You will have 90 seconds with a recruiter who has spoken to 200 people today. Everything about how you enter, stand, speak, and leave will be evaluated before you finish your opening sentence.
Posture and pace of approach. Eye contact before you reach the table. Whether you reach for a handshake or wait to be invited. How you hold your materials. What you do with your hands.
They rehearse what they will say instead of how they will arrive. They treat the job fair as a passive experience. They approach from behind other candidates and wait. They confuse a job fair with a job interview.
The recruiters who matter are watching the room. They notice who navigates confidently and who hesitates. Your approach is your first application.
Bring two versions of your CV. A short one, two pages, and a long one, six pages. When you reach the table, hand both to the recruiter and ask which they would prefer. Their answer tells you everything before you say another word. If they take the longer one, they are interested. If they reach for the shorter one, they are not looking to invest time in you. You have just gathered real intelligence in under five seconds. Prepare both before you walk in.
A job fair interaction is not a conversation. It is a structured performance with a defined arc. Know the arc.
Make eye contact at 10 feet. Smile at 6 feet. Offer your hand at 3 feet. Do not speak until you are within comfortable conversation distance.
“I am [Name]. I came specifically because [specific reason tied to their work].” The specific reason is what separates you from the 200 others.
Connect your experience to their stated need. This is not your full biography. It is one relevant story, under 40 seconds.
“What is the best next step from here?” Always close with a specific ask. Never end with “I just wanted to introduce myself.”
Recruiters remember the candidates who gave them something to write down. Make sure there is something worth writing.
When you offer both CVs, watch which one they reach for. The long version means they want depth. They are already invested. The short version means they are managing the queue and you are part of it. This is not rejection. It is information. Adjust your approach accordingly. If they take the short one, your hook needs to be sharper and your bridge faster. You have less runway than you thought.
A skilled candidate reads recruiter signals before, during, and after the conversation.
You approach a table. The recruiter smiles but immediately says “We’re actually looking for someone with more technical experience.” What do you do?
A job fair CV is not your full résumé. It is a one-page argument for a specific opportunity. Build it here.
Auto-generated from all competency tags across experience entries.
You have your CV. You know the room. Now find where to take it. Upload your CV or resume and the scanner searches live job postings matched to your skills, location, and position type.
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