Earth?
No. Just every other human on earth.
Earth?
No. Just every other human on earth.
Earth?
No. Just every other human on earth.
It was implied Mr. Literal.
I want and need to apologize to McKell for my initial comment in this thread. I received a few reps and even a text in regards to the post saying that it was neither the time nor the place for my comment. I can definitely see how my post could have been taken and offer my sincerest apology to Archie. My intent was not to belittle him in any way or to make light of the situation.
By all accounts, Archie seems to be a decent dude and good father. He currently finds himself in a situation that calls for support and advice. So, yeah, my bad, Archie. I hope you're able to find work sooner than later and that your financial situation improves.
Update:
I had a job interview last week. Going into the interview, I knew more than likely (99%) I would not take the job, but I figured I should at least interview and brush up on the interview process and game. The job is for a staffing company.
I showed up 5 minutes early and the receptionist gave me some paperwork to fill out. Basically the same damn stuff I give every company twice when submitting my applications online. They wanted stuff they could find in my resume, the online application (basically filling your resume out again after you upload it) and now this paper to hand fill out. Sigh. The job-seeking process is so monotonous and redundant. I want to say I get why they need the same info filled out over and over, but honestly I don't. My brother told me that his company hires third parties to do their applications and says they don't forward the info over of qualified candidates they pass on. It's 2014 people, get with it!
The interviewer asked me maybe one or two typical interview questions. Glanced back and forth at my resume during the interview and asked a few personal, rapport building questions. He asked me what I made with my previous employer and I told him I'd prefer to keep that between me and them. (I don't wanna show my cards.) He did a double-take, almost as he was shocked I responded that way and laughed and asked why. I replied something to the extent of not wanting to show my cards. Anyway, I was surprised with his reaction, almost as if he took it personal.
After a few more minutes of brushing up on my experience, work history, and education he kept saying he knew I had questions for the company, but they all could be answered if I committed to a half-day of work and shadow some people. I felt this was a cope out (he did answer some questions I asked first but kept replying we could do this all day, just come in for a half day.) At this point I just agreed because I knew it was pointless to keep asking questions to someone who was gonna say the same thing over and over again so I asked if I could look around the offices before I left and he agreed. There's more things I could say about my tour, but I don't. I will say though, I've never seen a company so guy-heavy. Pretty much everyone I saw (other than the two receptionist upfront, were dudes and there were a lot of them.)
Reasons why this job isn't for me are many. It's pretty much a phone job talking to people all day about placing them in jobs. Most of my professional experience has been outside (a lot of windshield time), business to business, project development, public relations, marketing and things like that. Sitting in a cubicle and calling people all day long (he was set on telling me all their calls were warm calls with people looking for job placement) sounds just awful and like hell. The schedule was beyond ridiculous (at least to me. Advice?) The hours are 7:30 to 6 Monday through Friday and very limited weekend work. It's about a half hour drive from my house without traffic, so I'd be looking at almost 12 hour days five days a week. The salary is terrible. 30K and pays commission. It sounds like something you could make some pretty good money at with time and being the right person for the job though. But... Not for me. I'm glad I interviewed and I'm keeping my options open. I want to go into something I may not love, but definitely don't want to shoot myself every day. I have a few more interviews next week and I'm sure more and more companies are going to start getting back to me or at least I hope. This is very tiring and stressful.
On a bright note, I will be doing P.R. work for a huge athletic event here in Utah I'll tell you guys about soon. I'm not sure what this project will pay if anything, but it will be something I can add to my portfolio and it's been great networking.
Jesus Arch, they had you fill out the paperwork and asked you how much money you made so he can present positions to you that are commensurate with your background and salary expectations. That's it. If the staffing guy is left in the dark, he may not feel he can present you with anything.
Also, I don't think it would look good to take a job and still keep looking for a better one.
I get that. My problem isn't with filling things out. It's with filling things out over and over again I've already given them. I'll do it, keep doing it, but it doesn't make it less annoying.
I didn't want to reveal how much I made until he told me what the job paid. Why shoot myself in the foot and possibly present a number lower than what they'd be willing to pay? I promise you, it's not uncommon to respond that way. In fact, I'd say it's encouraged by most.
Why? Companies look after themselves. Why not look after yourself?
It's a bit uncommon to say it the way you said it though. You could say, "I'm willing to entertain a salary commensurate with my background" or some bs like that. Don't get all self-defensive up front.
Also, there's a a lot of money to be made in the staffing industry. The top three billers for Robert Half in the entire world all worked out of the same NJ office and all made over 1M...not bad for an 8-5 job. But it sucks and isn't for a lot of people, myself included.
What he's saying (I think) is that if the company you interviewed with, hired you, they would know they hired someone who had taken his previous job only as a temporary solution. This may then lead them to believe that their job too was only temporary for you.
That said, you can spin that just fine imo.
Also, I don't think it would look good to take a job and still keep looking for a better one.
What he's saying (I think) is that if the company you interviewed with, hired you, they would know they hired someone who had taken his previous job only as a temporary solution. This may then lead them to believe that their job too was only temporary for you.
That said, you can spin that just fine imo.
Why? Companies look after themselves. Why not look after yourself?