Anonymous wrote:Does your company use Workday? I have been applying to jobs with Workday, and I autofill my resume. Then, I have to list my experience, which is essentially the exact same thing. So I use the same verbiage. Is this incorrect? Why does Workday ask to provide this information two different time?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I applied for a job over 6 weeks ago (job posting had been live for around 4 days when I applied). I heard nothing until this week, when I was invited for interview. I had assumed I wasn’t in the running for this job anymore based on the length of time since I applied. Why did it take 6 weeks? I assume their top candidates declined? Or something else?
Likely that they had other candidates in the funnel that didn’t make the cut through the progressive interview rounds. So the recruiting team went back to the well. I have 5 candidates at the top of an IT funnel right now. I’ve vetted their resumes and they are a good match for the job. However I have one candidate in final round interviews this week. And two more behind him if he doesn’t pan out. IF for some reason any of the three aren’t selected for the role, I’ll go to that group of 5. If I do, it will be after Spring break and they applied late February. It’s just what happens in the recruitment process.
That’s interesting too - do you tend to run a few top candidates simultaneously, getting them all through the various stages and then comparing at the end, or do you only push the top candidate to the final round and then the others only if the top one doesn’t work out?
We move tranches of 4-5 candidates at a time. Invariably in late stages it narrows to the top 3. Someone goes to the final interview first. That’s where we are now with this role. This candidate is a total fit so if the exec likes him, we’re moving to an offer. I have another role where it’s neck and neck between two candidates. We’re pushing both through to the end because the role is a little more high profile and it is more critical that we get that capability and fit right.
Anonymous wrote:I have been applying to VP level roles and not getting to the interview. I heard from an hr influencer that VP level roles should not be applied to in job boards and that is a self selecting out process. Is this true? If so, should I make a new email address and so a new portal in the workday of the companies I am applying to before I
ask for a referral? Thank you!
Anonymous wrote:OP, if you’re in the middle stages with a candidate and they tell you they have another offer from another company but would prefer to continue your process if it could accelerate, will you accelerate the hiring process for them if you like them? Or is it not really possible?
Anonymous wrote:OP, I was contacted by an external recruiter for a position that aligns well with my experience and interests. While I’m a good match for the position, the suggested pay range is the same as I’m getting now. I would need more to make a move.
Should I let the recruiter include my resume in her batch of resumes knowing that my salary requirements are out of alignment or should I let the company decide? In my limited experience, if a company tentatively allocates $175k for a role, they’re not going to go with someone looking for $200k.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A recruiter reached out to me about a very interesting position and I had a first conversation with her yesterday. At the end of the call, she told me she thought I would be a great candidate for this role and encouraged me to submit my resume. She warned me that the process had just kicked off, so might be slower than I would anticipate since it is an external search firm. She asked me to let her know if I was moving forward with any other conversations so she could try to accelerate.
Do external recruiters say these kind of things in all/most of their conversations? Or can I take at face value that she really sees me as a strong candidate?
I’m OP. The external recruiter’s job is to send as many resumes as possible to the hiring manager/company. Like a dozen is better than 6 resumes. That is ther motivation. Gauge from that what you will……
Anonymous wrote:My DH is 62 and thinks no one will hire him if he looks for a new job. He is C-suite level and for that reason I disagree. You don't get to that level without experience. Who is wrong?
Anonymous wrote:My kid is about to graduate from college and has been job-hunting for months. Last week they were offered a position on Monday and given three days to respond. They are very excited about the opportunity and did accept the job last week. Two weeks ago they’d been asked to schedule an interview at another company— it was supposed to be tomorrow. On the one hand, they’d be really interested to still go through with the interview because it’d be good practice and they’d like to learn more about the company (it’s a place they’d be very happy to work someday). On the other hand, they don’t want to waste the interviewer’s time or burn bridges. They think they still want the position they’ve accepted, regardless of what happens with tomorrow’s interview if they go through with it. I advised them to cancel the interview—do you agree?
Anonymous wrote:A recruiter reached out to me about a very interesting position and I had a first conversation with her yesterday. At the end of the call, she told me she thought I would be a great candidate for this role and encouraged me to submit my resume. She warned me that the process had just kicked off, so might be slower than I would anticipate since it is an external search firm. She asked me to let her know if I was moving forward with any other conversations so she could try to accelerate.
Do external recruiters say these kind of things in all/most of their conversations? Or can I take at face value that she really sees me as a strong candidate?