Post Job Interview Etiquette
- Post job interview etiquette job interview tips
- Post job interview etiquette and dress for success
- Post Job Interview Etiquette? | Yahoo Answers
- Job Hunt Advice - new grad : PTschool
- Are my views on business phone etiquette outdated? : etiquette
I'm not sure why I felt the need to make a throwaway for this...
Post job interview etiquette job interview tips
Candidate: Who is this? Me: My name is Kunseii with Company X. How can I help you? Candidate: Yeah, you called me... Me: Okay, what is your name? Candidate: Someone called me from this number. Me: Right, did you apply for a job recently? Candidate: I applied to a bunch of places, yeah. Where are you calling from? Me: Company X. Did you listen to the voicemail I left? Candidate: No, I saw I had a missed call and just called back. Me: What is your name? Candidate: Where is this company located? At this point, I'm so frustrated with this person, I want to know their name just so I can put their resume through the shredder and blacklist them from future postings. People have told me that I need to understand that because of robocalls it's a new world and people are bound to be more cautious about giving out information on the phone. I think that someone who can't be bothered to listen to a voicemail, calls back a number and makes me repeat the same information three times, and then won't answer my simple questions has already earned a few strikes against them before they even get into the door for an interview.
I created a spreadsheet of classmates/my cohort to keep track of their contact info, their work history, current jobs, and any mentioned connections. It took work but this has paid many dividends over the past three years and will continue to do so. While online degrees don't have the networking and personal connections built in, it is possible to build those networks yourself. I also made sure that my final thesis applied to my government role and was able to expand my project onto the national level. In the process of working on my final project, I applied for a different job that is fully inline with my MBA with much better earning potential and job satisfaction. I had a panel interview with one supervisor and two branch chiefs. One had a PhD, one a masters (Econ I think? ) and the last had an MBA (finance). My MBA became a major topic and I later learned a big factor in their decision to hire me. So where am I now? I completed my degree requirements last August and conferred in December.
Post job interview etiquette and dress for success
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[... ] The key line is Why can everyone else do it and not me? When I was unemployed, I was convinced that an absolute ontological gulf separated me from Work. Work - which, like "being in a relationship" - would automatically confer on me the status of being a Real Person. But the horrific irony was that one couldn't achieve this status. You couldn't become a Real Person by getting a job. It was the other way round: only Real People could get work. Being unemployed wasn't a cause of shame; rather the sense of shame which I carried around as if it was the core of my being was what prevented me getting a job. So my job applications and interviews had an air of total hopelessness about them. I know there's no way you would give the job to an insect like me, and we both know I couldn't do it even if by some miracle you offered it to me, but... It took me years to realise that job interviews were a ritualized exchange where the point was to determine whether you knew what the right communicative etiqutte was, and that telling the truth made you some weirdo.
Post Job Interview Etiquette? | Yahoo Answers
Surely even those who have not been in the Castle know that one doesn't behave like that... Being a postgraduate student was little better than being unemployed - not least because it was regarded (by me as much as anyone else) as a way of avoiding work. (A friend once remarked that, in most circles in Britain, it would be less shameful to confess to being a drug addict than to admit you were a postgraduate student in an arts subject. ) But I only "avoided work" because I didn't think I could do it. Ben writes: I can't quite make up my mind whether this missing quality is a ruling-class privilege (for which see the discussions collected here a few years back), or more of a stereotypical working class thing - hustle, graft, with its suggestions of not-entirely-legitimate activity. Perhaps it's something possessed by people at both ends, but lost by those inbetween? Rather like the ridiculous etiquette books of early Victorian times - real aristocrats didn't worry about that type of thing, they just did what the hell they pleased (knowing that they were immovably established and that being seen using the wrong kind of spoon wasn't going to affect them at all).
Contrast this with the bourgeois kids doing unpaid internships for years on end...
Job Hunt Advice - new grad : PTschool
I don't know if it's necessarily illegal, but it's sorta none of their business at the same time, IMO. However, I also think that they may be curious in trying to figure out why you went with the other job. It may be for their own purposes in figuring out why potential applicants accept other positions rather than theirs. In addition, part of it may be natural curiosity. That's my best guess. As for the email itself, there's nothing wrong with stating that another position has presented a better fit for you, and if they have any further questions, they can contact your new boss or Human Resources. That way, they can determine if the questions are/were legal, and handle the situation from there. I hope this helps.
I've created this throwaway to ask the Reddit hive mind about job interview follow up. Here's my story: Four weeks ago I had a job interview for a position that I REALLY want at a large university. The interview went really well! The four people I met with were great, we seemed to get along immediately, I am fascinated by the work happening at this place and I know that would be a great fit. One of the interviewers told me that she had a great feeling about me and would love to see me in the position. When I left the interview I was asked to send along a list of references. I did so via email and thanked the one person I sent them to. I also wrote hand-written thank you notes to all four people I met with. Thy told me they were interested in filling the spot ASAP. Two weeks pass and I sent an email to my contact person (the same person I sent my references to) asking what the status was and offering to meet with them again if they had additional questions. I was told that they had to put the search aside for a bit but would let me know when there is more to share.
Are my views on business phone etiquette outdated? : etiquette
Only the upwardly mobile bourgeoisie cooked up these arcane rules and customs to try and monopolise the road up and discreetly kick the bulk of the population off the ladder. For me, it was absolutely a question of being projected into a space between classes. When I did work in factories, I was either pitied or pilloried. Every job seemed impossible: manual work because of my feckless diliatoriness, graduate jobs because, well, I wasn't the sort of person who could do them. Me, a teacher, a journalist or a lawyer - surely not. Is there anyone who has caught the agony of this state of worklessness better than Morrissey? The useless jouissance of refusing what was anyway impossible: "No I've never had a job/ because I've never really wanted one " "No, I've never had a job because I'm too shy "... I do sometimes think that the implicit political position in those handful of early Smiths songs was one of the most powerful of the 80s. Singing "England is mine and it owes me a living" at the time of 3 million unemployed and the Miners Strike...