It is just a Q&A thread about finding jobs.
Yeah, I know I haven't gone back and read through the vast majority of the thread.
anyways, I guess another general question (applicable to all levels in career progression I suppose--I am entry level):
How long does it *actually* take HR to respond to applications, and/or in people's experience, do HR actually stick to the timelines they say they will?
I've had extremely little interaction with HR, but all of it can probably be characterized as negative. The one job interview I've had [with hiring managers[, the HR running the interviews that day said they'd get responses out within the business week, and at most a week. Understandably, they would try to get out offers quickly. I only got a letter in the mail 1 month afterwards at my permanent mailing address that, as far as I know, only said no offer was made [no surprise, given a month had passed]. No phone call or email, and of course about x6 business days longer than actually exlicitly told.
Recently, after applying to a fairly new job posting at the time (job opened middle of february, I applied a week later), I got a fairly straightforward email asking for more background information requiring a response by the next business day [which was the nexy day; I of course obliged]. Obviously, they must be structured to have a basic prescreen then get more information if desired to forward to hiring managers. But what causes a process to slow down so much that they demand applicants basically respond in a 12 hour window but take weeks or longer to follow up with any information? [ninja edit--this one I'm optimistic to, or at least, it actually makes sense]
Last relevant example I have is a terrible practice but more "expected" in my mind, in that a friend of mine should have an interview for a federal government position that was told in ~november that he'd get an interview "sometime between january and march". Now, I actually know a lot of the federal government stuff of the US has weird archaic rules for being able to announce anything [basically have to wait for something to be 100% funded to offer, and then that funding of course can be taken away instantly], and other factors present.
But all in all, these seem like just terrible HR practices that seem to be present at all levels of positions (my circle of contacts is geared towards entry level, but also just some HR stories from relatives, middle aged adults, etc); is it just typical for HR to basically never actually deliver on what they say ['we'll respond in <1 week' -> respond 1 month later], or vary so much in their time of response to things? [expect information immediately from applicants, but no progress update to applicants for weeks or months at a time]?
How long does it *actually* take HR to respond to applications, and/or in people's experience, do HR actually stick to the timelines they say they will?
Pretty much. HR departments are notorious for not responding when they say they will. I think the reason for this is that they commit themselves to unrealistic timelines. For example I interviewed for this one position and they told me they would get back to me in two days and I didn't hear from them for two weeks. This was a position that around 100 people applied for, so there was no way they were interviewing and then reviewing 100 applicants in two days. Now I don't know why HR commits to such unrealistic timelines when speaking to an applicant, but they would save the applicant and themselves a lot of grief if they would just be honest. I ended up turning that position down because by the time they got back to me I had already accepted my current job because I thought I hadn't heard from them because they decided not to hire me.
I would also say no unless your material there is outstanding. The more (different) information you provide from what is standard, the more opportunity you provide an employer to reject you. You need to stay focused on you and the value you an bring to the company that meets their current needs. It is rare that a company will hire someone for a future opportunity there. They want someone who will fulfill a current need.I've been debating about this for a while. Should I add in my Linkedin link to my resume?
I wish I could work in HR so that I could tell definitively tell people we'll get back to them by a certain date (Monday, March 17, 2014) then don't actually do that.
And would you like doing it 9/5 for years?evidently you make self imposed deadlines and then not follow said deadlines. seems like a pretty sweet gig to me
/bitter
I've been debating about this for a while. Should I add in my Linkedin link to my resume?