That said, even when presenting technical material, you should try to
provide as much intuition as possible. If you can keep someone not in your
field interested in your presentation for the entire duration of your talk, that
person will be much more likely to vote for you when the department has to
choose who to make an offer to. There are few worse offenses than that of
wasting people’s time; for an academic, there are few things worse than
sitting in a seminar where the speaker has made no effort to be understood
by as many people as possible.
When interviewing for senior (i.e., post-tenure) positions, one strategy
which I have seen work well in the past is to present an overview of one’s
research agenda (either in whole or on a given topic if interviewing for a
more narrowly defined position) instead of a job-market paper. For
instance, I recall seeing a colleague who applied for a global health position
presenting her entire research agenda on HIV/AIDS in China. This worked
well for her because it allowed her to both show that she had been (and
would remain) productive in an important area of global health, and thus
that she was the solution to our constrained maximization problem.
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