An EPIK Interview
You've applied for EPIK and you've passed the first phase. Congratulations! Grab that soju and take a shot! This means the next obstacle: the interview. Cue the nervous breakdown. Â
For me, that nervous breakdown was intense. Coming straight out from college, maintaining my job for the past 3 and a half years, and not actively job-hunting, I completely forgot how to do an interview. I immediately took to the internet to find anything and everything about the EPIK interview. I found questions, questions about EPIK, regular interview questions, random questions (and I mean randomâŚI prepared myself in answering, "If you were a tree, what tree would you be and why?").  I wrote them down on post cards, then rewrote them on post-its. I practiced interviews with friends. One was informal, the other formal, and another through Skype. I did everything past EPIK teachers talked about doing. I was still kind of a nervous wreck.
So, to boost my confidence, I decided to browse through TED Talks because they're the best at teaching people "ideas worth sharing" and I found Amy Cuddy's Your body language shapes who you are. It intensely helped me and gave me some confidence. But, I was still stressed and it showed physically with a large pimple manifesting on my nose.
The day of the interview came around, scheduled for October 28th, 13:20 KST (October 27th, 8:20 PM Seattle time). I worked my usual 10:30-4:30 shift and returned home to prepare. To make it more interesting, my family decided to schedule our family portrait at 6:30 PM that same day. We literally rushed through the family portraits and I got home at 7:00. I took a shower and prepared myself in my good luck blue suit.
Various vlogs say good lighting is highly important, so I prepared my webcam and lamps in the 3-point lighting method (key, fill, and back lighting). I looked at myself and realized I looked oily and my nose pimple shone bright like Rudolph. In a desperate frenzy, I took baby powder and powdered myself heavily, matting my face and concealing the crimson mountain on my nose. I tested Skype, connecting the Ethernet port to my laptop for better quality. I did a practice interview before show time and used the bathroom.
15 minutes before the interview, I got an invite from the EPIK coordinator and added them as a contact. Everything was going to plan. I reviewed my notes one last time. Then I took out my phone, played some Tinashe while doing my Wonder Woman pose that I learned from Amy Cuddy.Â
9:20 PM hit. I took my place in front of my webcam. No call. 9:21, 9:22, 9:23âŚnothing! I was about to stress. So right when I get up to resume my Wonder Woman pose, Skype begins ringing. I rush to sit down, take a deep breath, and answer.
A black screen with the EPIK logo. That's all I saw. You know how nerve-racking it is to stare into the webcam while speaking to a black screen? No? Well I do. It's scary. You can't analyze their reactions. You don't know if they see your baby powdered face and make the look, "WowâŚhe looks like a vampire from a cheap budget film!" You possibly don't know because all you see on the other end is a black screen with the EPIK logo.
Now keep in mind, my experience is totally different from others. My coordinator told me that he was late because his webcam had technical difficulties. Whether this is true, it happened and I wasn't prepared for it. But I played it cool, continued to stare into the webcam, while smiling like a buffoon.
Turns out the interview was easier than it seemed. The interview began with reviewing my application. Then it shifted, to the Q&A portions. To my surprise, my coordinator asked only two questions, both questions that were totally and utterly expected. But whatâs hilarious about this was I threw the script out the window. Instead of answering the way I prepared, I answered how I felt. In the end, I believe it helped me shine through so much more because it allowed me to be my authentic self. And even more unpredicted, he told me that I had a strong application! It gave me pride and confidence. It was good validation. After 23 minutes, the interview ended and it all felt like a dream.
INTERVIEW TIPS
1. Prepare, but donât over prepare. The EPIK process is a balancing act. And life is a balancing act in of itself. Just like how you shouldnât overdo it on the fiber, donât overdo it with preparing for the interview. Just find the basic questions and create your own unique answers. Feel confident in what youâve done and own up to it.Â
2. Create the best set-up that fits with you. Iâm not saying that you should follow the 3-point lighting technique (although I am bias towards it). Just make sure youâre well-lit and in a presentable space. The space doesnât need to be bare. I had a rug hanging on the wall that looked like a painting.Â
3. Dress to impress. This includes pants.
4. On a side note to preparing, print out your application. Read through it a couple of times and highlight key parts. Keep that in front of you during the process.Â
5. Have a notebook and pencil (or write on the back of your printed-out application). Itâs good to take notes and displays youâre taking in knowledge!Â
6. Remember your coordinatorâs name and use their name. Donât be creepy about it. But saying âHello, Jeffrey. How are you?â is a nice way to start. Mine was Jeffrey, by the way!Â
7. Be authentically you. Remember that many people apply, but donât get the chance of an interview. And if what you said in your application is true, they like you. The interview is to see if youâre alive, engaged, and healthy.Â
8. Donât refresh your email immediately after interviewing. Just take the time to stop and breathe (and maybe take a shot of soju).
âđźJOHN









