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Employer “unable to provide any feedback” about interview process

1 pointsby bobloblaw02over 9 years ago
This is a rant thread. I know, and apologize in advance. But, if you ask me to give 8-10 hours of my time over a week or two to interview with your company and submit a take home test and then tell me you&#x27;re moving on with other applicants, please at least give me some kind of feedback that might help me improve.<p>After receiving the email saying you&#x27;re moving on with other candidates, I wrote back politely asking for specific feedback. Why did I not meet your company&#x27;s expectations?<p>To say that you are unable to provide any feedback at this time is not only terribly unhelpful for any future interviews I need to prepare for, but also just a flat out lie.<p>This is most upsetting because the rest of the interview process was very professional and timely.<p>Has anyone had this experience before?

3 comments

yoloswaginsover 9 years ago
Sharing feedback is a huge risk for companies. Giving feedback after a rejection provides them ammunition for a potential discrimination lawsuit.<p>For this specific case, your best bet is to follow up with individuals after the interview, and ask for very specific things, rather than asking someone in HR.<p>One good way to ask for feedback has been to ask, &quot;Is there anything that is giving you a pause for concern, or anything that gives you uncertainty about continuing the process?&quot; The best time to ask is as the second question after the interviewer asks, &quot;Do you have any questions for me?&quot;.<p>When you get a good response from that question, it allows you to confront your perceived weaknesses. At worst, it tells you something you already knew, &quot;You could have solved the white board question in N time.&quot;<p>Getting good feedback is hard, both for the person to give, and for the asker to receive and process. Don&#x27;t take it personally that people don&#x27;t want to give you feedback.
snap12789over 9 years ago
Wow, fuck those guys; an 8-10 hour interview process with no feedback? Even if you do receive feedback, I wouldn&#x27;t take it seriously. This interview sounds abusive and unprofessional, but hey, they wouldn&#x27;t have done it if they didn&#x27;t find applicants.
pavornyohover 9 years ago
Sorry to hear. It is ok to rant and this happens quite often. I personally don&#x27;t understand why as you want to give the candidate concrete feedback so that they can work on whatever didn&#x27;t get them the job.<p>Also, there are legal reasons tied to it.