Recruiter rejects job seeker because she left her old job due to a toxic work environment: 'It shows she's not loyal or responsible.'

2 months ago 27

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  • A woman sitting at a desk with a notepad and pen

    Recruiter taking notes while she interviews a job candidate.

    Image is representative only and does not depict the actual subjects of the story.

  • I overheard why my coworker rejected a candidate… and it explains a lot about why hiring is so broken.

    Apparently leaving a toxic workplace is a red flag now. Overheard a conversation between a couple of coworkers this week and it honestly made me understand why the job market feels so f_____ed sometimes.

  •  my job is hiring a front desk person/secretary. Our current front desk worker (works \~30 hours a week because of benefits for the state or something) is screening resumes and sending the "good" ones to our head of finance.

  • They started off laughing about a resume someone sent that included a selfie. Okay... yeah, that's definitely unprofessional.

  • Man in suit taking a selfie with surprised expression

    A businessman is taking an expressive selfie to send with his resume to potential employers.

    Image is representative only and does not depict the actual subjects of the story.

  • But then the finance lady started talking about an interview she did earlier in the week.

  • She said the candidate was too overqualified and wouldn't be getting a call back. The reason?

  • When asked why she left her last job, the candidate said it was because of a toxic work environment.

  • A stressed woman sitting at a table with a laptop computer

    Stressed-out woman sitting at her desk, trying her best to cope with a toxic work environment.

    Image is representative only and does not depict the actual subjects of the story.

  • According to her, that's "not a good reason" to leave a job and it shows you're not loyal or responsible.

  • So apparently being overqualified is bad, and leaving a toxic workplace is also bad. Maybe I'm overthinking it, but hearing that explanation kind of made the whole hiring process feel a lot more arbitrary.

  • Is this actually a common mindset when hiring or was that just a weird take.

  • Electrical-Injury-23 I know someone who asks interviewees for their work history and why they left. If the reason is ever "for a better salary", they get binned because it means "they'll leave you for anyone offering more money". Combined with this post, it makes me wonder what they think an acceptable reason to switch jobs is.

  • The_Easter_Daedroth Both of those are indicators that the candidate will not put the company's profit before their own well-being and the capitalists' flunkies in HR are programmed not to accept that.

  • FriendlyEngineer "I am looking for career growth opportunities that simply do not exist at my current employer." This is your answer, 100% of the time when you are asked why you are leaving your current job. You love your job and your employer, but unfortunately you don't want to be stuck in the same position for the rest of your career. I have never failed with this response. Never. It does not need to be true.

  • MrCrash I've done resume review and it's actually very normal for international applicants to include a photo on their resume. I know that's not really what your post was about, but unless it's like a selfie of them partying, it's actually pretty standard outside the US.

  • DrHugh I remember when you'd be asked about a difficult situation in a former job and how you handled it. I can understand wanting to know you have someone who will talk to management or HR if they have an issue, but who will try to deal with miscommunications on their own. But if someone believes a workplace is toxic, loyalty no longer applies. Is the finance lady one of those who claims no one wants to work anymore?

  • paintrain10 They need you to need the job desperately so they can underpay you. Otherwise they can't take advantage

  • ginny11 Don't ever bad mouth or say negative things about your previous employers. Find a way to clean up the reason why you left. Right or wrong, somebody doing the hiring is going to not know what was really going on at your previous job and if they hear you say you left because of a toxic work environment, they're going to imagine in the future that it's possible that you say negative things about them to other people.

  • People_be_Sheeple Stating that you left a job because it was a "toxic workplace" is TMI. Just like it would be TMI to tell someone that your previous relationship was toxic on a first date. Does it s k that you can't just be open and honest with everyone about everything? From an egocentric point of view, yes, but that's not how the world works.

  • Sunflower_Cat7 If a person is willing to leave a toxic work environment it means the boss cant be toxic to them or mistreat them so of course they don't want to hire them

  • Any_March_9765 she's naive to disclose the real reason. Common "reasons" are "moving closer to family"

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