Hello 1 wrote: » Anyone ever been to a job interview where the job has been already offered to someone else or 'earmarked" for someone else by the time you attend for the interview?
Stephen15 wrote: » (...) they may be looking at is if they may need to replace the preferred candidate if it dosen't work out.
Haithabu wrote: » No pressure then for the candidate
Hello 1 wrote: » I have attended for interviews in the past (2 past interviews to be precise) and was unsuccessful in both. My theory - it seems they only hire candidates who live locally to the business ( same town) and / or are relatives of the existing staff members who are 'shoehorned' into jobs.
alroley wrote: » Yeah like every single teaching job in Ireland
OMM 0000 wrote: » I know you aren't asking for this advice, but I'm going to give it anyway. Assume your failures are due to you, and not due to someone else. So in your case, assume you didn't get the job on both occasions due to you not being the best candidate, rather than there being some conspiracy to secretly hire a relation or whatever. This way you can improve yourself (e.g. your interview skills) rather than doing nothing.
Hello 1 wrote: » I don't agree with you on the above, I have been successful in obtaining other similar roles in building up my job experience, so my past employers in the same line of work to that I am looking for other roles in, obviously did n't hold the view that I was the wrong candidate if I was hired by them.
Corkgirl18 wrote: » Yes. It happens a lot with teaching. Just move on and try to apply for more.
jimbobaloobob wrote: » With the teaching thought aren't a lot of those hired already doing subbing in the schools isn't that better than any interview to prove themselves?
Tom Dunne wrote: » Yeah, I applied for a job where I now see there was a candidate already chosen. The signs were there - interview scheduled for Friday afternoon (suggesting it was a formality and there weren't too many candidates, I was first to be interviewed). Then the interview started 30 minutes late, they were clearly seeing everyone's CV for the first time. The interview itself was brief (30 mins) and HR repeatedly ignored phone calls and emails looking for an update. Six weeks to the day later, they bothered to tell me I was unsuccessful. Very unprofessional.
Avatar MIA wrote: » Employers are damned if they do, damned if they don't. A 30 / 60 minute interview is of limited value in reality, interviewees are well coached and have prepared answers to standard questions. 'Tell us one of your weakness' Cue breathless answer that turns their weakness into a virtue. References can be from effective friends of the interviewee. So, if a position is important other indicators will be more valuable such as personal experience of the person, or recommendation from someone you trust (Nepotism does exist, but is rare enough, imo). BUT, an employer may be required to advertise, or the same people that cry foul over pre-selection would be able to make life difficult for the hiring company.
Hello 1 wrote: My theory - it seems they only hire candidates who live locally to the business ( same town) and / or are relatives of the existing staff members who are 'shoehorned' into jobs.
tedpan wrote: » Really not sure on the point of this thread? How would you know if the position is already filled, I see you have a 'theory' below although it means nothing, only the person(s) hiring and getting hired can be sure of what happened in the process?
Avatar MIA wrote: » Employers are damned if they do, damned if they don't. A 30 / 60 minute interview is of limited value in reality, interviewees are well coached and have prepared answers to standard questions. 'Tell us one of your weakness' Cue breathless answer that turns their weakness into a virtue. References can be from effective friends of the interviewee.
AndrewJRenko wrote: » It sounds like your experience is limited to fairly crap interviewers. Any half-decent interviewers will 1) Not pose standard questions - will pose their questions in a way that tests the candidate ability to interpret and apply their own knowledge and experience 2) Pose follow-up questions that drill into a prepared answer to test whether the person is spoofing, or whether they really understand the issue.
Avatar MIA wrote: » In your experience how normative is that. Are all company owners/interviewers expected to be experts in HR. Dream on.
_Brian wrote: » People who have been repeatedly interviewed by large companies and multinationals get brainwashed into thinking it’s all HR professionals out there. Go to a small company and it’s different, many small companies operate with not one single hr or management trained individual so when it comes to interviewing it’s a bit of a loose process. I’ve seen people ask completely inappropriate questions that could land them is serious hot water.
AndrewJRenko wrote: » Yes, it is different in small companies. In public sector, you won't get onto an interview panel unless you've done interview training, which is right and proper.