Anonymous wrote:Our panel uses the camera. However, we indicate at the very start of the interview that use of camera by the interviewee is optional because it is optional for non-management at our organization. Just interviewed about 40 people and FWIW, not a single one opted to not use the camera. We use the camera on our end because we believe the interviewees are (or should be) interviewing us as much as we are interviewing them. We make it optional for them because it is optional once they onboard and because we want all interviewees to be comfortable.
Anonymous wrote:I think it is EXTREMELY unprofessional to interview a prospective candidate with cameras off and their camera on! It makes the candidate feel uncomfortable and it's a red flag the company is not interested in hiring you. With cameras off and yours on tells you a lot about the company's morals and ethics. Would you want to work for an organization that doesn't take the time to turn on its cameras 🤔? It makes the prospective candidate feel very uncomfortable and uninterested. After all the candidate is also interviewing the company. Bottom Line: Turn on your cameras during interviews!! With the camera(s) off leaves a bad taste in the candidate's mouth after their interview. It also leaves a negative impression on the company. 😠
Anonymous wrote:I think it's rude too. It's happened twice to me on the interview circuit.
First time, she was running around and busy so took the call from her phone. Fine, but it was an ad agency and her first comments were judging my clothes/hair. I couldn't see her.
Second time, the company culture was no cameras, 100% remote but candidates have to have their cameras on bc my role is client facing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yeah, this is rude to me. If you (the hiring manager) don’t want to be on camera, schedule a phone interview.
Agree very rude. Schedule an interview over the phone.
It's not rude, and the manager invited the applicant to turn off their camera. As others have noted, many companies have switched to video capable systems for all their telecoms.
Anonymous wrote:It's polite for the organizer (for any meeting) to say what the camera norms are. If you know you will be off camera, tell invitees ahead of time that you'll be off camera and they can do the same. If you expect cameras on, tell them.
I prefer cameras off, but I hate putting on makeup and office clothes for something I thought would be video and its not.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yeah, this is rude to me. If you (the hiring manager) don’t want to be on camera, schedule a phone interview.
Agree very rude. Schedule an interview over the phone.
At my agency that isn’t an option. We have to schedule via teams. So if we are telling you that you can turn off your camera, we are saying you can treat it like a phone interview.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yeah, this is rude to me. If you (the hiring manager) don’t want to be on camera, schedule a phone interview.
Agree very rude. Schedule an interview over the phone.
Anonymous wrote:I have a few zoom/team/google interview online, and I have come across 1-2 hiring manager turns off camera. I just looked at the black screen, and one told me that I could also turn off my camera. Well, I did not, but I perfomed badly because I felt more nervous and awkward not knowing where to look at. The job position I interview is remote working, but I thought isn't it both parties want to treat virtual interview as face to face. I got a negative first impression of the hiring manager, and I felt like wasting my time to dressup and wear makeup. Is that common for interviewer not turning on camera?
I put my camera on top of the middle of monitor, so I am centered. Where do you normally place the camera for interview?