T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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743.1 | Good luck! | NSG022::POIRIER | Only 20 days til spring! | Tue Mar 01 1988 13:25 | 23 |
| If you think they may discriminate against you because of it, don't
tell them about it.
When I was looking for my first job, I was engaged. On my first
interview, the interviewer (male) took note of my engagement ring and
started asking questions that were none of his business (e.g. When are
you getting married, are you going to have children, what does your
future husband do etc.). For future interviews I just did not wear my
engagement ring and thus did not subject myself to a possible
chauvinist interviewer.
If I were in your position, I would just tell them you are looking to
make a move for personal or professional reasons (no explanations need
be given). And then you might add you just can't stand the cold
anymore and just love California.
Best of luck with your job hunt!
Suzanne
I can imagine that the reverse may be worse when a man is looking
for a new job because his wife made a career change. Some interviewers
would label him a wimp = bad employee.
|
743.2 | Career Opportunities are of interest only! | NSG022::POIRIER | Only 20 days til spring! | Tue Mar 01 1988 13:38 | 13 |
| By the way:
A friend of mine was looking for a new job in Phoenix and was moving
from Boston for the same reasons as you are. Her general answer towards
this inevitable question was that she made the prospective employer
think that she was really interested and attracted by the job and the
career opportunities they were offering and that their location was not
of her primary interest. This prevented any possible discrimination
by the employer for her primary reasons to move.
|
743.3 | Above all be honest with yourself | FENNEL::SLACK | | Wed Mar 02 1988 07:59 | 23 |
| I agree with .2, regardless if a person was married or single.
Take for instance two people who cannot make use of the
"legal by marriage" contracts which some group qualify for. How
would those individiuals handle this situation. They certainly
can't say, "I'm re-locating because my significant other has been
offerd a job out here."
Also, check out the acceptable and non-acceptable behaviors of the
area. For instance, when I was looking for a non-secretarial job
back in the early 70's, I wore a wedding ring -- so what if they
thought I was married, it worked...somehow for this particular
organization, they felt that a married person represented a stable
person. I never wore that ring again... it was the image they
bought. Just stay focused on what you want.
According to a friend of mine who is a v.p., he always asks himself
this question "What's in it for me?" This may sound selfish, but
this provides him with a clear focus...if he doesn't need it then
he doesn't pursue it..
Good luck - it's easier to throw out the options, but difficult
to implement the plan..
|
743.4 | It happened in Pittsburgh... | CELICA::KNELSON | | Wed Mar 02 1988 13:12 | 6 |
| I once was interviewed by someone who wanted to know what my
"family plans" were. After a minute's thought, I replied,
"I plan for my family to live a long and fulfilling life." :)
(Not recommended if you *really* want the job!)
|
743.5 | questions you can't ask me anymore | CADSYS::RICHARDSON | | Thu Mar 03 1988 12:11 | 7 |
| I remmeber a job interview long ago where I was asked what form
of birth control I used!!!
Since I had already decided that they were unlikely to offer me
a job anyhow (I had been out of work for three months, so I would
have taken it if it had been offered even though I really didn't
want to work there), I told them to mind their own business.
|
743.6 | | MONSTR::PHILPOTT_DW | The Colonel | Thu Mar 03 1988 14:19 | 31 |
|
These sort of offensive questions aren't entirely limited to female
job applicants. Several years ago I applied for a job in the [British]
Civil Service. The position was a junior management grade, and it turned
out that all the Clerical Officers in this particular office where women.
They cordially interviewed me about qualifications etc and in due course
I got a second interview. This was entirely different: as a single
[youngish] male they grilled me (third degree comes to mind) for over
two hours: almost all the topics were on three issues:
1) If a black woman applied for a job and was the best qualified applicant
how would I handle the situation if the existing all white staff refused
to work with her (the situation was escalated to "how would I handle
a threatened strike?")
2) How would I handle the sexual pressures of working in the predominantly
female office ("did I have a steady girlfriend" etc - one interviewer
even asked me if I was having sex regularly, presumably on the assumption
that if I wasn't I might start an affair with one of my subordinates).
3) If I had a baby (remember I'm male - they meant if I fathered a child)
how would we manage on my rather low civil service salary...
The irony is that when they finally sent me a letter saying I hadn't
gotten the job the official reason given was that I was OVERQUALIFIED
for the job. This left me wondering if they had thought that I was looking
for a job below my qualifications in order to find partner(s).
/. Ian .\
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743.7 | | CHEFS::MANSFIELD | | Fri Mar 04 1988 07:58 | 17 |
|
I think it can be worse when you *feel* that you are being looked at
differently because of your sex, than when the person interviewing
you comes out with a real classic like "What birth control method
do you use". ( I couldn't believe that one !!!) I had a tough interview
once when they ( I had three interviewers, all male, all puffing
away on cigarettes - I don't smoke - ugh!!!) put a lot of emphasis
on where I saw myself in ten years time. I *felt* this was being
emphasized because the had me down as a having-kids-and-giving-up-work
-female, I might have been wrong though, if they'd directly asked
that i would have told them to take a running jump.
Needless to say I left the interview feeling mad and hoping they'd
offer me the job so I would have the pleasure of turning it down!!!
(They didn't !)
Sarah.
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743.8 | answer the real question | TALLIS::BYRNE | | Fri Mar 04 1988 10:09 | 28 |
|
Back to the geographical issue ...
When I was interviewing for a job after college, someone in the
recruiting office gave me good advice. Assume any questions about
why you want a job in a particular area are REALLY questions about
whether you will move there, hate it, and leave before you can
contribute to the job.
This is a valid concern; at Cornell, in January, any job in
California looked mighty nice. But my family and all my friends live
on the east coast, and it was unlikely I would be happy 3000 miles
away from everything and everyone I knew. And it is reasonable
for an interviewer to want to know that.
You (.0), don't exactly have this problem. You are moving for
a solid reason, and have every belief you will be happy in the new
area. If you think mentioning your fiance will hurt your chances
with a particular interviewer - be vague. You 'have family' in
the area; you've always wanted to live there; etc, etc. Just
answer (what I think) is the REAL question: convince me you are
a good person to invest trust, and time, and training in.
kasey
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743.9 | you interview them, too | VIA::RANDALL | back in the notes life again | Fri Mar 04 1988 12:32 | 27 |
| re: .7
My husband was asked the same questions about where he saw himself
in ten years when he was interviewing several years ago.
When a company hires a professional to fill a professional
opening, they aren't just hiring a body to fill a box. They
are hiring a person they think will be a part of the company
for a good long time, and they have to view it as an investment
in their future -- depending on the company, they may also
view it as an investment in yours.
If your ultimate goals don't match theirs -- if, for example,
technical people at the company are never promoted to management
but your long-range goal is to be a manager -- it doesn't matter
how perfectly qualified you are for the present job, they're going
to assume that you will grow unhappy as your goals remain
unfulfilled and you will eventually leave them for more challenge.
If you do that, they've lost their investment in you.
That's why it's so important that you interview the company to
find out if it's a place *you would like to work*. If you get the
feeling that they expect you to put your career ahead of your
family, and you aren't willing to make that sacrifice, you won't
be happy there.
--bonnie
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743.10 | Yes, but... | CHEFS::MANSFIELD | | Fri Mar 04 1988 12:50 | 30 |
|
re .9
I take your point Bonnie, but I'm not sure the 10 year question
applies to every job interview. In this case I had just graduated,
and was applying for a retail management job in a largish chain
store group in the UK. I think there are very few new graduates
that have a good idea where they want to be in the next few years,
let alone 10 ! (It was a graduate training scheme I was applying
for, so its not as if there were comparing me to someone who had
been working a few years.) And it wasn't one of the `top' retailers
in the UK - well Ok so its a big company, but there are other retail
companies who are better known for providing good training, prospects
etc. So I would have thought it highly unlikely that anyone who
was any good would have been with them in 10 years time. ( In fact
I know that 1/2 of their graduates on this 1 year scheme drop out
before the end of the year - so it seems to me obviuos that they're
not doing something right!!)
If I had been asked that question in different circumstances, such
as when I was interviewed for DEC, I would have felt happier answering
it. I have had plenty of interviews when it was a two way process,
but this was very definitely me being interrogated !!!
But the fact I was a woman may have made no difference, perhaps
they were as aggressive with everyone. If they have then they probably
haven't done themselves any good 'cos I for one won't buy anything
from their store any more !!!!
Sarah.
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743.11 | What have you to loose, give an answer! | FSTVAX::ROYER | FIDUS AMICUS.. | Wed Mar 09 1988 11:54 | 23 |
| When asked the same question, I puzzled the answer over and
replied something like this.
What a strange question, I really have not Looked forward to
such a long time in the future. I could perhaps give you an
Idea as to where I will be in my job career in 5 years, however
If you want pure speculation, I would like to be the President
of this Company in 10 years! Then I asked the Interviewer where
he Planned to Be in 10 years, I got some kind of an answer,
but I thought that Minas better.
If they ask questions that have no possible bearing on the
job I am seeking I have no qualms about asking just what
relevance that has to the position I am seeking.
Those questions that have no real answer except to feel out your
plans have no real answer, and if you show that you are planning
your career path then they usually accept that.
more that $.02 worth I guess.
Dave
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743.12 | | JENEVR::CHELSEA | Mostly harmless. | Wed Mar 09 1988 13:27 | 11 |
| Re: .11
>Those questions that have no real answer except to feel out your
>plans have no real answer, and if you show that you are planning
>your career path then they usually accept that.
I've heard it said that women are less likely to develop a long-term
career path than men. The "where do you see yourself in 5/10 years"
was a standard (and dreaded) question in my campus recruiting
interviews. I suspect it's a way of evaluating your personality,
as well as your goals, to see if you would fit in with the group/company.
|