Also, delete your voicemails, especially if you opt out of texting.
I hate this. "I'm open for a call at any time", but they don't answer when you say you'll call them, then voicemail is full.Kevin the 3-legged dog said:
Also, delete your voicemails, especially if you opt out of texting.
I had a candidate tell me to "hold on" while she talked to the cashier at Target. Really?Kevin the 3-legged dog said:
I've spoken to 2 people, that picked the time to talk to me, who were doing something else. One guy was in Costco shopping and picking up his contact lenses, the other was checking out at the grocery store. Both unemployed.
Kevin the 3-legged dog said:
Also, delete your voicemails, especially if you opt out of texting.
BeastmodeAg said:
NETWORK, NETWORK, NETWORK!!
noGreen2Maroon said:
Should you put your college GPA on your resume when you graduated in 2010? I didn't do so hot but I've had several full time jobs since I graduated.
Green2Maroon said:
Should you put your college GPA on your resume when you graduated in 2010? I didn't do so hot but I've had several full time jobs since I graduated.
AndesAg92 said:
I love this thread.
Recruiters/HR folks here: "I'm too busy and don't have more than 10 seconds to breeze a resume, heaven forbid a cover letter"
Also them: "let's post a well thought out response on Texags at 10 am or 3 pm during work hours!"
In my industry, this is great advice.BeastmodeAg said:
NETWORK, NETWORK, NETWORK!!
Most people Texags on the toilet.AndesAg92 said:
I love this thread.
Recruiters/HR folks here: "I'm too busy and don't have more than 10 seconds to breeze a resume, heaven forbid a cover letter"
Also them: "let's post a well thought out response on Texags at 10 am or 3 pm during work hours!"
ea1060 said:
Heres another one while I have it on my mind. Make sure you apply to a job with your updated resume! I cant tell you how many times Ive seen resumes that looked like the person hadnt worked in a year, then when you talk to the candidate they say thats an old resume and theyre currently working. This happens all the time and its only hurting the candidate from getting an interview. Also, lots of disconnected old phone numbers on resumes. Put your current phone number on there!
It happens all the time.infinity ag said:ea1060 said:
Heres another one while I have it on my mind. Make sure you apply to a job with your updated resume! I cant tell you how many times Ive seen resumes that looked like the person hadnt worked in a year, then when you talk to the candidate they say thats an old resume and theyre currently working. This happens all the time and its only hurting the candidate from getting an interview. Also, lots of disconnected old phone numbers on resumes. Put your current phone number on there!
Funny story.
A few years ago, I got an email from a recruiter who said that my resume looked "awesome", they had the "perfect" job for me and my experience at Acme Inc made me a great fit for the role in Java development. Problem was I had not been in Java development for about 10 years. I was curious if he was f@rting about having my resume so I asked him to send me the copy of my resume he had.
He actually did, and it was mine. Except that it was from 2003, 15+ years old.
Quote:
You can use the STAR methodology to answer these questions (random googled link here: https://novoresume.com/career-blog/interview-star-method). As an HR partner, I can't tell you how many people struggle with answering these types of questions because they simply haven't taken the time to remember when they did some of these things in their previous jobs. I usually tell folks to actually type out the stories and practice them so that they can answer these questions easily. Now, these answers do have to come from actual experiences that you have had on the job (don't try to wing it or make it up as any HR interviewer worth their salt will ask follow-up questions that could trip you up if you are lying about your experience).
True story.Shumba said:
(don't try to wing it or make it up as any HR interviewer worth their salt will ask follow-up questions that could trip you up if you are lying about your experience).
EclipseAg said:True story.Shumba said:
(don't try to wing it or make it up as any HR interviewer worth their salt will ask follow-up questions that could trip you up if you are lying about your experience).
I once interviewed a guy who claimed he led this big project at his previous employer (not on his resume; during the interview).
Only problem was, the guy who actually DID lead that project was a good friend of mine. I knew all about it because my buddy and I had been talking about it for months.
He had no way of knowing that, but needless to say, there was no way I was going to hire him after that.