Page 214 - John Kador - 301 Best Questions to Ask on Your Interview, Second Edition-McGraw-Hill (2010)
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YOU BLEW THE INTERVIEW. NOW WHAT?

        the recruiter is willing to communicate the bad news, then the inter-
        viewer may be more willing to tell the truth. A hospital administra-

        tor told me the story of an otherwise well-qualified candidate for a
        position as a hospital administrator who was rejected because he
        was chewing gum at the interview. Sound unfair? Maybe, but that’s
        why some candidates get rejected. It was clear that the interviewer
        would not have revealed that critical fact directly to the candidate.
        But to the recruiter who presented the candidate, the interviewer
        could be more direct. The recruiter then had the unenviable task of
        confronting the candidate with the costs of his gum chewing. The
        good news is that the candidate learned, gave up the gum, and soon
        got a well-paying position.
          Sometimes the subjectivity of hiring managers can be unreason-
        able. A recruiter for TMP Worldwide, Inc., in Tampa, Florida, told
        me about working with a hiring manager who rejected a perfectly
        qualifi ed candidate because of a clothing accessory the candidate
        wore. After the recruiter pressed the interviewer for a reason why
        the candidate was rejected, the interviewer reluctantly said that it
        was because of a turtle broach the candidate wore on the lapel of her
        tailored suit. It turns out that the interviewer questioned her profes-
        sionalism for wearing a turtle broach to a job interview. There is no
        way the candidate would have gotten that feedback directly. “I tell
        candidates that story from time to time,” the recruiter says, “because
        I want them to know that it is the little things that can get you ruled
        out late in the game.” The important thing is to get accurate feed-
        back whenever possible.





        CUTTING THROUGH THE PRETENSE
        There is one strategy for cutting through the pretense, but it’s pretty
        strong medicine and it doesn’t always work. Of course, you have little
        to lose. I personally have had success with it, so I know it can pay off.
        After you are rejected for a position and you genuinely don’t know






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