As a hirer [of contractors], I've always given feedback - to the agency.
I doubt it ever makes it's way back to the contractor, and it's probably because as mentioned above, providing feedback to a contractor who didn't make the cut isn't going to generate any income for the agent.
I did recently coincidentally meet someone at my current clientco, that we'd interviewed at my last clientco - he didn't get the role and must have been baffled as to why. I asked whether he got the feedback I'd given; he hadn't - of course. I told him the real reason he hadn't been offered the role [a permie had worked with him in a previous life and blocked me hiring him]. He was just relieved his intuition that I'd liked him hadn't been wrong.
I doubt it ever makes it's way back to the contractor, and it's probably because as mentioned above, providing feedback to a contractor who didn't make the cut isn't going to generate any income for the agent.
I did recently coincidentally meet someone at my current clientco, that we'd interviewed at my last clientco - he didn't get the role and must have been baffled as to why. I asked whether he got the feedback I'd given; he hadn't - of course. I told him the real reason he hadn't been offered the role [a permie had worked with him in a previous life and blocked me hiring him]. He was just relieved his intuition that I'd liked him hadn't been wrong.
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