Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think the responses to this are way out of line. I took OPs question as asking whether she should say something like - i've been at this company for a long time and I know it would have been very empowering for me to have a woman mentor/role model in this position, so I'm hoping to be able to provide that for other young women in the office. That would be a follow-on to a much more substantive answer. I think it totally depends on the office culture, but in an office like mine that answer would absolutely not be offensive.
OP here. I like this approach. I think this is something I would send in a form of a post-interview follow-up. Thank you
I would NEVER do this.![]()
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Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think the responses to this are way out of line. I took OPs question as asking whether she should say something like - i've been at this company for a long time and I know it would have been very empowering for me to have a woman mentor/role model in this position, so I'm hoping to be able to provide that for other young women in the office. That would be a follow-on to a much more substantive answer. I think it totally depends on the office culture, but in an office like mine that answer would absolutely not be offensive.
OP here. I like this approach. I think this is something I would send in a form of a post-interview follow-up. Thank you
Anonymous wrote:I think the responses to this are way out of line. I took OPs question as asking whether she should say something like - i've been at this company for a long time and I know it would have been very empowering for me to have a woman mentor/role model in this position, so I'm hoping to be able to provide that for other young women in the office. That would be a follow-on to a much more substantive answer. I think it totally depends on the office culture, but in an office like mine that answer would absolutely not be offensive.
Anonymous wrote:I think she'll know you're a woman.
Anonymous wrote:I hope you aren't hired.
Anonymous wrote:I'm interviewing for a position (rotational assignment) that has been previously held by men (for the past 15 years). The hiring official is a woman and thru the grapevine I learned that I'm the only woman to be interviewed. If the cliche question should come up -- "why are you the best candidate for this position", would it be appropriate for me to add this minor detail (giving women more opportunities) to my answer, without coming off as I'm trying to "hint" at an EEO complaint later?