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No I wouldn't ask.
I think this is a case of bruised ego for you OP and nothing more. I'm basing that on your last sentence. Thank them for their time congratulate them on finding a nanny and move on with your job search. As for giving a time frame. I have given one and gotten a job offer. You can be assertive and land a great job if a family really wants you they will snatch you. |
No it is not common practice in ANY profession!!! You are nuts, PP, and very inexperienced. As an MB, I know I would feel angry and put-upon to have to answer a question like that! |
Your mistake. Why did you lie? |
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MB here. You'll probably never know what happened - even if they give you an answer. Maybe they felt you were too aggressive, or maybe they met someone else (either before or after) who seemed like a slightly better fit and that became clear when they talked after meeting you. Maybe they knew you weren't going to be their top choice and they didn't want to string you along, given what you had said about your other offers. Maybe they were just being gracious in the interview with you but the truth was that they had a top candidate before you even walked in the door. Maybe they had even put an offer out to someone else but were waiting to hear back and moving forward with their other candidates to be safe.
You'll never really know OP. If I were the MB I don't think I'd be particularly bothered by a follow up email asking if there was any feedback I could provide. I think, when done graciously, that can be a very professional thing to do. (Although I will say that in my 9-5 job I do a ton of interviewing and hiring for desk jobs and only once in 25 years of doing this has a rejected candidate ever asked me for feedback. It isn't common at all in my experience.) |
| I always ask them what is the problem and they always respond very polite about the thing my problem is always the money,nothing about my experience... |
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I wouldn't ask and in the future I wouldn't mention other offers until it's been awhile after the interview with no response. You interview, thank them in a follow up email and when they respond explain that you really liked them and are hoping to accept a position in x amount of days. That they are your number 1 pick etc etc. you need to butter the family up. You can't put pressure on them and make it seem like you're so important that you can't wait for them to make up their mind.
My first nanny job was the only one I had to wait a few days for an offer, every other job I was one of first interviewed and hired on the spot. I always gave the family a sense that they were free to make the decision at their time and that I wanted them to have time to pick the very best. It made me seem patient, understanding, and caring. All qualities you want in a nanny. As much as we want to seem in charge and can decide who we work for, it's still the parents decision. You will get more offers by being sweet and using some of your child manipulation on them lol |
| By child manipulation tactics, I mean all the little ticks we use to get children what we want to do by making them feel like it was their choice. |
I agree that this is the most likely explanation. You interviewed on Thursday, said you could do a trial day next week, then turned around and pressured them to decide on you in two days. That's pretty rude, especially since you agreed to a trial day next week. I'm assuming you did not have competing offers with such a tight deadline. If you did, you wouldn't be annoyed you didn't get this one. I suggest you do NOT write them and ask what you did wrong. It is not common, nor is it professional. You didn't get the job, end of story. If you emailed me, I wouldn't tell you the truth if you did do something wrong in the interview. Frankly,if you tried to pressure me into an early decision without a trial day, I would not hire you unless you were absolutely perfect in every other way. Instead of telling you what you did wrong, I would simply say we went with another candidate and wish you luck. |
| Next time I would say I had other offers and would like to make a decision by early-mid next week. Give them the chance to do the trial day with you, and they can usually tell within the first 24 hours if you are one of their top candidates or not. They could then say they are interested but need a few more days to make a decision (if you could wait for that), or they might then let you know quickly that they are passing and let you choose from the offers you already have. |
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The mother said she would make a decision BY next week + the father said he could have a decision BY this weekend so in effect, they were giving you their deadlines per say.
And the fact that you stated you were entertaining "other offers" made it sound like you were not really interested in the position to them so that is why they most likely chose another candidate. |
+1. This was very off-putting. I would have mentally crossed you off my list right then. |