Back in the early 90s, I was told that I lost a job because the person who interviewed me hadn't received a thank you letter-TWO days after the interview. They said I was the best candidate for the position, but I wasn't grateful enough to have immediately typed out a letter and mailed it to them. I dodged a bullet there.
I once dodged a howitzer shot. It was for a job in the international division of a consulting firm. A man walked into the interview and asked if I was related to one of my uncles; I said "yes, he's my uncle, why?" and he told the head of the international division "don't even think about it". "Hey, next time you'll reject someone for their lastname at least do it before they come, save them the trip!" Asking my uncle: dude had been one of uncle's coworkers until he caught wind that uncle was investigating him and hoofed it (uncle was one of the internal auditors in their accounting team). The investigation eventually proved that several of dude's closest buddies had been stealing from the company. Dude was the head of the national division for this other company I'd been interviewing at. I'm female, some 25 years younger than Uncle and not an accountant, but hey: "don't hire her, she's likely to be honest" is a compliment in my book.
If I were the deaf actor, I'd have taught my replacement all the wrong words. The entire Deaf community would have eaten the movie producers for dinner! lol
Maybe sneak in a few rude ones as well, or maybe ones that reveal the rejection, ie they rejected a girl for this part because she is deaf, and then cast me, rewrote it, and got her to train me in one day!
I was rejected for a job in another department with the same company I worked with. When I asked why, they said “you don’t have the right qualifications and experience.” Then they listed the requirements and I said “I have been doing all of those tasks for this company for 7 years! I also do..” and I listed all my other job duties. The HR person then asked “Well then why are you applying for this position?” To which I replied “Because it is 50% less work 30% more pay, no 24/7 on call, no nights and weekends. As opposed to my current position which is a lot more responsibility, a lot less pay, graveyard shift Thursday through Tuesday plus a daytime Tuesday staff meeting and the same job title.” The next day that other job listing was gone, nobody was hired for it, and I never heard from that HR rep again.
The real estate example here: I would have turned this back on the interviewer by saying that "A conflict between a viewing and my mother's funeral would never come up because that would be such an insensitive situation that it could never come up in a company that was run by any manager with an ounce of humanity. Don't you agree?" If they didn't immediately back track I would then tell them that they don't come up to my required standards as an employer and terminate the interview.
Reminds me of an I terrier a friend had. They wanted her to run a battery (gauntlet, really) of tests to see if she would be a good fit. She turned it back on them. She wanted to interview the person currently in the position to decide if she even wanted the job, and not waste both her own and the company's HR's time. She was hired that day.
This. If they literally said 'we aren't gonna hire you *because you're deaf,* that's a slam-dunk case for disability discrimination. Plenty of films have employed actually-deaf actors successfully without major safety incidents, so they can't even use safety concerns as a scapegoat. It's just straight up discrimination. I hope that production company takes it where the sun don't shine for that.
I had the interviewing manager spend 30 minutes critiquing my resume format. What he didn't know, apparently, was I'd been personally invited to interview by the HR director. The HR director called me at home to get feedback. She was incredibly mad. I got an apology from the interviewing manager with the HR director on the call. Then was offered the job. I politely declined.
@deannal.newton9772 - I think he was annoyed he HAD to interview me. He hated the HR director. Probably because she was a woman, outranked him and was younger than he was. Cardinal sins... :-)
I applied for a job, was told I was a very good fit, discussed all the usual things, said I was looking forward to starting asap and the boss as a final casual throwaway remark asked what kind of motorbike I had... when I said I didn't own one and preferred to drive a car, interview over, thanks for coming, no job... I thought I was applying for a job, not asking to join a biker gang...
I once overheard 2 people on a train talking about a woman who had come into their company for an interview. One of the people had interviewed her and thought she was great but needed the sign off from the CEO so she asked him to meet with the candidate. His feedback was that she was a lovely person with just the right skills but wouldn't fit in with the 'aesthetics' of the office as she was too 'big'!
I have never worn makeup during any interviews. I dress smart. Black pencil skirt, white blouse. I'm clean and I've got nice perfume on. But I hate makeup with a passion. If someone told me I didn't have makeup on during an interview, and I didn't get the job because of it, I'd tell them to stick it where the sun doesn't shine. So shallow of a company to say crap like that.
@@susannahwilkinson5254 This. Yeah, it's sexist. I'm like abikt in that I don't like wearing makeup. I'll do it on occasion, but it messes with my skin too much. I've also got a pock-marked face from really bad puberty-fueled pimples, and I still get pimples all the time no matter what I do. If I had a job that provided healthcare, I could get medication to wrangle my hormones into a normal range, but I can't get a job because I'm too fugly- because of the pimple problem I need healthcare to deal with. It's a feedback loop. Capitalism would rather I just crawled in a ditch and died.
I can't wear makeup, have tried many different kinds but my skin reacts to everything. Years ago, I was told when I went for a job interview that I needed to wear makeup. I can't understand how me being able to do a job relies on me wearing make up.
Should'a tossed out the words 'medical' and 'discrimination' on your way out the door to rattle 'em. Not in a directly threatening way, ofc, just in an off-handed way. 'Oh, once again, my medical condition leads to a discrimination-based rejection. I guess I'll have to keep looking for an employer that follows the law.'
I was rejected for a job in forestry managment by HR as the interviewer reported I didn't have the correct tickets for the role. When I pointed out that had presented all the correct licenses required, and another 6 or 7 not specified on the job description making me more qualified than ANY of their other current staff, many of which had worked with and trained in my previous job, I heard nothing back. I later found out that the lead foreman who conducted the interview didn't want someone more qualified than him on the team and had falsified the interview report.
I got this feedback for a Design Leadership role: “You came across as too polished, you interviewed really well, and your portfolio presentation really resonated with the hiring manager. They just thought you were too good for the role.”
This reminds me of an interview I did where the interviewer asked, "If you were in a situation where you weren't prepared for something, but called on to do it, how would you proceed?" I tried to give my best answer in the realm of "I'd do what I can, try to figure out what's possible, possibly ask for help, etc." His reply was that I should NEVER be in a situation where I'm not prepared and ended the interview shortly afterwards. He GAVE me the scenario. Don't ask questions you don't want answers for.
I've come to the conclusion to NOT take interviews personally anymore. You'll either get people who are incompetant interviewing you (I've seen it from within, where people who aren't technically interviewing people for technical roles) OR, as I've also witnessed this and had it happen to me twice, they already have someone they want for the job, but HR has made them have interviews anyway. So they fudge the interview so everyone else is rejected and their "mate" gets the job instead.
This may be somewhat off-topic, but it's zany enough to mention. In the town where I live there is a center for in-coming calls. The employees have no direct contact with the public yet the office has a dress code that requires the phone workers to wear a certain kind of shoe.
I hate makeup. You can't pay me enough to wear it. I like how it looks on other people when it's not overdone, but it doesn't blend in on my skin. I can feel it all day, and it drives me nuts. It also takes too much time to put on and take off. I have better things to do.
I got offered a job managing a franchise after going through 3 interviews. When i finally got the call with the job offer i accepted immediately and was told i would be given my start date and papwrwork in the upcoming week, waited two weeks then called the company owner to be told sorry but he had decided to hire his friend instead
I used to work in a fish and chip takeaway shop with a restaurant attached upstairs. Sometimes the counter staff would go upstairs to help the person who ran the restaurant. When one of the girls who worked as a waitress up there quit, I asked if I could be considered for the role, as I enjoyed the work. I was told I would potentially be allowed if I "Straightened my hair and wore more makeup because then I might be considered pretty enough"". My hair is naturally curly, but I tie it back to keep it tidy. Admittedly I wasn't wearing makeup, but bear in mind I worked at the counter of a fish and chip shop. It was hot and greasy and sweaty down there. Make up would have been not just unsanitary but also just gross feeling as it began to melt etc. To this day I still think that was definitely a bad reason to not be allowed to apply for the position of waitress upstairs. Didn't know you had to be a natural beauty to serve fish and chips before that.
I work at a university here in the U.S. that understandably will do in-house hiring for a position that opens up. However there is a requirement that jobs have to be advertised to the public on the university website. Even if someone already working in the office or department is going to get the job, the job has been advertised and people are applying for it even though there's no chance they will get the job. A total waste of time and a cruel thing to do to people who are looking for work.
Seems to happen a lot with government departments and similar in Australia as well. I had two unique skill & experience sets combined, in a rural area. Even though I chased up the recruiting company a couple of times (being fobbed off effectively) I think I was ghosted in the end. It was all very strange.
@@andrewbrendan1579 Yeah, that's a typical bureaucratic cover your ass move. That way they can claim they did everything by the book and above board. It's utter BS.
@@andrewbrendan1579 Same with my University but only because we’re a state uni and that’s the law. However, laws like this get passed because there has been some past incident.
Yes, my alma mater and former employer does this all the time. It is the law that they have to post the positions. My advice is ...get a temporary job and do well. You have a leg up in that case. BTW, I am in Florida, USA.
mmmmh, a lot of people here seem to underestimate that the reason given is quite often different from the reason why. And petty or stupid as the reason given may seem, you can be sure that the reason why is something they can't outright tell you without incurring in a lawsuit. For instance, "You don't wear enough makeup" easily translates to "You are prettier than me without any makeup, no way in hell I'll let you get this job"
I went on a job interview and the two people interviewing me asked why I had applied, since I had no experience in construction. I was baffled, since I have several years of experience in construction. I looked over at the paper they were looking at AND IT WASN'T MY RESUME! They apparently had another person with my first name also applying and just grabbed the paper with that name on it. I had a copy of my resume and handed it to them and they took a minute to look it over. That ended my interest in the company right there.
I tried to move from part time to full time at Best Buy. First time I tried, I was told that I wasn’t knowledgeable enough in car electronics (the bane of everyone’s existence). Okay. I immersed myself in that section. Volunteered every time someone needed help. Managed to hold my own. Second interview, I described how I took their advice and I’d worked hard to learn the department. They took my words as “admitting I wasn’t knowledgeable about car fi.” The kicker? During the rejection meeting, the person who got the position over me got on the radio asking for help in car electronics because she couldn’t answer any questions.
@@rsh793 Acting isn't THAT different in terms of disabilities, especially when it comes to deaf actors. There've been PLENTY of deaf actors. The industry knows how to handle it safely and make the necessary accommodations. It was straight up discrimination, nothing more.
I find that being rejected for a position because she didn't wear makeup is incredibly offensive. How does the way you look affect your ability to do anything? Obviously taking into consideration that you should be clean, tidy and smart. It's like saying girls with specs can't be attractive. Dodged a bullet there - imagine the culture
I've previously worked in nursing for many years. I've known nurses who wore bare minimum makeup, some on night shift who wore no makeup, and then other nurses who came in full face done up like going to a pageant or modeling gig makeup. And while most nurses I knew went for hair worn up, either basic ponytail or pinned up in a bun, others came in with going g to church curl and comb out look or going to the club big hair. As someone who got down and dirty , working hand in hand with the CNAs to change linens, dress wounds, help patients to the toilet, etc I still can't see how they maintained their appearance throughout their shift. I came off some shifts looking like a sweaty, frazzled dandelion, with loose hair poofing out of my ponytail or bun at all angles.
@@RogbodgeVideo Because the job was not about through-put of work, it was about obtaining clients. It doesn't really matter if it's right or wrong lol, it's just the truth. It does make a difference even if we don't want it to. Especially with boomers who you're trying to woo into being clients.
Before COVID, I got turned down for a software developer job because they thought I lived too far away. What was really ridiculous is that I went through three in-person interviews with them. They knew where I lived from my resume. Why have me come in three times when they already decided I lived too far away? They actually asked the recruiter I was working with if I was willing to move closer to the office.
I believe that commute times are factored in, because they want to know how fast you can be at the office if you are called in unexpectedly. One of my clients was decently sized company. And they encouraged their new employees (who often moved from out of town) to rent close to the business, just so employees wouldn't have to travel far. Some employees even had such a short commute that could spend their lunch hour at home.
@@finris1Lots of software roles don't have any support requirements. They want you to move because they want you to work long hours. Edited to say: I was turned down for a project because I refused to move to the town. I had previously done two projects in that town with different companies from where I live which is an hour's commute. In all my software roles there is no out of hours or rota of support required. Looking at Glassdoor and other sites it appeared that company often made people work longer hours though to be fair in software roles it's expected.
Jonathan Chang story. Knew a cop, let's call him Andy Brown, had a wife and kids and lived in a police house. He had taken and passed his promotion exams. He was called up for a promotion ceremony and given his stripes. Then they told him where he was going, to a post with another police house, and he said, but that house isn't big enough for my family! They replied, but you didn't say anything about that before? He says, I've never seen that house before. They had promoted the wrong Andy Brown, but couldn't take it back!
Right out of highschool i walked into a daycare center with a help wanted sign in the window and asked for an application. Was given a runaround and finally told, without ever receiving said application, that they couldnt hire me without experience, but got the impression that i was rejected for being a man not for lack of experience.
As a stay at home dad for many years I found that being male was a huge disadvantage when applying for work in that sector. My kids school did not have a single man on their staff and jobs frequently went to friends of those in charge.
Misogyny. Being rejected for not wearing makeup is like being rejected for not having a moustache. Being rejected for straightened hair is like being rejected for plucking your unibrow.
@@drhelenloney1426 I thought that too, but wanted to keep it short, and didn't want to attract the "race card!!!" trolls. So, between you and me, being rejected for straightening instead of keeping it "natural" is like being rejected for getting a fade and an edge-up.
I remember the worst interview experience I had - graduate recruitment out of university, big 4 accounting firm. Got flown up for the interview which was a panel interview, then psychometric testing, then a one on one, then knowledge testing, then another one on one, and finally a cocktail evening. Cocktail evening started at 630, the flight they'd booked me on home was at 8. I went for half an hour, then called a taxi to get to the airport. Got rejected the following week, because I left the cocktail early, despite them booking the flight. When I explained that, they said that I should've stayed for the cocktail and rebooked onto a later flight at my own expense.
Appearance... get this. I recommended a suit and tie to a friend of mine, who was interviewing for a manager position in a company, where I had a mole. That mole then informed me, that he was rejected, because he came in a suit... not even kidding. The same friend tried to become a tram driver a while back. He got rejected for quote: "achieving too good a result in psyche tests" Not joking.
I am suspicious that "too good a result in the psych test" was not a positive thing... No company wants to tell you that you are too unstable to drive a tram!
Mine was more frustrating. Had been out of work for a few months (GFC and all that). Interview went really well, had very good experience in the sector, even answered some tricky questions to his satisfaction. When asked why I had been out of work 'so long' I replied that I had been the front runner on a couple of positions, but they went with internal promotions, which was disappointing (all true btw). A day or two later I got the call back that "sorry, you were not successful, we went with an internal promotion". Picture the cartoon steam from ears.
I truly hope you read this one. My best friend was working for a publishing company. I would normally try a tactful way to explain this but I'll just say that she definitely inherited her mother's ample chest and THEN SOME. Soon after being hired she was called into HR for dressing inappropriately. Now please understand. My best friend is modest and doesn't show off her body even when she is dressed up to go out. It's just her personal preference. So I know for a fact that she didn't (and still DOESN'T) own terribly revealing pieces of clothing. Nevertheless, she spent a bunch of money on clothing that the sales people agreed would be excellent for work. Among the new clothes was even a shirt that another woman in the office owned and wore to work. She was dragged into HR *again* where they told her she needed to be more modest. At this point she had already sunk hundreds of dollars into new clothes and wasn't about to go shopping a second time - it's not like the company was going to reimburse her for these new items and she didn't feel comfortable spending even more money just because of her large chest. The day she was wearing *the very same shirt* as her coworker, she was fired. My friend literally *lost her job because she has large breasts.* Apparently people can't look at them without making her into a sex object. What was she meant to wear? Was she supposed to tape them down (wouldn't have worked) or pay out of pocket for a reduction? A reduction is not covered by insurance until you back begins to be injured. She would have been out of pocket $10,000 at least just to be able to wear perfectly normal and professional clothing. So yeah, there are undoubtedly different rules for man and women regarding not only their dress codes but their bodies as well. If I had been that young woman who lost a job opportunity because of wearing no makeup I likely would have asked how many of the men showed up without wearing it. For all they knew this woman could have an allergy to silicone (something in a LOT of makeup) or other ingredients. If her only crime was not augmenting her appearance to someone else's standard the company frankly doesn't deserve her the same way that publisher certainly didn't deserve my best friend.
I just got a reduction this year. I have very good insurance. Just the hospital portion was around $30,000. After in-network discounts, my out-of-pocket will be about $1200. I forget how much the total was for the pre-discounts were for the anesthesiologist, surgeon, and , easily $40,000-$50,000, with all 4 items.
@@amethystanne4586 Wow. I had a medically necessary reconstruction that wasn't covered by insurance. I'm just now realizing how wonderful my surgeon is regarding his rates! And considering he managed everything I was hoping for and more just makes me feel blessed.
@@amethystanne4586 If it was for pain-reduction reasons or for your own mental health (NOT including mental strain put on you by others discriminating against you), then it makes sense to get a reduction. But *nobody* should have to go under the knife for a job. Period. Demanding that someone permanently modify their physical appearance for a job should be illegal.
I interviewed at a University department business office. When i sat down in front of the department head's desk, she could barely see me for all the stacks of file folders on her desk. Flipping through a few of them, then taking a big bite out of her deli sandwich, she said, "Who are you again?" Ended up offering me the job but i declined.
I went for an admin role, which would have been my second job after graduating, the first being teaching which is a whole other awful story. But anyway, I was 24. I got told by one of the two MDs at a radiator company, "Hey we really liked you, and are thinking of offering you the job, but would it be okay if you came and spoke to my partner? I'm sure it will just be a formality. You seem like a really good fit." No problem. Wore my hair up, a little scarf, my "weather girl" suit. I looked nice and presentable. My make-up game has never been particularly strong, but then again, I'm not a supermodel. Just a little short lass with mousy brown hair and a great CV. MD No. 2 did not smile when I went into the room. He did not say hello. He said as soon as I'd sat down with a big exhalation of air, "Look, I don't think this job is for you. We're looking for a graduate." "Oh, well, that's lucky," I said, keeping a smile on my face. "I have a dual honour degree, 2:1, plus subsidiary subjects. And the PGCE. But anyway, I am definitely a graduate." "I meant recent graduate," he said, with an even deeper frown. "Well, that's lucky again," I said. "I graduated less than 2 years ago, which means I am definitely a recent graduate." "No, no, no. It's not going to work. Just go." Flipping heck. As I walked out, the PA was looking at me with absolute horror on her face, and I affirmed what had just happened, and she mouthed, "So sorry," at me. I mean, like I said, I am no supermodel, but it couldn't be clearer, that for a crappy little admin entry role on an industrial estate in the middle of Willenhall, that fella was expecting one.
I was rejected from a job I was already doing because and I quote "my future looked too uncertain". I really wish that I was kidding. The worst part was that the candidate they eventually chose was the same age as me and had less work experience....
@@EmperorsTeeth not even... it was an entry level civil service job. The pay is based on a national scale in my country. You earn exactly the same regardless of your experience or age.
I once applied for a job and got no feedback. A year later, they wrote to me that they were inviting me for an interview. By that time, I had already forgotten that I applied to that company and was already in a new position.😅
I once got a call saying they were calling me about the job. "Which one?" "The one you applied for!" "I apply to about 5 jobs per week, ma'am, you'll need to provide more detail." It was for a job I'd applied to three months before. Apparently she expected people to just hold their breath while their company finished scratching its collective butt.
Notice the two sides of the women-can't-win coin. A woman is rejected because she's not artificial enough--her natural face without makeup is deemed unprofessional--or she's too artificial, because, god forbid, she straightened her hair. It's time to get rid of these arbitrary sexist "standards" for women.
Men have standards to. Must wear suit, nice hair, groomed face. It's business both sexes have to deal with looking the part. Edit: there's literally a comment I just came across any how a man was rejected because he wore a suit, proving is both sexes that have to deal with standards.
This is an issue for both sexes. When my husband was laid off (the whole department was laid off, not just him), he went to a lot of interviews, even though he was very competent in his field, he still didn't land a job. Yes, being the typical nerd in IT that he is, he often wore a T-shirt and an unkempt beard. The unemployment office came to his aid and suggested that he dress more professionally next time. Wear a more formal shirt, shave his beard, and organize his CV. He nailed the next interview and has worked for that company now for 12 years.
I once was given the full tour treatment (the interview with the HR went well, so she called in the head of the department, it went well enough to call my would-be future boss. This went so well that we went to meet the team. Then like 2 minutes in, the boss got a phone call, then 2 minutes after, he told me they gonna call me back. Then I got ghosted. But the absolute worst was with a big engineering company preparing a billon-sized tender bid concerning an 100 year old engineering feat that I am interested enough to have done an extensive website about. I got called to meat a very nice woman engineer who ushered me in a meeting with 6 or 7 engineer, plus the VP of a big local engineering firm. We talk for at least two hours, then I was invited for lunch. Each time I got invited for lunch, I got the job, usually... Then nothing. Totally ghosted.
2 years ago i got rejected from a job that was a 20 min commute because the company found someone who lived closer. a week later the job was advertised again (automotive parts delivery driver)
Got ghosted after doing an unpaid trial shift with someone. Was told by the assistant manager she wanted me but the manager 'was useless at making decisions'. Think I dodged a bullet.
I‘m an electronis technician. I once got rejected because „the team you‘d be joining consists only of women. Adding a man to the mix would disrupt the social dynamics of the team.“
The makeup one is ridiculous I haven't worn makeup for decades and I've never had anyone turn me down for a job because I'm not wearing makeup. I also refused to wear high heels they're bad for your ankles and your feet and I've had surgery on my left ankle. Even though I can wear heels I already have arthritis in that ankle so it would cause major damage. I would say if women have to wear makeup and heels, men should as well.
I once drove over 4 hours to Oxford for a developers role with a nano tech company. I did my presentation in the board room with an overhead projector and answered all the questions thrown at me. At the end my interviewer told me that I was the best candidate and my presentation was the best that HE HAD EVER SEEN!!!!!!! Half an hour after leaving I was informed that I had been rejected because they wanted someone local. They knew I was not local as my address was on my CV.
As I was driving home (4 hours min( I was asked by an agency if I could get to the Lake District (UK), a 4 hour drive for an interview the following day. I turned round and headed north, braved a 2 hour traffic jam around Birmingham and arrived very late. At the interview I was given some code. It was awful. I commented that the code was not fit for purpose as it was just one long chunk without comments, documentation and explanations. Variables did not reflect their purpose. It had been written by the guy interviewing me. I did not get the job, they refused to pay my hotel bill after saying they would, and it was a mere 6 hour drive home. A really crap 2 days!!!!!
Oh, I once interviewed at UPS. Programming. Was given sample code and asked to spot/fix the error. I did. Also spotted an "extra" error in the question (2 arguments to a function were reversed). Never got the job. Heard from a bud on the inside that the topic came up, and that I showed Bad Form in correcting the interviewer. I didn't, just pointed out the question as-written had an "extra" mistake, and I had no idea *whose* mistake that was. Could've just as easily been deliberate, as a "trick question", and that they would've *wanted* me to find/fix the *TWO* errors in the code, not just one.
I remember going to a design tech firm in North London for a job interview. I sent my CV and I did mention that I have a stammer that I have a history of stammering. They rejected me even though they said that I was perfect for the job.
President Biden is a stammerer. So were Aristotle, Charles Darwin, Marilyn Monroe, Virgil, Winston Churchill, Demosthenes, King George VI of England, Emperor Claudius I...............
I recently got rejected from a role for not being vastly overqualified. They have an unwritten job spec they want filled, but are advertising a lower job spec. The company has been trying to fill this role for over a year.
I’m in a small workshop. As part of my interview I was taken into the shop and introduced to the technicians. The next time they interviewed someone, after they finished their interview, the boss came through and asked what we thought about them. Very nice, too bad they stopped doing that because we called the candidates right.
A friend of mine was denied a promotion because, despite she had excelled in the role, her male colleague was moping, and needed a promotion to motivate him to do better. Tech in the late 80s.
My husband once lost a job because the HR woman thought he was brusque when he went into to discuss the terms. She had kept him waiting an hour, on his lunch break, when he had not yet given his notice at his old place. Lesson, suck up to HR, some companies actually let them them make decisions.
Like the first lady, I also do not really wear makeup. I have only been unsuccessful at three interviews. All three interviewers that rejected me were other women and all of them had made a comment about my appearance in one form or another, though I never asked why they rejected me so they may have had other reasons. All my successful interviews were conducted by men and they never said a word about the way I looked. Whether right or wrong, I have been left with the impression that women bosses/recruiters are more about style over substance.
When my son was still at school, I kept telling him to work hard, go the extra mile, ask questions because learning was a good discipline and would show potential employers that he was keen to progress etc. I wanted to set him up for life as an adult, so he would always be able to have work. So we moved back to this area when he was 17 and he applied for a manual agricultural job near where we lived. He was told that he didn't get the job because he was too intelligent and they wanted someone who'd stay with them for years and not look for something better or more challenging. He's now middle aged, in a responsible IT job and is *still* educating himself. He's just got *another* degree, letters after his name and everything. I am so proud of him.
I was asked during an interview how I would estimate how many airplanes there are in the world if I didn’t have access to the Internet or any other resources. I’m guessing this is one of those questions where they just want to see how you think. But I considered it a waste of my time and said so and ended the interview. This was after being given wrong directions on where to park and how to get into the building, the interview started late, and then it was 45 minutes of this guy acting like the job opening was God’s gift to humanity. That question was the breaking point.
A reason why the entire process of getting a job is so infuriating is that you can do everything right up to the judgment, taking all the tests, studying the role, practicing responses, but be still at the mercy of someone's whims and biases.
I interviewed at a boat and marine place. They loved my experience, resume, etc. During interview they asked why i wanted to leave job currently at where had been for five years. I told them, honestly , that i don't like to speak ill of places, but in the last year they had shifted away from customer service and into a more commercial sales role. I was not as enthusiastic about that, so was looking for a place focused on customer service. When i failed to get the job, i asked for input. They said felt i bashed my current employer so didn't want me.
Employers in general don't have the decency to communicate with prospective employees. It seems to be that they don't get any benefit from even just sending a stock 'thanks but no thanks' letter/email, so they don't bother. It gets so frustrating as a job seeker.
I remember reading about the first one somewhere online. If I recall, that guy got absolutely roasted and hoisted by his own tiny petard in the comments.
I was once rejected for an internal promotion at a company I’d been at for years because the manager “felt like he would struggle to manage me” despite working together for three years and I believed we had a good working relationship. Turned out he was just two faced. I am very outspoken, if I think something is wrong I will vocalise it and offer alternatives. This manager used to always listen to my objections and ideas and actually implemented a lot of them. He later moved on and I ended up with his position anyway, but after he left I found out I had my career held back by 18 months or so because my manager was insecure and slightly scared of me 😂😂
The ghosting thing is a huge problem at the moment especially in the construction sector been experiencing this a lot lately and when its direct with companies
I was lucky that I worked in "mom and pop" print shops and was able to wear casual clothing and never wore makeup. Also, I mostly worked on my own and was not a face to the public. But the times I did, I was always clean, neat and presentable. It saved me spending money on makeup and fancy clothes!
I remember years ago when I lived in the UK that women were getting fired for not wearing stilettos. What brought it to attention was a lady who’d hurt her foot wore flats to work and she was told to go home and get “proper” shoes that met the official dress code. She tried to explain the issue and I think they fired her. Once that was made public, women came out of the woodwork saying they’d had similar issues with their companies’ dress codes. This was before social media so for it to go viral was a real thing. Lots of companies shamed for their horrible dress codes.
Put the stilettos on a belt at your waist and wear flats on your feet. Malicious compliance to the max. Get every woman to do it at every job across the whole country. If the men wanna join in by wearing their wives' stilettos on their belts, that's even better. Make the awful men in power feel embarrassed about their stupid, sexist dress codes.
I got put onto a college course pacifically dedicated to training me for the position. At the end of the 5 month course I was told that the position has been filled and was no longer available three days in.
With the third story I had to rewind just to check whether the job she was applying for was at a department store makeup counter because that would be a legitimate reason.
I only apply to companies that are part of the Circle Back Initiative, where employers commit to responding to every job applicant. It saves a lot of issues.
My weirdest experience interviewing for a graduate engineering position was being asked what member of Alice in Wonderland's tea party I would be and why. That, for me, came out of left field.
I interviewed & received a job. I relocated to the town and went in for handover only to be told that they offered the job to someone else. The reasoning being that he and his family couldn’t relocate until they found her replacement as a Kindy Teacher. I had the qualifications also as a teacher so they offered me a part-time teaching position over a Managerial full-time position! I was very disheartened over the integrity of the Environmental company. The new Manager didn’t even last long and the company approached me afterwards to offer me the role! To say I was utterly disgusted is an understatement!
I've been ghosted more times than I care to remember. And for one job (as a gravedigger) it took them over a year after the interview they finally told me I didn't get the job (No s🤬, Sherlock; I'd long since figured that out by then). Another gravedigger job I was told the job was being put on "indefinite hold," which is just a way of saying the position was already filled via nepotism and they were just covering themselves. That's just the tip of the iceberg of stories I could tell.
At 16 and trying to find my feet in the working world I went for an apprenticeship in a hairdressers. Walked an hour in the rain to get there. I did a full 8 hour trial day for free, to be told I wasn’t pretty enough and wasn’t ’made-up’ enough to work for them, but they did want me to come back for a second trial day for free the next day 🙃. I did not return.
What? So they said "we are not gonna hire you, but you can make work another day here for free" or...? But I understand your pain, years and years ago I applied to position of busboy in one hotel and I was first ghosted and then told that I'm not qualified enough. I still don't know what qualification is needed for picking up dirty dishes and loading them in dishwasher (except hands).
@@simonspacek3670 I still love how companies want so much experience for such a job 🤦♀️ that’s ridiculous, ahh yes totally have my level 3 and 5 years experience in sponge handling 🙄😂. And they did exactly that! I think I was just so young and new they were trying to take the mick and have me do another day of rolling towels and sweeping for free, ‘we’re willing to let you come back and try again tomorrow!’ As if they were doing me a favour, whilst I was trying to hold back tears. I’m so glad they showed their colours early on now though. Truly knocked my confidence for a while at the start.
The "hair straightening" one immediately made me wonder if it was perhaps an interview for a modelling gig: I could imagine, and I'm by no means an expert on such things, that it would be useful for a hair and make-up professional to see someone *before* they've spent an indeterminate amount of time on their hair, to gauge how easy their hair is to work with.
An internal manager role at the same level as I was already in. So essentially an internal transfer to another team doing the same job. I got turned down because I had too much experience.
You can tell that the realtor who asked that either/or question had an employee choose "wrong" as well. I had someone ask me during an interview for an administrative assistant position (small office, basically asst. and the main guy) if I had planned on getting pregnant. Illegal question? 100% but his last person had went out on maternity leave and didn't come back. Wonder why lol.
Did happen to me that i got negative feedback that i was ''not representing the company well enough'' as I was not in a 3 piece suit or at least a full shirt'n tie. I was not working with client nor working with people outside of the company. I wanted to tell them ''the 30 min i prep my suit is 30 minutes that I am not putting in my work, so you want to pay me too look good and not do good work, got it'' but I stayed silent and move on.
I sometimes interview for my firm. My fellow interviewer, a male, did not want to put a candidate through because she was ‘too fat’. I told him to go look in a mirror and the candidate got the job. He then reported me to HR for being rude, I told them to look at the interview notes that he had signed!
I got rejected because I was “too intelligent and expensive” so they hired a “dumb and cheap” person and then asked me to teach them the job I didn’t get.
I also don't wear makeup and haven't for decades! I have not ever experienced an issue with that during an interview. However, I work in IT and I've never interviewed for a VP position. Might make a difference since they interact with customers and higher ups a lot and need to have that 'extra' bit of bling to them.
Got rejected from a job at Burger King as i had no experience working at Burger King, I did however have experience at Burger King... i was wanting to transfer jobs during uni termtimes.
@@Ben-Askins Yeah I was really confused about it, it was even done through the internal email system between management. I got an email 2 weeks later saying "On further consideration we'd like to extend you an offer."
I was refused an interview as I didn’t have a car, although I was happy to buy one once I had a new job (was being made redundant). Also had job refused, most likely as I would need to apply for Access to work assistance for the disabled but can’t apply for that until I had a job… chicken & egg. Eventually set up as self employed, no joy for ladies over a certain age yet the retirement age moved off into the far distance.
I got rejected for a job, I was highly qualified for, but one of my masters had the wrong title.... it qualified me to do that job, i had been doing the job but my masters title did not have a specific word in it.
I know this doesn't compare but I lost a job because they wanted a specific number of references and I didn't have enough. They talked to two but my third didn't answer. I couldn't find anyone else at short notice.
So, apparently those random facebook shorts work, because I saw one of those 'worst boss ever' things and I just had to look you up. And then ding! Here I am! You're awesome.
Apologies in advance for the long essay, but this is a bit of a story. I work for a government department where office politics are on an entirely different level of their own. Being good at one’s job is very rarely enough to get a higher position. In fact it can be worse for one’s career as they need someone to make them look good, and they never want someone to outshine them. I got rejected for an interview, not because I didn’t have the necessary experience or qualifications, I had been acting in the role ever since the former person in the role had put in a year’s long service prior to retiring, and had been filling in for them for the years leading up to it as they were cutting out their leave entitlements. The reason I was rejected was for a very silly criterion HR had put on the essential criteria. All applicants had to be a certain level within the organisation. Unfortunately I was just below it. Prior to the interview, they had the applicants acting in the role, each for a period of two weeks so it was “fair for everyone”. They actually had the audacity to ask (although it wasn’t a request, they just expected me to be a “team player”) to train each applicant. This put me in an awkward position because refusal would put the kibosh on me for any other roles that I was applying for at the time. So I reluctantly agreed. On the surface I acted like it didn’t bother me, but in reality I was seething so when it came to it I gave them the bare minimum, and I also just happened to have a few “scheduling conflicts” with study leave that I coincidentally applied for. After that insult I had put in a transfer to another department. The successful applicant was panicking and a series of emails to coordinators, managers, and even HR, begging to keep me on the team. Finally they “very generously” allowed me to choose where I went and I opted to leave to a different team within the same section so I was close by but not in that team. I found out that the fix was in for this particular applicant because they themselves had to be a particular level to obtain an interview for a higher position. So they pulled some strings and got them the position. Before the position was posted they acted in the role so they needed someone to run that team. Who did they ask to run it? Not the other applicants, but me. I ended up getting the job after all. They had nobody competent for that position so the next job listing there was a notable absence in the essential criteria.
I had gone in to work one day with a terrible cold (early 2010s when remote work wasn't so commonplace). I got half way through the day before the CFO sent me home, saying to get some rest and feel better. My supervisor, rather than sharing the sentiment, pointed out that I could have "at least put on a little lipstick" that day. 🤦🏻♀️🤦🏻♀️
Some of these are really wild. The most ridiculous one I got was that I had quit my last job rather than having been `laid off,` and they felt that was a red flag. Which I translated to "He isn't going to put up with our crap,` chalked it up as dodging a bullet, and moved on.
I was applying to jobs straight out of college. I had gotten my first job offer from a school and I was really excited but it would have required me to move to a different state. I said “can I have a day or a week to think about it?” (I remember this explicitly.) The principal says she can’t give me a week but I could have 3 days. So I talk to my parents and decide to accept. I call the next morning and the principal tells me she can no longer offer me the job because her assistant superintendent said she couldn’t. I call to speak with him and he said that by asking for a week to think about it, I was showing I wasn’t truly dedicated to the students. (🙄)He went on to say they hired someone else who was also graduating with me from my college. I knew she wasn’t as good of a teacher as me and HE ALSO ADMITTED THIS but decided to go with her. Later that summer, I landed a different job in a great building but that whole situation was horrible.
Stupidest rejection from a job was when a person from potential company I applied for told me she looked me up on social media and told me that she can't see me as a right cultural fit because I have a cat, that she isn't a cat person and that if I had a dog it may have been a sign that I am all about loyalty, but with a cat I may be too independent for team work.
Scroll up the comments (a couple of hours later). Someone was rejected "for being a dog person, so they hired a cat person". The world be getting crazier by the day!
My wife was once turned down for a job because she couldn't give examples of when she had suffered discrimination in the workplace. The interview was for an internal promotion, so the interviewers were actually rejecting candidates because their company wasn't sexist enough.
I once rejected a job offer after trialling it for a day - i was going to be a dishwasher. An hour after the trial, my hands were burning. Two hours after, they were red and swollen and i could barely move them. I called the manager and said I'm sorry, i can't do this. His response was "your work ethic won't get you anywhere".
I had something similar to the deaf role one. I worked as a substitute teachers aid. One year, I worked 6 weeks for someone who was out having surgery. 2 weeks later, a job opening came up. When I interviewed and was asked about experience related to the position, I brought up the 6 weeks I had worked at the school. I was told they weren’t allowed to give preferential treatment to people because they worked at the school. Someone else was hired. During the new hire’s first week, I was subbing for someone else, and was asked to help the newbie figure out something she was supposed to be doing. Um, no, if I’m not qualified for the job, then I’m not qualified to train the person who actually got the job.
Back in the 80s, my husband applied for and was interviewed for a certain job. He the went to 2 more follow up interviews with basically the same people. Passed background check, had a good driving record, reliable transportation to and from work. They ghosted him. Oh, this was for a $5 per hour furniture delivery job.
Back in the early 90s, I was told that I lost a job because the person who interviewed me hadn't received a thank you letter-TWO days after the interview. They said I was the best candidate for the position, but I wasn't grateful enough to have immediately typed out a letter and mailed it to them. I dodged a bullet there.
This would have been a strong contender for the list...
Tha ts crazy
Oh yeah, they really did you a favor!
Oh my days 😮
Thank you for what? 😂
Hiring someone is not a favor to then. It’s a mutual exchange.
I once dodged a howitzer shot.
It was for a job in the international division of a consulting firm. A man walked into the interview and asked if I was related to one of my uncles; I said "yes, he's my uncle, why?" and he told the head of the international division "don't even think about it". "Hey, next time you'll reject someone for their lastname at least do it before they come, save them the trip!"
Asking my uncle: dude had been one of uncle's coworkers until he caught wind that uncle was investigating him and hoofed it (uncle was one of the internal auditors in their accounting team). The investigation eventually proved that several of dude's closest buddies had been stealing from the company. Dude was the head of the national division for this other company I'd been interviewing at.
I'm female, some 25 years younger than Uncle and not an accountant, but hey: "don't hire her, she's likely to be honest" is a compliment in my book.
I am sure the thoughts he had were "Uncle SameSurname busted me last time, the kid won't ruin my pillaging here!"
Ah that old "you're not a good cultural fit" chestnut. By cultural fit we mean you don't like robbing the company and aren't a wrongun.
If I were the deaf actor, I'd have taught my replacement all the wrong words. The entire Deaf community would have eaten the movie producers for dinner! lol
Actually a great idea :D
Love it. Casually signing “I’m not actually deaf” throughout the film 😂👌
Maybe sneak in a few rude ones as well, or maybe ones that reveal the rejection, ie they rejected a girl for this part because she is deaf, and then cast me, rewrote it, and got her to train me in one day!
More of the anger would probably end up directed at the actor who was maliciously taught wrong.
@@SuprousOxide You're right. I didn't think about that.
I was rejected for a job in another department with the same company I worked with. When I asked why, they said “you don’t have the right qualifications and experience.” Then they listed the requirements and I said “I have been doing all of those tasks for this company for 7 years! I also do..” and I listed all my other job duties. The HR person then asked “Well then why are you applying for this position?” To which I replied “Because it is 50% less work 30% more pay, no 24/7 on call, no nights and weekends. As opposed to my current position which is a lot more responsibility, a lot less pay, graveyard shift Thursday through Tuesday plus a daytime Tuesday staff meeting and the same job title.” The next day that other job listing was gone, nobody was hired for it, and I never heard from that HR rep again.
The real estate example here: I would have turned this back on the interviewer by saying that "A conflict between a viewing and my mother's funeral would never come up because that would be such an insensitive situation that it could never come up in a company that was run by any manager with an ounce of humanity. Don't you agree?" If they didn't immediately back track I would then tell them that they don't come up to my required standards as an employer and terminate the interview.
Reminds me of an I terrier a friend had. They wanted her to run a battery (gauntlet, really) of tests to see if she would be a good fit. She turned it back on them. She wanted to interview the person currently in the position to decide if she even wanted the job, and not waste both her own and the company's HR's time. She was hired that day.
Much better answer than mine (Mom would never want a funeral).
That deaf interview deserves a discrimination lawsuit.
This. If they literally said 'we aren't gonna hire you *because you're deaf,* that's a slam-dunk case for disability discrimination. Plenty of films have employed actually-deaf actors successfully without major safety incidents, so they can't even use safety concerns as a scapegoat. It's just straight up discrimination. I hope that production company takes it where the sun don't shine for that.
I had the interviewing manager spend 30 minutes critiquing my resume format. What he didn't know, apparently, was I'd been personally invited to interview by the HR director.
The HR director called me at home to get feedback. She was incredibly mad. I got an apology from the interviewing manager with the HR director on the call. Then was offered the job. I politely declined.
@deannal.newton9772 - I think he was annoyed he HAD to interview me. He hated the HR director. Probably because she was a woman, outranked him and was younger than he was. Cardinal sins... :-)
I applied for a job, was told I was a very good fit, discussed all the usual things, said I was looking forward to starting asap and the boss as a final casual throwaway remark asked what kind of motorbike I had... when I said I didn't own one and preferred to drive a car, interview over, thanks for coming, no job... I thought I was applying for a job, not asking to join a biker gang...
How oddly specific - was the job even related to motorbikes in any way or were they mentioned at all in the job description?
Was it a job at that garage from American chopper?
Nope, nothing even slightly automotive, it was a tech company making SMT circuit boards, lol...
@@nigelskinner8988 I guess the boss really fit the tech bro stereotype 😂
I once overheard 2 people on a train talking about a woman who had come into their company for an interview. One of the people had interviewed her and thought she was great but needed the sign off from the CEO so she asked him to meet with the candidate. His feedback was that she was a lovely person with just the right skills but wouldn't fit in with the 'aesthetics' of the office as she was too 'big'!
I have never worn makeup during any interviews. I dress smart. Black pencil skirt, white blouse. I'm clean and I've got nice perfume on. But I hate makeup with a passion. If someone told me I didn't have makeup on during an interview, and I didn't get the job because of it, I'd tell them to stick it where the sun doesn't shine. So shallow of a company to say crap like that.
That’s also discrimination on the basis of sex. A man would not be expected to wear makeup. (And might not get the job if they did!!)
@@susannahwilkinson5254 This. Yeah, it's sexist. I'm like abikt in that I don't like wearing makeup. I'll do it on occasion, but it messes with my skin too much. I've also got a pock-marked face from really bad puberty-fueled pimples, and I still get pimples all the time no matter what I do. If I had a job that provided healthcare, I could get medication to wrangle my hormones into a normal range, but I can't get a job because I'm too fugly- because of the pimple problem I need healthcare to deal with. It's a feedback loop. Capitalism would rather I just crawled in a ditch and died.
I can't wear makeup, have tried many different kinds but my skin reacts to everything. Years ago, I was told when I went for a job interview that I needed to wear makeup. I can't understand how me being able to do a job relies on me wearing make up.
This is also gender discrimination.
Should'a tossed out the words 'medical' and 'discrimination' on your way out the door to rattle 'em. Not in a directly threatening way, ofc, just in an off-handed way. 'Oh, once again, my medical condition leads to a discrimination-based rejection. I guess I'll have to keep looking for an employer that follows the law.'
I was rejected for a job in forestry managment by HR as the interviewer reported I didn't have the correct tickets for the role. When I pointed out that had presented all the correct licenses required, and another 6 or 7 not specified on the job description making me more qualified than ANY of their other current staff, many of which had worked with and trained in my previous job, I heard nothing back. I later found out that the lead foreman who conducted the interview didn't want someone more qualified than him on the team and had falsified the interview report.
If your prospective boss was that insecure, you probably dodged a bullet. People don't quit jobs nearly as often as they quit managers.
I got this feedback for a Design Leadership role:
“You came across as too polished, you interviewed really well, and your portfolio presentation really resonated with the hiring manager. They just thought you were too good for the role.”
In other words, the manager was scared of you. You were better than them and they were afraid you'd get their job. It happens quite often.
@@kmbbmj5857 or you'd leave in 20 minutes and they'd have to start the whole process again.
This reminds me of an interview I did where the interviewer asked, "If you were in a situation where you weren't prepared for something, but called on to do it, how would you proceed?"
I tried to give my best answer in the realm of "I'd do what I can, try to figure out what's possible, possibly ask for help, etc."
His reply was that I should NEVER be in a situation where I'm not prepared and ended the interview shortly afterwards. He GAVE me the scenario. Don't ask questions you don't want answers for.
Ooo this would have been a contender for the list. Might have to do a Part 2 from these comments alone
I've come to the conclusion to NOT take interviews personally anymore. You'll either get people who are incompetant interviewing you (I've seen it from within, where people who aren't technically interviewing people for technical roles) OR, as I've also witnessed this and had it happen to me twice, they already have someone they want for the job, but HR has made them have interviews anyway. So they fudge the interview so everyone else is rejected and their "mate" gets the job instead.
I cannot roll my eyes enough to respond to that!😂
So...correct answer is "I'd quit because I'm not working for a company that puts me in that sort of situation"?
It's a gotcha question. He wanted to tank your interview for some reason.
This may be somewhat off-topic, but it's zany enough to mention. In the town where I live there is a center for in-coming calls. The employees have no direct contact with the public yet the office has a dress code that requires the phone workers to wear a certain kind of shoe.
I hate makeup. You can't pay me enough to wear it. I like how it looks on other people when it's not overdone, but it doesn't blend in on my skin. I can feel it all day, and it drives me nuts. It also takes too much time to put on and take off. I have better things to do.
Same!
Same. And in addition, I can't help, I touch my face all day long, so it wouldn't even hold 10min
The VP position - how many of the male applicants were wearing too much / not enough makeup for the job????
I got offered a job managing a franchise after going through 3 interviews. When i finally got the call with the job offer i accepted immediately and was told i would be given my start date and papwrwork in the upcoming week, waited two weeks then called the company owner to be told sorry but he had decided to hire his friend instead
That could be classed as a breach of contract. Job offered and accepted = creation of employment contract.
I used to work in a fish and chip takeaway shop with a restaurant attached upstairs. Sometimes the counter staff would go upstairs to help the person who ran the restaurant.
When one of the girls who worked as a waitress up there quit, I asked if I could be considered for the role, as I enjoyed the work.
I was told I would potentially be allowed if I "Straightened my hair and wore more makeup because then I might be considered pretty enough"".
My hair is naturally curly, but I tie it back to keep it tidy. Admittedly I wasn't wearing makeup, but bear in mind I worked at the counter of a fish and chip shop. It was hot and greasy and sweaty down there. Make up would have been not just unsanitary but also just gross feeling as it began to melt etc.
To this day I still think that was definitely a bad reason to not be allowed to apply for the position of waitress upstairs. Didn't know you had to be a natural beauty to serve fish and chips before that.
I work at a university here in the U.S. that understandably will do in-house hiring for a position that opens up. However there is a requirement that jobs have to be advertised to the public on the university website. Even if someone already working in the office or department is going to get the job, the job has been advertised and people are applying for it even though there's no chance they will get the job. A total waste of time and a cruel thing to do to people who are looking for work.
Seems to happen a lot with government departments and similar in Australia as well. I had two unique skill & experience sets combined, in a rural area. Even though I chased up the recruiting company a couple of times (being fobbed off effectively) I think I was ghosted in the end. It was all very strange.
@@andrewbrendan1579 Yeah, that's a typical bureaucratic cover your ass move. That way they can claim they did everything by the book and above board. It's utter BS.
@@andrewbrendan1579 Same with my University but only because we’re a state uni and that’s the law. However, laws like this get passed because there has been some past incident.
Yes, my alma mater and former employer does this all the time. It is the law that they have to post the positions. My advice is ...get a temporary job and do well. You have a leg up in that case. BTW, I am in Florida, USA.
@@pamelafiske55799
mmmmh, a lot of people here seem to underestimate that the reason given is quite often different from the reason why. And petty or stupid as the reason given may seem, you can be sure that the reason why is something they can't outright tell you without incurring in a lawsuit. For instance, "You don't wear enough makeup" easily translates to "You are prettier than me without any makeup, no way in hell I'll let you get this job"
I went on a job interview and the two people interviewing me asked why I had applied, since I had no experience in construction. I was baffled, since I have several years of experience in construction. I looked over at the paper they were looking at AND IT WASN'T MY RESUME! They apparently had another person with my first name also applying and just grabbed the paper with that name on it. I had a copy of my resume and handed it to them and they took a minute to look it over. That ended my interest in the company right there.
I tried to move from part time to full time at Best Buy. First time I tried, I was told that I wasn’t knowledgeable enough in car electronics (the bane of everyone’s existence). Okay. I immersed myself in that section. Volunteered every time someone needed help. Managed to hold my own.
Second interview, I described how I took their advice and I’d worked hard to learn the department. They took my words as “admitting I wasn’t knowledgeable about car fi.”
The kicker? During the rejection meeting, the person who got the position over me got on the radio asking for help in car electronics because she couldn’t answer any questions.
I am not an employment lawyer, but that second one is a lawsuit. You can't discriminate on a disability
LOL yup - normally they keep that sort of thing to themselves rather than open it - although that said, acting is different ....!
In the US it’s definitely a lawsuit it won’t even make it to court they’ll settle before court
I'm guessing the rejected deaf actress knows one bit of sign language that even the casting director will understand.
@@rsh793 Acting isn't THAT different in terms of disabilities, especially when it comes to deaf actors. There've been PLENTY of deaf actors. The industry knows how to handle it safely and make the necessary accommodations. It was straight up discrimination, nothing more.
I find that being rejected for a position because she didn't wear makeup is incredibly offensive. How does the way you look affect your ability to do anything? Obviously taking into consideration that you should be clean, tidy and smart. It's like saying girls with specs can't be attractive. Dodged a bullet there - imagine the culture
The weird thing is I've seen other managers look down on girls who wear makeup. Its a gotcha in both directions.
I've previously worked in nursing for many years. I've known nurses who wore bare minimum makeup, some on night shift who wore no makeup, and then other nurses who came in full face done up like going to a pageant or modeling gig makeup. And while most nurses I knew went for hair worn up, either basic ponytail or pinned up in a bun, others came in with going g to church curl and comb out look or going to the club big hair. As someone who got down and dirty , working hand in hand with the CNAs to change linens, dress wounds, help patients to the toilet, etc I still can't see how they maintained their appearance throughout their shift. I came off some shifts looking like a sweaty, frazzled dandelion, with loose hair poofing out of my ponytail or bun at all angles.
And men don't wear makeup, but they still get jobs!
What gives them the right to reject the perfect candidate because she doesn't wear make up?
@@RogbodgeVideo Because the job was not about through-put of work, it was about obtaining clients. It doesn't really matter if it's right or wrong lol, it's just the truth. It does make a difference even if we don't want it to. Especially with boomers who you're trying to woo into being clients.
Before COVID, I got turned down for a software developer job because they thought I lived too far away. What was really ridiculous is that I went through three in-person interviews with them. They knew where I lived from my resume. Why have me come in three times when they already decided I lived too far away? They actually asked the recruiter I was working with if I was willing to move closer to the office.
I believe that commute times are factored in, because they want to know how fast you can be at the office if you are called in unexpectedly.
One of my clients was decently sized company. And they encouraged their new employees (who often moved from out of town) to rent close to the business, just so employees wouldn't have to travel far. Some employees even had such a short commute that could spend their lunch hour at home.
@@finris1Lots of software roles don't have any support requirements. They want you to move because they want you to work long hours.
Edited to say: I was turned down for a project because I refused to move to the town. I had previously done two projects in that town with different companies from where I live which is an hour's commute. In all my software roles there is no out of hours or rota of support required. Looking at Glassdoor and other sites it appeared that company often made people work longer hours though to be fair in software roles it's expected.
Jonathan Chang story.
Knew a cop, let's call him Andy Brown, had a wife and kids and lived in a police house. He had taken and passed his promotion exams. He was called up for a promotion ceremony and given his stripes. Then they told him where he was going, to a post with another police house, and he said, but that house isn't big enough for my family! They replied, but you didn't say anything about that before? He says, I've never seen that house before. They had promoted the wrong Andy Brown, but couldn't take it back!
Right out of highschool i walked into a daycare center with a help wanted sign in the window and asked for an application. Was given a runaround and finally told, without ever receiving said application, that they couldnt hire me without experience, but got the impression that i was rejected for being a man not for lack of experience.
As a stay at home dad for many years I found that being male was a huge disadvantage when applying for work in that sector. My kids school did not have a single man on their staff and jobs frequently went to friends of those in charge.
Misogyny. Being rejected for not wearing makeup is like being rejected for not having a moustache. Being rejected for straightened hair is like being rejected for plucking your unibrow.
I completely agree with you
Not a makeup wearer either just a touch of gloss. However if you give me a couple of weeks or so I might be able to manage a mustache 😂🙈
I wonder if this could be considered gender discrimination, depending on jurisdiction.
@@carbine090909 actually, sounds potentially like racism. It’s common for black women’s appearance to be scrutinised
@@drhelenloney1426 I thought that too, but wanted to keep it short, and didn't want to attract the "race card!!!" trolls. So, between you and me, being rejected for straightening instead of keeping it "natural" is like being rejected for getting a fade and an edge-up.
30-odd year ago I was rejected for a farm manager role because I didn’t have young children as they were trying to keep the local primary school open.
I remember the worst interview experience I had - graduate recruitment out of university, big 4 accounting firm. Got flown up for the interview which was a panel interview, then psychometric testing, then a one on one, then knowledge testing, then another one on one, and finally a cocktail evening.
Cocktail evening started at 630, the flight they'd booked me on home was at 8. I went for half an hour, then called a taxi to get to the airport.
Got rejected the following week, because I left the cocktail early, despite them booking the flight. When I explained that, they said that I should've stayed for the cocktail and rebooked onto a later flight at my own expense.
Hahahahaha, they dodged a bullet, what idiots!
Appearance... get this. I recommended a suit and tie to a friend of mine, who was interviewing for a manager position in a company, where I had a mole. That mole then informed me, that he was rejected, because he came in a suit... not even kidding. The same friend tried to become a tram driver a while back. He got rejected for quote: "achieving too good a result in psyche tests" Not joking.
@deannal.newton9772 Unlikely to be hidden agenda. My friend never had any interaction with either of those companies at the time
I am suspicious that "too good a result in the psych test" was not a positive thing... No company wants to tell you that you are too unstable to drive a tram!
@@minorcadence1 Well, he did become a tram driver in a different city, so no. This was not a "him" problem.
That was probably management scared the candidate was way better than them.
If I should choose between my mothers funeral and work and I chose wrong, then I would be happy not to work there
Agreed, and I would like to think most people are with us on this one
Mine was more frustrating. Had been out of work for a few months (GFC and all that). Interview went really well, had very good experience in the sector, even answered some tricky questions to his satisfaction. When asked why I had been out of work 'so long' I replied that I had been the front runner on a couple of positions, but they went with internal promotions, which was disappointing (all true btw). A day or two later I got the call back that "sorry, you were not successful, we went with an internal promotion". Picture the cartoon steam from ears.
I truly hope you read this one.
My best friend was working for a publishing company. I would normally try a tactful way to explain this but I'll just say that she definitely inherited her mother's ample chest and THEN SOME.
Soon after being hired she was called into HR for dressing inappropriately.
Now please understand. My best friend is modest and doesn't show off her body even when she is dressed up to go out. It's just her personal preference. So I know for a fact that she didn't (and still DOESN'T) own terribly revealing pieces of clothing.
Nevertheless, she spent a bunch of money on clothing that the sales people agreed would be excellent for work. Among the new clothes was even a shirt that another woman in the office owned and wore to work.
She was dragged into HR *again* where they told her she needed to be more modest.
At this point she had already sunk hundreds of dollars into new clothes and wasn't about to go shopping a second time - it's not like the company was going to reimburse her for these new items and she didn't feel comfortable spending even more money just because of her large chest.
The day she was wearing *the very same shirt* as her coworker, she was fired. My friend literally *lost her job because she has large breasts.* Apparently people can't look at them without making her into a sex object. What was she meant to wear? Was she supposed to tape them down (wouldn't have worked) or pay out of pocket for a reduction? A reduction is not covered by insurance until you back begins to be injured. She would have been out of pocket $10,000 at least just to be able to wear perfectly normal and professional clothing.
So yeah, there are undoubtedly different rules for man and women regarding not only their dress codes but their bodies as well.
If I had been that young woman who lost a job opportunity because of wearing no makeup I likely would have asked how many of the men showed up without wearing it. For all they knew this woman could have an allergy to silicone (something in a LOT of makeup) or other ingredients. If her only crime was not augmenting her appearance to someone else's standard the company frankly doesn't deserve her the same way that publisher certainly didn't deserve my best friend.
I just got a reduction this year. I have very good insurance. Just the hospital portion was around $30,000. After in-network discounts, my out-of-pocket will be about $1200. I forget how much the total was for the pre-discounts were for the anesthesiologist, surgeon, and , easily $40,000-$50,000, with all 4 items.
@@amethystanne4586 Wow. I had a medically necessary reconstruction that wasn't covered by insurance. I'm just now realizing how wonderful my surgeon is regarding his rates! And considering he managed everything I was hoping for and more just makes me feel blessed.
@@amethystanne4586 If it was for pain-reduction reasons or for your own mental health (NOT including mental strain put on you by others discriminating against you), then it makes sense to get a reduction. But *nobody* should have to go under the knife for a job. Period. Demanding that someone permanently modify their physical appearance for a job should be illegal.
I interviewed at a University department business office. When i sat down in front of the department head's desk, she could barely see me for all the stacks of file folders on her desk. Flipping through a few of them, then taking a big bite out of her deli sandwich, she said, "Who are you again?" Ended up offering me the job but i declined.
I went for an admin role, which would have been my second job after graduating, the first being teaching which is a whole other awful story. But anyway, I was 24. I got told by one of the two MDs at a radiator company, "Hey we really liked you, and are thinking of offering you the job, but would it be okay if you came and spoke to my partner? I'm sure it will just be a formality. You seem like a really good fit." No problem. Wore my hair up, a little scarf, my "weather girl" suit. I looked nice and presentable. My make-up game has never been particularly strong, but then again, I'm not a supermodel. Just a little short lass with mousy brown hair and a great CV.
MD No. 2 did not smile when I went into the room. He did not say hello. He said as soon as I'd sat down with a big exhalation of air, "Look, I don't think this job is for you. We're looking for a graduate."
"Oh, well, that's lucky," I said, keeping a smile on my face. "I have a dual honour degree, 2:1, plus subsidiary subjects. And the PGCE. But anyway, I am definitely a graduate."
"I meant recent graduate," he said, with an even deeper frown.
"Well, that's lucky again," I said. "I graduated less than 2 years ago, which means I am definitely a recent graduate."
"No, no, no. It's not going to work. Just go."
Flipping heck.
As I walked out, the PA was looking at me with absolute horror on her face, and I affirmed what had just happened, and she mouthed, "So sorry," at me.
I mean, like I said, I am no supermodel, but it couldn't be clearer, that for a crappy little admin entry role on an industrial estate in the middle of Willenhall, that fella was expecting one.
I was rejected from a job I was already doing because and I quote "my future looked too uncertain". I really wish that I was kidding. The worst part was that the candidate they eventually chose was the same age as me and had less work experience....
So they were probably cheaper, then...
@@EmperorsTeeth not even... it was an entry level civil service job. The pay is based on a national scale in my country. You earn exactly the same regardless of your experience or age.
@@lydiaolsen98 ouch. That doubly sucks, then!
I once applied for a job and got no feedback. A year later, they wrote to me that they were inviting me for an interview. By that time, I had already forgotten that I applied to that company and was already in a new position.😅
If it takes a YEAR for them to get back to you, I can only imagine how unorganized and chaotic that workplace must be if you actually worked there.
This is hilarious (though very annoying they didn't come back to you)
There is an email somewhere on twitter where someone was offered a job and Panda Express two years after applying
I once got a call saying they were calling me about the job. "Which one?" "The one you applied for!" "I apply to about 5 jobs per week, ma'am, you'll need to provide more detail."
It was for a job I'd applied to three months before. Apparently she expected people to just hold their breath while their company finished scratching its collective butt.
I've had this on Indeed before. Like, thanks for the thought, but I've given up on employment and have been working for myself for 18 months now!
Notice the two sides of the women-can't-win coin. A woman is rejected because she's not artificial enough--her natural face without makeup is deemed unprofessional--or she's too artificial, because, god forbid, she straightened her hair.
It's time to get rid of these arbitrary sexist "standards" for women.
Men have standards to.
Must wear suit, nice hair, groomed face.
It's business both sexes have to deal with looking the part.
Edit: there's literally a comment I just came across any how a man was rejected because he wore a suit, proving is both sexes that have to deal with standards.
What about those that can't wear makeup due to allergies? People can be allergic to makeup too. The makeup thing is just stupid.
@@Robert-cu9bm Come on bro, to act like the appearance standards for men are anything like the appearance standards for women is a joke.
This is an issue for both sexes. When my husband was laid off (the whole department was laid off, not just him), he went to a lot of interviews, even though he was very competent in his field, he still didn't land a job. Yes, being the typical nerd in IT that he is, he often wore a T-shirt and an unkempt beard. The unemployment office came to his aid and suggested that he dress more professionally next time. Wear a more formal shirt, shave his beard, and organize his CV. He nailed the next interview and has worked for that company now for 12 years.
@deannal.newton9772 Well I was actually glad that he shaved. It tickled my lips 😉😅
I once was given the full tour treatment (the interview with the HR went well, so she called in the head of the department, it went well enough to call my would-be future boss. This
went so well that we went to meet the team. Then like 2 minutes in, the boss got a phone call, then 2 minutes after, he told me they gonna call me back. Then I got ghosted.
But the absolute worst was with a big engineering company preparing a billon-sized tender bid concerning an 100 year old engineering feat that I am interested enough to have done an extensive website about. I got called to meat a very nice woman engineer who ushered me in a meeting with 6 or 7 engineer, plus the VP of a big local engineering firm. We talk for at least two hours, then I was invited for lunch. Each time I got invited for lunch, I got the job, usually...
Then nothing. Totally ghosted.
2 years ago i got rejected from a job that was a 20 min commute because the company found someone who lived closer. a week later the job was advertised again (automotive parts delivery driver)
Got ghosted after doing an unpaid trial shift with someone. Was told by the assistant manager she wanted me but the manager 'was useless at making decisions'. Think I dodged a bullet.
I‘m an electronis technician. I once got rejected because „the team you‘d be joining consists only of women. Adding a man to the mix would disrupt the social dynamics of the team.“
Thats is sexual discrimination
The one who got the tour then ghosted smacks of some exec’s kid needing a job.
The makeup one is ridiculous I haven't worn makeup for decades and I've never had anyone turn me down for a job because I'm not wearing makeup. I also refused to wear high heels they're bad for your ankles and your feet and I've had surgery on my left ankle. Even though I can wear heels I already have arthritis in that ankle so it would cause major damage.
I would say if women have to wear makeup and heels, men should as well.
I once drove over 4 hours to Oxford for a developers role with a nano tech company. I did my presentation in the board room with an overhead projector and answered all the questions thrown at me. At the end my interviewer told me that I was the best candidate and my presentation was the best that HE HAD EVER SEEN!!!!!!! Half an hour after leaving I was informed that I had been rejected because they wanted someone local. They knew I was not local as my address was on my CV.
As I was driving home (4 hours min( I was asked by an agency if I could get to the Lake District (UK), a 4 hour drive for an interview the following day. I turned round and headed north, braved a 2 hour traffic jam around Birmingham and arrived very late. At the interview I was given some code. It was awful. I commented that the code was not fit for purpose as it was just one long chunk without comments, documentation and explanations. Variables did not reflect their purpose. It had been written by the guy interviewing me. I did not get the job, they refused to pay my hotel bill after saying they would, and it was a mere 6 hour drive home. A really crap 2 days!!!!!
Oh, I once interviewed at UPS. Programming. Was given sample code and asked to spot/fix the error. I did. Also spotted an "extra" error in the question (2 arguments to a function were reversed). Never got the job. Heard from a bud on the inside that the topic came up, and that I showed Bad Form in correcting the interviewer. I didn't, just pointed out the question as-written had an "extra" mistake, and I had no idea *whose* mistake that was. Could've just as easily been deliberate, as a "trick question", and that they would've *wanted* me to find/fix the *TWO* errors in the code, not just one.
Someone's ego was bruised.
I remember going to a design tech firm in North London for a job interview. I sent my CV and I did mention that I have a stammer that I have a history of stammering. They rejected me even though they said that I was perfect for the job.
President Biden is a stammerer. So were Aristotle, Charles Darwin, Marilyn Monroe, Virgil, Winston Churchill, Demosthenes, King George VI of England, Emperor Claudius I...............
I recently got rejected from a role for not being vastly overqualified. They have an unwritten job spec they want filled, but are advertising a lower job spec. The company has been trying to fill this role for over a year.
I’m in a small workshop. As part of my interview I was taken into the shop and introduced to the technicians. The next time they interviewed someone, after they finished their interview, the boss came through and asked what we thought about them. Very nice, too bad they stopped doing that because we called the candidates right.
A friend of mine was denied a promotion because, despite she had excelled in the role, her male colleague was moping, and needed a promotion to motivate him to do better. Tech in the late 80s.
My husband once lost a job because the HR woman thought he was brusque when he went into to discuss the terms. She had kept him waiting an hour, on his lunch break, when he had not yet given his notice at his old place. Lesson, suck up to HR, some companies actually let them them make decisions.
Like the first lady, I also do not really wear makeup. I have only been unsuccessful at three interviews. All three interviewers that rejected me were other women and all of them had made a comment about my appearance in one form or another, though I never asked why they rejected me so they may have had other reasons. All my successful interviews were conducted by men and they never said a word about the way I looked. Whether right or wrong, I have been left with the impression that women bosses/recruiters are more about style over substance.
Some of these I can barely believe! Ghosting someone after an interview is terrible practice but unfortunately very common.
That us why my country has a law that you must be informed in writing within 2 weeks if the process is ending.
80% of the very many interviews I went to looking for my first job didn’t reply
And over 90% of applications get ghosted. For a while there, I thought all applications were being sucked into a black hole.
@@chrisdonnellyofficial So true. It's happened to me many times.
When my son was still at school, I kept telling him to work hard, go the extra mile, ask questions because learning was a good discipline and would show potential employers that he was keen to progress etc.
I wanted to set him up for life as an adult, so he would always be able to have work.
So we moved back to this area when he was 17 and he applied for a manual agricultural job near where we lived.
He was told that he didn't get the job because he was too intelligent and they wanted someone who'd stay with them for years and not look for something better or more challenging.
He's now middle aged, in a responsible IT job and is *still* educating himself. He's just got *another* degree, letters after his name and everything. I am so proud of him.
Employers want wage slaves who never say no to any request and don’t need any benefits
Most employees would be those wage slaves happily, just not for peanuts.
For the majority of workers, that is a budget-dictated answer. Mum is dead. She had to skip Da's funeral or lose her position. She'll understand.
@@CarKiller92 The peanuts is what makes the wage slaves. Otherwise, you just have employees.
I was asked during an interview how I would estimate how many airplanes there are in the world if I didn’t have access to the Internet or any other resources. I’m guessing this is one of those questions where they just want to see how you think. But I considered it a waste of my time and said so and ended the interview. This was after being given wrong directions on where to park and how to get into the building, the interview started late, and then it was 45 minutes of this guy acting like the job opening was God’s gift to humanity. That question was the breaking point.
A reason why the entire process of getting a job is so infuriating is that you can do everything right up to the judgment, taking all the tests, studying the role, practicing responses, but be still at the mercy of someone's whims and biases.
I interviewed at a boat and marine place. They loved my experience, resume, etc. During interview they asked why i wanted to leave job currently at where had been for five years. I told them, honestly , that i don't like to speak ill of places, but in the last year they had shifted away from customer service and into a more commercial sales role. I was not as enthusiastic about that, so was looking for a place focused on customer service.
When i failed to get the job, i asked for input. They said felt i bashed my current employer so didn't want me.
Employers in general don't have the decency to communicate with prospective employees. It seems to be that they don't get any benefit from even just sending a stock 'thanks but no thanks' letter/email, so they don't bother. It gets so frustrating as a job seeker.
Infuriating. I haven't been seeking a job in a long time, and I still remember how much that bothered me.
Makeup and hair are ridiculous reasons. Sure, if you have mud on your face and bits of hoover dust in your hair, that's one thing, but that is bonkers
Agreed
Mud on your face? Big disgrace!
I remember reading about the first one somewhere online. If I recall, that guy got absolutely roasted and hoisted by his own tiny petard in the comments.
I wonder how many of these were "What are you doing interviewing people for that job? It was only created to give the CFO's nephew a job."
That’s what I immediately thought regarding the one where the candidate was given a tour and introduced to everyone.
I was once rejected for an internal promotion at a company I’d been at for years because the manager “felt like he would struggle to manage me” despite working together for three years and I believed we had a good working relationship. Turned out he was just two faced. I am very outspoken, if I think something is wrong I will vocalise it and offer alternatives. This manager used to always listen to my objections and ideas and actually implemented a lot of them. He later moved on and I ended up with his position anyway, but after he left I found out I had my career held back by 18 months or so because my manager was insecure and slightly scared of me 😂😂
Starbucks - help desk
Candidate is too nice and because of that we don’t think he will be able to finish tickets on time
The ghosting thing is a huge problem at the moment especially in the construction sector been experiencing this a lot lately and when its direct with companies
Usually it's the other way around - construction workers ghost them.
I was lucky that I worked in "mom and pop" print shops and was able to wear casual clothing and never wore makeup. Also, I mostly worked on my own and was not a face to the public. But the times I did, I was always clean, neat and presentable. It saved me spending money on makeup and fancy clothes!
experienced all of these (except the make up). Taken on a full tour of companies to be ghosted. Weird
Sorry to hear that mate!
I remember being introduced to everyone on the team. Shown my desk. Invited to join them on break. Did I get the job? Not hardly.
I wonder if the team later 'voted' upon a candidate? Very bizarre though.
I remember years ago when I lived in the UK that women were getting fired for not wearing stilettos. What brought it to attention was a lady who’d hurt her foot wore flats to work and she was told to go home and get “proper” shoes that met the official dress code. She tried to explain the issue and I think they fired her. Once that was made public, women came out of the woodwork saying they’d had similar issues with their companies’ dress codes. This was before social media so for it to go viral was a real thing. Lots of companies shamed for their horrible dress codes.
I remember that happening, there was an huge outcry about it.
Put the stilettos on a belt at your waist and wear flats on your feet. Malicious compliance to the max. Get every woman to do it at every job across the whole country. If the men wanna join in by wearing their wives' stilettos on their belts, that's even better. Make the awful men in power feel embarrassed about their stupid, sexist dress codes.
I got put onto a college course pacifically dedicated to training me for the position. At the end of the 5 month course I was told that the position has been filled and was no longer available three days in.
With the third story I had to rewind just to check whether the job she was applying for was at a department store makeup counter because that would be a legitimate reason.
I only apply to companies that are part of the Circle Back Initiative, where employers commit to responding to every job applicant. It saves a lot of issues.
My weirdest experience interviewing for a graduate engineering position was being asked what member of Alice in Wonderland's tea party I would be and why. That, for me, came out of left field.
I interviewed & received a job. I relocated to the town and went in for handover only to be told that they offered the job to someone else. The reasoning being that he and his family couldn’t relocate until they found her replacement as a Kindy Teacher. I had the qualifications also as a teacher so they offered me a part-time teaching position over a Managerial full-time position!
I was very disheartened over the integrity of the Environmental company. The new Manager didn’t even last long and the company approached me afterwards to offer me the role!
To say I was utterly disgusted is an understatement!
I've been ghosted more times than I care to remember. And for one job (as a gravedigger) it took them over a year after the interview they finally told me I didn't get the job (No s🤬, Sherlock; I'd long since figured that out by then). Another gravedigger job I was told the job was being put on "indefinite hold," which is just a way of saying the position was already filled via nepotism and they were just covering themselves. That's just the tip of the iceberg of stories I could tell.
At 16 and trying to find my feet in the working world I went for an apprenticeship in a hairdressers. Walked an hour in the rain to get there. I did a full 8 hour trial day for free, to be told I wasn’t pretty enough and wasn’t ’made-up’ enough to work for them, but they did want me to come back for a second trial day for free the next day 🙃. I did not return.
What? So they said "we are not gonna hire you, but you can make work another day here for free" or...?
But I understand your pain, years and years ago I applied to position of busboy in one hotel and I was first ghosted and then told that I'm not qualified enough. I still don't know what qualification is needed for picking up dirty dishes and loading them in dishwasher (except hands).
@@simonspacek3670 I still love how companies want so much experience for such a job 🤦♀️ that’s ridiculous, ahh yes totally have my level 3 and 5 years experience in sponge handling 🙄😂.
And they did exactly that! I think I was just so young and new they were trying to take the mick and have me do another day of rolling towels and sweeping for free, ‘we’re willing to let you come back and try again tomorrow!’ As if they were doing me a favour, whilst I was trying to hold back tears. I’m so glad they showed their colours early on now though. Truly knocked my confidence for a while at the start.
The "hair straightening" one immediately made me wonder if it was perhaps an interview for a modelling gig: I could imagine, and I'm by no means an expert on such things, that it would be useful for a hair and make-up professional to see someone *before* they've spent an indeterminate amount of time on their hair, to gauge how easy their hair is to work with.
My first thought was "diversity hire not 'ethnic' enough in appearance?"
An internal manager role at the same level as I was already in. So essentially an internal transfer to another team doing the same job. I got turned down because I had too much experience.
You can tell that the realtor who asked that either/or question had an employee choose "wrong" as well. I had someone ask me during an interview for an administrative assistant position (small office, basically asst. and the main guy) if I had planned on getting pregnant. Illegal question? 100% but his last person had went out on maternity leave and didn't come back. Wonder why lol.
Did happen to me that i got negative feedback that i was ''not representing the company well enough'' as I was not in a 3 piece suit or at least a full shirt'n tie. I was not working with client nor working with people outside of the company. I wanted to tell them ''the 30 min i prep my suit is 30 minutes that I am not putting in my work, so you want to pay me too look good and not do good work, got it'' but I stayed silent and move on.
I sometimes interview for my firm. My fellow interviewer, a male, did not want to put a candidate through because she was ‘too fat’. I told him to go look in a mirror and the candidate got the job. He then reported me to HR for being rude, I told them to look at the interview notes that he had signed!
I got rejected because I was “too intelligent and expensive” so they hired a “dumb and cheap” person and then asked me to teach them the job I didn’t get.
I also don't wear makeup and haven't for decades! I have not ever experienced an issue with that during an interview. However, I work in IT and I've never interviewed for a VP position. Might make a difference since they interact with customers and higher ups a lot and need to have that 'extra' bit of bling to them.
Got rejected from a job at Burger King as i had no experience working at Burger King, I did however have experience at Burger King... i was wanting to transfer jobs during uni termtimes.
This really made me laugh
@@Ben-Askins Yeah I was really confused about it, it was even done through the internal email system between management. I got an email 2 weeks later saying "On further consideration we'd like to extend you an offer."
What kind of job was it that they wanted a potential employee to have experience at Burger King? Seems really weird and specific.
@@reginabillotti I was transfering jobs between burger kings. I had emailed them on the internal emailing system using my BK email.
I was refused an interview as I didn’t have a car, although I was happy to buy one once I had a new job (was being made redundant). Also had job refused, most likely as I would need to apply for Access to work assistance for the disabled but can’t apply for that until I had a job… chicken & egg.
Eventually set up as self employed, no joy for ladies over a certain age yet the retirement age moved off into the far distance.
I got rejected for a job, I was highly qualified for, but one of my masters had the wrong title.... it qualified me to do that job, i had been doing the job but my masters title did not have a specific word in it.
I know this doesn't compare but I lost a job because they wanted a specific number of references and I didn't have enough. They talked to two but my third didn't answer. I couldn't find anyone else at short notice.
So, apparently those random facebook shorts work, because I saw one of those 'worst boss ever' things and I just had to look you up. And then ding! Here I am! You're awesome.
Apologies in advance for the long essay, but this is a bit of a story.
I work for a government department where office politics are on an entirely different level of their own. Being good at one’s job is very rarely enough to get a higher position. In fact it can be worse for one’s career as they need someone to make them look good, and they never want someone to outshine them.
I got rejected for an interview, not because I didn’t have the necessary experience or qualifications, I had been acting in the role ever since the former person in the role had put in a year’s long service prior to retiring, and had been filling in for them for the years leading up to it as they were cutting out their leave entitlements. The reason I was rejected was for a very silly criterion HR had put on the essential criteria. All applicants had to be a certain level within the organisation. Unfortunately I was just below it.
Prior to the interview, they had the applicants acting in the role, each for a period of two weeks so it was “fair for everyone”. They actually had the audacity to ask (although it wasn’t a request, they just expected me to be a “team player”) to train each applicant.
This put me in an awkward position because refusal would put the kibosh on me for any other roles that I was applying for at the time. So I reluctantly agreed. On the surface I acted like it didn’t bother me, but in reality I was seething so when it came to it I gave them the bare minimum, and I also just happened to have a few “scheduling conflicts” with study leave that I coincidentally applied for.
After that insult I had put in a transfer to another department. The successful applicant was panicking and a series of emails to coordinators, managers, and even HR, begging to keep me on the team. Finally they “very generously” allowed me to choose where I went and I opted to leave to a different team within the same section so I was close by but not in that team.
I found out that the fix was in for this particular applicant because they themselves had to be a particular level to obtain an interview for a higher position. So they pulled some strings and got them the position. Before the position was posted they acted in the role so they needed someone to run that team. Who did they ask to run it? Not the other applicants, but me. I ended up getting the job after all. They had nobody competent for that position so the next job listing there was a notable absence in the essential criteria.
I had gone in to work one day with a terrible cold (early 2010s when remote work wasn't so commonplace). I got half way through the day before the CFO sent me home, saying to get some rest and feel better. My supervisor, rather than sharing the sentiment, pointed out that I could have "at least put on a little lipstick" that day. 🤦🏻♀️🤦🏻♀️
Some of these are really wild. The most ridiculous one I got was that I had quit my last job rather than having been `laid off,` and they felt that was a red flag. Which I translated to "He isn't going to put up with our crap,` chalked it up as dodging a bullet, and moved on.
I was applying to jobs straight out of college. I had gotten my first job offer from a school and I was really excited but it would have required me to move to a different state. I said “can I have a day or a week to think about it?” (I remember this explicitly.) The principal says she can’t give me a week but I could have 3 days. So I talk to my parents and decide to accept. I call the next morning and the principal tells me she can no longer offer me the job because her assistant superintendent said she couldn’t. I call to speak with him and he said that by asking for a week to think about it, I was showing I wasn’t truly dedicated to the students. (🙄)He went on to say they hired someone else who was also graduating with me from my college. I knew she wasn’t as good of a teacher as me and HE ALSO ADMITTED THIS but decided to go with her. Later that summer, I landed a different job in a great building but that whole situation was horrible.
The first story. If Ben wasn't so obviously English. I would still know. Just from his range of small talk options
Yeh guilty on that one for sure
Stupidest rejection from a job was when a person from potential company I applied for told me she looked me up on social media and told me that she can't see me as a right cultural fit because I have a cat, that she isn't a cat person and that if I had a dog it may have been a sign that I am all about loyalty, but with a cat I may be too independent for team work.
Scroll up the comments (a couple of hours later). Someone was rejected "for being a dog person, so they hired a cat person". The world be getting crazier by the day!
Sounds like she was having a mental breakdown
She was aware the cat wasn't the one applying for the job, wasn't she?
My wife was once turned down for a job because she couldn't give examples of when she had suffered discrimination in the workplace. The interview was for an internal promotion, so the interviewers were actually rejecting candidates because their company wasn't sexist enough.
I once rejected a job offer after trialling it for a day - i was going to be a dishwasher. An hour after the trial, my hands were burning. Two hours after, they were red and swollen and i could barely move them. I called the manager and said I'm sorry, i can't do this. His response was "your work ethic won't get you anywhere".
I had something similar to the deaf role one. I worked as a substitute teachers aid. One year, I worked 6 weeks for someone who was out having surgery. 2 weeks later, a job opening came up. When I interviewed and was asked about experience related to the position, I brought up the 6 weeks I had worked at the school. I was told they weren’t allowed to give preferential treatment to people because they worked at the school. Someone else was hired. During the new hire’s first week, I was subbing for someone else, and was asked to help the newbie figure out something she was supposed to be doing. Um, no, if I’m not qualified for the job, then I’m not qualified to train the person who actually got the job.
The appearance thing has a lawsuit waiting thats blatant sexism
Back in the 80s, my husband applied for and was interviewed for a certain job. He the went to 2 more follow up interviews with basically the same people. Passed background check, had a good driving record, reliable transportation to and from work. They ghosted him. Oh, this was for a $5 per hour furniture delivery job.