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Home > Jobing Community Blogs > Blog Post: Showing Up For The Inter...
Blog Post: Showing Up For The Interview
posted Tuesday, December 4, 2007 2:00 AM
I was recently reading an article about job seekers that don't show up for their interviews. I began to think about why candidates are no shows. The job seeker goes through with applying for the job and generally a phone interview or at least a brief discussion to set up the interview. Then I though of using this forum to get some feedback from you; the job seekers and recruiters to discuss the topic.
Have you ever been a no show for an interview? Why did you decide not to show up? Are you a recruiter that has had no shows? What do you do with these types of candidates? With a tight job market and low unemployment rate is there an increase in no shows or has society changed so much that people are starting to ignore their responsibilities? A simple phone call or email to cancel an interview is easy and the responsible thing to do. I say never burn any bridges. HR Recruiters sometimes move from company to company and they may remember that name and resume that wasted their time. I once had an area manager that I worked for at one company, several years later I was working at another company when they hired a new manager, this is the same person and I was again reporting to them. Please tell me your thoughts and lets get a dialogue going on this issue.
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I am dismayed about the lack of interviewing skills, job search etiquette, and no follow up by candidate.
Thank you for your response. What are you seeing with candidates interview skills, job search etiquette and follow up?
As an expert in the community what advice can you provide?
I too have heard that a great deal of South Florida job seekers simply don't show up! These "no-shows" have missed the most important area every job seeker should master, Networking 101. This is the moment when you sell yourself to an employer and more importantly a HR professional in the community.
These our the people who will affect our future, I really feel sorry for us :(
For instance, take me for example, I've been looking for work for almost a year, I have sent resumes to many employers and I have not been offered an interview, not even an e-mail from the employers thanking me for applying, but the position has been filled. I qualify for the jobs that I apply for. I'm a recent graduate with an Electrical Engineering degree and I have many years of experience in office work. So, for the companies who say that people don't show for interviews, that is B.S, job-seekers don't show for interviews because they don't have one to go to.