FUCK THE POLICE
911 EVERY DAY
What do you mean you couldn't find one at Wallmart? Where the fuck do you live? North Korea?
I was surprised. No USB microphones or cameras.
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What do you mean you couldn't find one at Wallmart? Where the fuck do you live? North Korea?
How long until the interview?
It's on Monday.
I mean, I was already talking to the CIO. I will be talking to the same people again on Monday. We just need an in-personish (recruiters actual words) interview to formalize things.
Life's what you make of it buddy. Dying young from stress in a cubicle isn't all that great either.Life is much worse in the plywood industry.
Life's what you make of it buddy. Dying young from stress in a cubicle isn't all that great either.
Usually the intro interview is a bunch of vague HR mindfuck questions, and your experience. And the later interviews are increasingly technical, but you have to repeat your experience again because you're talking to different people. This is a weird interview process.
It's called "a panel interview". It means you made the next to last cut. They probably have two to four candidates they're interested in and you're one of them. So it's literally one of those times where you just hope they flip the coin and it lands heads up for you. You did good to make it this far. Even if it doesn't fall your way you've made progress, though you'll still be a loser.I mean, I was already talking to the CIO. I will be talking to the same people again on Monday. We just need an in-personish (recruiters actual words) interview to formalize things.
Thank god for nepotism. I've never done an interview where I wasn't guaranteed the job beforehand.
It's called "a panel interview". It means you made the next to last cut. They probably have two to four candidates they're interested in and you're one of them. So it's literally one of those times where you just hope they flip the coin and it lands heads up for you. You did good to make it this far. Even if it doesn't fall your way you've made progress, though you'll still be a loser.![]()
I myself was never so fortunate.Thank god for nepotism. I've never done an interview where I wasn't guaranteed the job beforehand.
I've never gotten one either! My job at Popeyes was due to a friend of my dad's. The process is stupidly long and drawn out, you have to use a shotgun approach and talk to everyone.
This is especially hard for a person like me who finds conversations with strangers deeply uncomfortable. After the whole lengthy process and eventual rejection by Lanyon I just shut down for a few months and didn't send applications to anyone.
I thought I could get into Georgia Pacific because my dad's subordinates wife is a programmer there, so I threw her on my application as a referral a few weeks back. My interview with Georgia Pacific was actually the worst interview in my life. They woke me up with a call at 9 AM, with no warning, and expected an interview right off the bat. It lasted 3 minutes. They never called or contacted me again.
I myself was never so fortunate.
Thank god for nepotism. I've never done an interview where I wasn't guaranteed the job beforehand.
That is correct. In the panel interview they're going to be asking left ball questions and more specific technical ones. What they really want is to get a sense that you can do the job and if you'll fit in with the team. If they mentioned any specific skills or knowledge in their job posting you should make sure you are conversant in them at the interview. Don't try to be a technical expert but show up prepared to discuss what they are interested in.Actual words were not that it was just to formalize. That's just my optimistic interpretation. I don't know what additional questions they'll have for me, we already covered my experience (I literally managed to fit basically every important project I had ever done into it) and he asked technical questions (which I mostly flubbed or dodged, having little PHP training) in the last interview.
But if they were unimpressed, I wouldn't be getting this callback.