Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Internal recruiter or external/third party?
Internal Corporate
Why does it take MONTHS to get to the second round and NEVER to respond when you’re not interested?
I get it.
Our priority is to move the best candidates Forward.
That does mean that the hundreds that aren’t our priority get left behind in terms of communication.
So say I interviewed you and 6 others. The Hiring Manager chooses to advance 4 of them to the next round. But you’re not one of the 4. My activity is now hyper focused on those 4. (Multiply this by 10-20 roles). I’m managing communications to say 80 people.
Now it takes 60 days for us to fill a role, sometimes 90. Once the new hire signs the paperwork, we close the job down and disposition the hundreds that in the recruitment funnel. Hence why, if you aren’t the candidate moving forward, for you it takes MONTHS.
I wish the systems could be faster - maybe AI helps to close the candidate communication loop better in next gen ATS’s
Anonymous wrote:Calibri, Arial, a clean sans serif font works really well
Why would sans-serif be preferable? It is generally considered to be harder to read for body text, and it also looks less serious than serif type. And Arial is sort of an abomination.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Internal recruiter or external/third party?
Internal Corporate
Why does it take MONTHS to get to the second round and NEVER to respond when you’re not interested?
Calibri, Arial, a clean sans serif font works really well
Anonymous wrote:"There is no reason to use Times Roman Font." Mind blown. Recruiter: What are we supposed to be using?
Anonymous wrote:What did you study in college and did it help you in your career?
Anonymous wrote:I applied for a job that I think I’m a perfect fit for. I haven’t heard back yet. If this was a position you were hiring for, would you want to hear from me, just to alert you to my application (which may be in a pile of 1000s) and to reiterate my strong interest in the job? Is there anything I could do at this point that you’d like to see, or is it better to just wait?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Excluding CEO/President level (think VP, senior manager, manager types) at what point does a candidate's age start working against them?
Good question. It depends on the role and the company to be honest. I’ve been in old school industries (think commercial and retail banking) where people stay a looonnng time and someone who is say 45 is about the midpoint of the workforce distribution. I’ve also worked in digital marketing where the average age was like 30. And then in F500 the average age might be in the middle say 38, but by 50 the company is packaging people out.
I will say this
There is no reason to ever put more than 15 years of experience on your resume
There is no reason to put your college graduation date. (1982??!)
There is no reason to still be using Yahoo email. SMH
There is no reason to use Times Roman Font
— when I see a combination of these things on a resume I start thinking ‘This PERSON Has Aged Himself/Herself With This Resume - they are demonstrating by this document that they are not adaptable, will not change.
Guilty. At least it’s not Hotmail?!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Internal recruiter or external/third party?
Internal Corporate
Anonymous wrote:I’m hoping this doesn’t devolve into ‘why did you ghost me’ rants. I’d rather give you tips and tricks to get hired. But go for it DCUM…
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Excluding CEO/President level (think VP, senior manager, manager types) at what point does a candidate's age start working against them?
Good question. It depends on the role and the company to be honest. I’ve been in old school industries (think commercial and retail banking) where people stay a looonnng time and someone who is say 45 is about the midpoint of the workforce distribution. I’ve also worked in digital marketing where the average age was like 30. And then in F500 the average age might be in the middle say 38, but by 50 the company is packaging people out.
I will say this
There is no reason to ever put more than 15 years of experience on your resume
There is no reason to put your college graduation date. (1982??!)
There is no reason to still be using Yahoo email. SMH
There is no reason to use Times Roman Font
— when I see a combination of these things on a resume I start thinking ‘This PERSON Has Aged Himself/Herself With This Resume - they are demonstrating by this document that they are not adaptable, will not change.