Job Interview Disasters
The boss showed me the shop floor, complete with loose floor tiles, out-of-date equipment and prospective colleagues eyeing me like a raw steak. "Christ, what a craphole", I said. I think that's the moment I blew it. Tell us how you didn't get the job.
Suggested by Field Marshall Dozington-Smythe (Ret.)
( , Thu 21 Nov 2013, 13:06)
The boss showed me the shop floor, complete with loose floor tiles, out-of-date equipment and prospective colleagues eyeing me like a raw steak. "Christ, what a craphole", I said. I think that's the moment I blew it. Tell us how you didn't get the job.
Suggested by Field Marshall Dozington-Smythe (Ret.)
( , Thu 21 Nov 2013, 13:06)
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There's going to be a veritable smorgasbord of irrelevant or downright illegal interview questions this week.
( , Thu 21 Nov 2013, 17:09, 1 reply)
( , Thu 21 Nov 2013, 17:09, 1 reply)
Asking about what colleagues, friends, family, customers would say about you allows a level
of personal reflection, especially if the questions are spattered throughout a structured interview allowing the interviewer to see if the personal reflection is consistent. To ask for one word is idiotic and the MD probably read it in a lol Reader's Digest article.
( , Fri 22 Nov 2013, 9:01, closed)
of personal reflection, especially if the questions are spattered throughout a structured interview allowing the interviewer to see if the personal reflection is consistent. To ask for one word is idiotic and the MD probably read it in a lol Reader's Digest article.
( , Fri 22 Nov 2013, 9:01, closed)
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