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Candidate guidance that is direct, practical, and confidential

Each section below is written to help experienced professionals prepare well, communicate clearly, and make stronger decisions during a search process.

Executive candidate on a video interview call
01

How to Prepare for a Video Interview

Video interviews are now a standard part of executive and professional hiring, and they deserve the same preparation as an in-person meeting. Test your technology in advance โ€” camera, microphone, and internet connection โ€” and choose a quiet, well-lit space with a neutral background. Have the job description and your resume nearby, along with a few concise examples that demonstrate results in your current and prior roles. Dress as you would for an in-office discussion, even if the conversation feels informal. Finally, look at the camera when answering, pause briefly before responding, and let your expertise and judgment come through clearly.

Test audio, camera, and internet before the meeting

Keep examples focused on outcomes and leadership

Maintain eye contact and executive presence on screen

02

How to Make Smart Career Decisions

Smart career decisions start with clarity about what youโ€™re optimizing for. Begin by defining your non-negotiables โ€” responsibilities, compensation, travel, culture, and work-life balance โ€” and your 3โ€“5 year goals. Look beyond the job title to understand scope: team size, P&L responsibility, strategic influence, and how success will be measured. Research the organizationโ€™s performance, leadership, and reputation in the market, not just the role description. Then compare each opportunity against your criteria instead of reacting to urgency or flattery. A thoughtful, criteria-driven approach helps you move toward a career youโ€™re building, not just a job youโ€™re taking.

Measure the role against your long-term direction

Assess leadership quality and decision-making culture

Weigh growth potential, not just compensation

Professional making thoughtful career decisions at a desk
Resume review and executive career positioning discussion
03

How to Strengthen Your Resume for Executive Roles

An effective executive resume tells a focused story of impact, not a list of responsibilities. Lead with a brief summary that positions you clearly in the P&C and claims ecosystem, then emphasize outcomes: revenue growth, loss-ratio improvement, operational efficiency, client retention, or successful transformations. Use concise bullet points that start with strong verbs and include metrics where possible. Highlight team size, budgets managed, and cross-functional initiatives to show scope. Keep formatting clean and consistent, and tailor your resume to the types of roles youโ€™re pursuing so hiring leaders can quickly see how your experience aligns with their needs.

Highlight strategic scope and leadership responsibility

Use metrics that show business impact

Cut detail that does not support your positioning

Businesswoman portrait
04

How to Evaluate a New Opportunity Before You Say Yes

Evaluating an opportunity starts with understanding the business context, not just the offer details. Ask how the role fits into the organizationโ€™s strategy, what problem youโ€™re being hired to solve, and how success will be defined in the first 12โ€“24 months. Clarify reporting lines, decision-making authority, and the resources youโ€™ll have to execute. Look closely at culture, leadership stability, and the organizationโ€™s reputation with clients and employees. Finally, compare the opportunity to your long-term goals: does this move expand your skills, influence, and options, or simply change your business card? A good offer should advance both.

Smiling businesswoman in office
05

How to work with a recruiter confidentially and effectively

A strong relationship with a recruiter should feel like a strategic partnership, not a transaction. Start by being candid about your experience, compensation, constraints, and goals so they can assess fit accurately. Clarify confidentiality expectations up front and confirm that your resume will never be shared without your consent. Be responsive and prepared for conversations; treating each touchpoint like a client meeting signals professionalism. In return, expect honest feedback about your market positioning and opportunities. The more clearly you communicate your priorities and boundaries, the better your recruiter can advocate for you and protect your interests.