Ingueferroque
Banned
Just go to the next interview, don't look back.
Job coach with you at a walgreens interview? I think you lost this one early man.
It doesn't sound like you bombed it, but making mistakes during an interview is a great way to avoid them in the future.
Yep...the fresh out of college unemployment rate has just been explained to me.
So today I learned people bring their parents to interviews. I don't know where to start but I'm not surprised so many people out of college can't land a job.
Yep...the fresh out of college unemployment rate has just been explained to me.
Christ. I got a job at McDonald's when I was 15. I rode my damn bike by myself to that interview. I can't even imagine the level of embarrassment having one of my parents at an interview would cause. Jesus....this is when the term "man up" is completely applicable and appropriate.
Don't bring your job coach to your interview. Don't bring anyone to your interview.
But then how will mom handle all the important stuff like negotiating my pay?
Nerves. I practiced and I was still a bit nervous.
I'm going to make a few phone calls tomorrow and see if there's anything I can do. I just feel so awful.
I guess I should look for another part timejob now. I was banking all my hopes on this, but those two fucking questions...
She didn't hold my hand, or say anything. She was there just to observe.Op how is an employer suppose to have confidence in you to be a self motivated, work well with others and by yourself , self starter if you have your hand held at the interview. You were done before you started.
Doesn't matter. Still weird and makes you look like you are eight.She didn't hold my hand, or say anything. She was there just to observe.
She didn't hold my hand, or say anything. She was there just to observe.
It's that and the fact that, at my university, parents don't let their children, or rather don't tell their children to handle their business. I used to work at my university and the amount of calls we'd receive from a parent calling on behalf of their kids for everything was appalling. They learn 0 responsibility.Hah! She'd for sure get me some free socks.
I think it's a problem caused by the fact that people stay in the coddle of University/College life for far too long before dipping their toes in the working (read: real) world.
I don't know why, but I find this very funny.
I'm going to make a few phone calls tomorrow and see if there's anything I can do. I just feel so awful.
I guess I should look for another part timejob now. I was banking all my hopes on this, but those two fucking questions...
I'm going to make a few phone calls tomorrow and see if there's anything I can do. I just feel so awful.
I guess I should look for another part timejob now. I was banking all my hopes on this, but those two fucking questions...
Those two questions won't make or break and interview to be perfectly honest. By now you should know what ruined it for you. The fact that you brought a second party with you into the interview who had business being in there and your clear lack of self confidence. I don't see an employer feeling confident on hiring an employee who can't do things for himself.I'm going to make a few phone calls tomorrow and see if there's anything I can do. I just feel so awful.
I guess I should look for another part timejob now. I was banking all my hopes on this, but those two fucking questions...
Nerves. I practiced and I was still a bit nervous.
I think "don't wear scents or if you do, make sure it's absolutely minimal" is some of the more common interview advice I've heard. I don't really anyway but... The More You Know I guess.I applied for a job as a Brokerage Financial Specialist about a month ago. The interview when fine, at least question-wise, but the recruiter was allergic to my cologne so she was sneezing, coughing, her eyes were red and her face too.. i mean i thought she was gonna die (allergic to Armani. Are you serious? Like.. come on!). Anyways, a friend of mine who happens to work there too, told me that they really liked me.. but i never got the call. Now why would that be lol!!? That woman really hated me and she fucked me over.
So, i know the feeling OP. Like everybody here is saying, on to the next one.
I think "don't wear scents or if you do, make sure it's absolutely minimal" is some of the more common interview advice I've heard. I don't really anyway but... The More You Know I guess.
I think "don't wear scents or if you do, make sure it's absolutely minimal" is some of the more common interview advice I've heard. I don't really anyway but... The More You Know I guess.
Yeah cologne/perfume is a bad idea too. We have a 'fragrance free' workplace policy because of sensitive people and I imagine many other companies do too nowadays.
Hope for the best and prepare for the worst. Continue job hunting while still being prepared to follow-up on that current possibility in case they call back to setup another interview. Most importantly, take note of where you messed up and be better prepared for if that (or related questions/scenarios) comes up in future interviews. The nervousness will still be there at first in later interviews, but as you quickly get into it you actually end up a lot more relaxed as you'll often be facing the same types of questions which you should be able to easily nail down (assuming you've done at least some modicum of preparation of course).
I went through 30+ interviews (counting everything, i.e. phone screens, hiring manager screen, in-person, etc) the past 10 months since getting laid off before finally landing a job. It's been over a decade since I last had to interview, so my earlier interviews were definitely rough as I was getting readjusted. The last couple I definitely felt I nailed it, but after getting to the final 2 or 3 candidates they ended up going with someone else.
Which brings up another point - things like timing and human nature can have a strong effect on things. For those particular spots I came close, I was the first one in for in-person interviews which can put you at a disadvantage - later candidates who come in a few weeks later as they wrap up the process have a good chance of taking the position with a strong enough showing as interviewers are much more likely to forget how interviews earlier on went and rely more on the notes they took back then - you're reduced to a handful of paragraphs and some possibly fuzzy memories going against the most recent interviewee who's fresh in their memory.
While disappointing, the fact that I was still in the running til the end despite being the first one in made it clear to me that I was nailing the interview enough to keep on applying. For the spot I finally got, I was the last one interviewed for once. And thanks to all those damn interviews I've gone through over the past year it was cake. I got the call back more or less hinting they're preparing a formal offer a day later.
Best advice i can give you is for you to forget the interview and immediately focus on a new one unless you received a position "next round" or "you got the job".
You panicked and that is natural. Next time, when you get questions like that, always focus your answer in benefit of the company you are being interviewed for, and if you can, tie it with you aspirations, again in benefit of the company. Never give generic answer like you did as it may work for some, but not many others.
Let me know if you need more interview advice.
Hope for the best and prepare for the worst. Continue job hunting while still being prepared to follow-up on that current possibility in case they call back to setup another interview. Most importantly, take note of where you messed up and be better prepared for if that (or related questions/scenarios) comes up in future interviews. The nervousness will still be there at first in later interviews, but as you quickly get into it you actually end up a lot more relaxed as you'll often be facing the same types of questions which you should be able to easily nail down (assuming you've done at least some modicum of preparation of course).
I went through 30+ interviews (counting everything, i.e. phone screens, hiring manager screen, in-person, etc) the past 10 months since getting laid off before finally landing a job. It's been over a decade since I last had to interview, so my earlier interviews were definitely rough as I was getting readjusted. The last couple I definitely felt I nailed it, but after getting to the final 2 or 3 candidates they ended up going with someone else.
Which brings up another point - things like timing and human nature can have a strong effect on things. For those particular spots I came close, I was the first one in for in-person interviews which can put you at a disadvantage - later candidates who come in a few weeks later as they wrap up the process have a good chance of taking the position with a strong enough showing as interviewers are much more likely to forget how interviews earlier on went and rely more on the notes they took back then - you're reduced to a handful of paragraphs and some possibly fuzzy memories going against the most recent interviewee who's fresh in their memory.
While disappointing, the fact that I was still in the running til the end despite being the first one in made it clear to me that I was nailing the interview enough to keep on applying. For the spot I finally got, I was the last one interviewed for once. And thanks to all those damn interviews I've gone through over the past year it was cake. I got the call back more or less hinting they're preparing a formal offer a day later.
Thanks.
Let's focus on the questions for a bit, specifically the database one. Would you consider search engines like Google a database? A price-checking mechanism on the cash register? My parents seem convinced they do.
I don't know if I was the first, last, or somewhere in between, I'm going to have to look into that and see what the case was. I was told that they would have a decision within a week or so, maybe I was in the middle?
I just know that the process was slow goings- I applied on December 24th, had a pre-test just last week, and had the interview last Monday.
Wow, not sure why or how but your post just reminded me to write a thank you letter for the phone interview I had yesterday. It almost completely slipped my mind probably because I'm fairly confident I'm going to get the job as I nailed the interview, so not sending a thank you letter would have probably screwed me.
I just know that the process was slow goings- I applied on December 24th, had a pre-test just last week, and had the interview last Monday.
Don't fall into that trap. I thought the same thing for at least 2 spots I narrowly missed on (came down to the final 2 candidates, they went with the other guy) and was crushed when it didn't pan out. But as I mentioned above, I did my best to spin that around to a positive because dwelling on it wouldn't help. Again, hope for the best in the back of your mind but actively prepare for the worst and assume you won't get it until they start talking offer.