Self-Defeating Job-Search Moves to Avoid

Despite the healing economy, employers are often slow to post openings and make hiring decisions. It’s a frustrating situation that can cause eager job candidates to act in counterproductive ways, scotching promising opportunities. Here’s our list of 10 real-life job-search misfires we hope will serve as cautionary tales for job-hunters. Don’t replicate these counterproductive deeds.

Inflicting Gratuitous Interrogation

I was reviewing résumés and found one that stood out in a positive way. I e-mailed the sender and asked whether he had a minute to talk by phone. “I might,” he wrote back. “Where is the company located, what is the starting salary, who is the CEO, and how long have you been in business?” That was the end of the correspondence; our street address was on our home page, the salary was listed in the job ad, and the company story (including inception date and leadership bios) was in the About Us section of our site. In his haste to make sure his time wasn’t wasted—a reasonable goal, in my opinion—the gentleman asked me to answer four questions he’d have already had answers to if he’d done a bit of homework. Lesson: It’s perfectly fine to guard against time-sucking or even bogus job ads, but do it in such a way that you don’t shoot yourself in the foot.

Forgetting Who You’re Interviewing With

The executive director of a small not-for-profit shared this tale with me. “I miraculously got enough money from my board to hire a marketing director last year,” she said. “I was over the moon. I had one precious job opening to fill. I interviewed five people, three of them from industry and two from the not-for-profit world. One of the industry folks was super-smart and insightful. Sadly, she knocked herself out of the running about halfway through the interview.” “How?” I wanted to know. “I asked her to tell me one story that illustrated how she rolls. I told her to think about our five-person agency and what we need in marketing, and tell me a story from her career that would make it clear she belongs here. She told me a story about a 24-month intranet development project involving 60 people across functions and six or seven levels of organizational sign-offs. I was nearly asleep by the time she finished. I think this lady really needs a big company atmosphere.” The job-seeker’s intranet story screamed “I don’t understand scrappy not-for-profits at all.” Lesson: In your written job-search communications and especially on an interview, keep your stories and questions relevant to the hiring manager’s issues.

Selling Yourself Short

A friend at a placement agency told me this story. Last summer she had a candidate on the short list of two finalists for a plum sales management job. She’d just gotten off the phone with the hiring manager, who said, “I have to sleep on it, but I think your guy Frank is getting the job tomorrow,” when Frank himself called her. “Don’t be mad at me,” Frank said. “Oh, no,” said the agent. “What did you do, Frank?” Frank had gotten fearful and had called the hiring manager to say, “If you don’t want me in the sales manager spot, I’ll take a sales territory assignment.” The manager hired him into the territory job and hired the other finalist for the sales management job. The placement agency lady never told Frank how close he’d come to the higher-paying, bigger job. Lesson: Stay the course. You’ll never show an employer what you’re worth, or persuade them they need you, by groveling.

Letting Minor Adversity Vanquish You

“I am so frustrated with my job search,” said a man I met at the library. “I had an interview last week, and when I got there at 20 after 5, the front door was locked,” he said. “Did you go around to the back?” I asked. “Did you call or text HR or the hiring manager?” “No, I went home,” said the gentleman. “When I got home, there was a message telling me the front door would be locked and I should go around, but I had left home before that message arrived.” “Did you reschedule?” I asked him. “No, I figured the opportunity was lost.” “Call them!” I said. He did, but they’d filled the job already. Lesson: Corporate hiring types are no different from anyone else; they make mistakes. On one job interview back in my 20s, I walked around the whole building looking for an open door for a 5:30 interview, and I finally walked across the loading dock to get in. Show your resourcefulness by rolling with the interview punches.

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