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Had my first 'bad' interview in years yesterday

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    #91
    Originally posted by Old Greg View Post
    Last year I walked an interview. Didn't get it because they couldn't understand why I'd want it.

    BECAUSE I AM ON THE BENCH AND THERE ARE NO CONTRACTS AROUND.

    Fortunately my niche has picked up now.
    I just binned off an interview for next week. Client and agent couldnt decide between themselves what the job spec was, what skillset was or whether the location was centralised or around the country.

    I said forget it. They said oh the client really wants to see you and you could resolve all these questions at their 'interview' day. That just made more alarm bells ring! Thanks, but I'm not spending 3 hours travelling at my cost to find out in the first 10 minutes my gut feeling is 100% correct.
    I couldn't give two fornicators! Yes, really!

    Comment


      #92
      Originally posted by Gentile View Post
      It's been fairly quiet up North for the past few months, so I was pleased yesterday when I managed to get an interview for a gig that involves a fairly meaty project in the Financial Services industry, that I'm well-suited to on a technical level, and that would see me through to the end of the year. It started off well; CV turned around within 24 hours, agent a nice competent chap that I'd worked with before, and it was an 100% skills match for once (which is unusual when the job spec lists nine discrete technologies, some of which are direct competitors to one another). When I arrived, the place was really nice, and to cap it all off they even fared well in my "Reception Test". [I invariably find that if the person manning the reception desk is nice, then that's generally a good place to work. Because reception is fairly near the bottom of the hierarchy in most organisations, whatever the place's internal culture is like is usually reflected in how happy the person doing that job is to be there. This also works in reverse: I've always found when I've been hiring technical staff that the receptionist's opinion of them has been pretty insightful – whilst candidates are always of course civil to me in the interview room, someone that can't even be nice to a receptionist is generally also someone that won't work well in a team.]

      When all those positives are lined up, I'm usually pretty good at interviews. From contracting, I've done enough of them, and so know the pitfalls to avoid like wittering on too much, or being too wishy-washy and failing to get your strengths across. However, in this particular one, I just felt I hadn't fired on all cylinders for whatever reason on the day. I didn't come out thinking "yep, that went well", and I'm fairly sure I didn't get the gig (no definite feedback either way yet, which is in itself pretty telling – contract gigs that are going ahead usually turn around far quicker than this). My only slight excuse is that it was one of those "interviews over coffee" things that I usually hate: I prefer interviews to be held in surroundings that respect the privacy of the process and cut out any distractions. This one was held in the soft seating area of their on-site canteen, and they spent the first 35 minutes or so of the hour we spoke telling me what they wanted, before handing over to me to let me explain how I could help fulfil their brief. Within that time, there were a couple of groups of existing employees nearby having social conversations at about the same noise level as we were trying to speak. I can't blame my bad performance just on that, though. I simply had an off day for once. I wouldn't have given me the gig if I had been interviewing me based on my performance at interview. Bah humbug.

      Never mind, keep looking.
      I think you read a bit too much into thing, "reception test"? WTF are you talking about? You failed because you were not what they wanted.

      Comment


        #93
        Originally posted by russell View Post
        I think you read a bit too much into thing, "reception test"? WTF are you talking about? You failed because you were not what they wanted.
        So you work in a nice place?

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          #94
          To the OP, by the sounds of things, you turned up to do business, and they didn't.
          Last edited by BillHicksRIP; 30 June 2012, 11:14.

          Comment


            #95
            Originally posted by cojak View Post
            See what I mean? Make that 90%
            Yep, the fun has gone out of it somewhat.

            Comment


              #96
              Originally posted by BillHicksRIP View Post
              To the OP, by the sounds of things, you turned up to do business, and they weren't.
              WHS+1
              one day at a time

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                #97
                Originally posted by BolshieBastard View Post
                I just binned off an interview for next week. Client and agent couldnt decide between themselves what the job spec was, what skillset was or whether the location was centralised or around the country.

                I said forget it. They said oh the client really wants to see you and you could resolve all these questions at their 'interview' day. That just made more alarm bells ring! Thanks, but I'm not spending 3 hours travelling at my cost to find out in the first 10 minutes my gut feeling is 100% correct.
                ..and don't forget the free consultancy you would have probably had to give them before they rejected you.
                "I can put any old tat in my sig, put quotes around it and attribute to someone of whom I've heard, to make it sound true."
                - Voltaire/Benjamin Franklin/Anne Frank...

                Comment


                  #98
                  Originally posted by Old Greg View Post
                  So you work in a nice place?
                  Ive worked in some really evil places where the receptionists were super nice. So the test is meaningless.

                  Comment


                    #99
                    Originally posted by Gentile View Post
                    One of the places I got a gig in the past was the FCO (where my DV comes from), which is full of Old Wykehamists and only about 1-in-250 get through, so I think I might be alright with trotting out the odd Americanism for comedic effect.
                    Wots a DV?
                    Behold the warranty -- the bold print giveth and the fine print taketh away.

                    Comment


                      Originally posted by Sysman View Post
                      Wots a DV?
                      Basic security clearance.
                      I couldn't give two fornicators! Yes, really!

                      Comment

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