Monday, June 1, 2020
6 Reasons You Never Heard Back from the Recruiter
6 Reasons You Never Heard Back from the Recruiter Youâve spotted a brilliant-looking job online. Great location, great salary, interesting role. All aflutter, you upload your CV, hit send, and sit back, dreaming of the interview you know youâll get (and ace), almost tasting that offer letter brimming with a massive salary hike. A week goes by. Two weeks. Three weeks. A month. You never hear back. Unfortunately, this is all too common for jobseekers, so here are six reasons why you never heard back. 1. Ugly CV My colleague wrote a great article about formatting your CV for maximum impact. CV writing is a skill thatâs difficult to master; thatâs why CV writing services exist. Your CV is a marketing document to sell yourself. A clear, well formatted CV helps: if it isnât easy to read, it wonât get read. If you struggle writing it, itâs worth paying a professional â" a minor outlay (around £70/$120) that could result in a huge pay-off. 2. Skills to pay the bills You know you can do the job with two hands tied behind your back, suspended upside down in a water tank. I donât, unless you tell me. Make no assumptions. You know youâre a Software Engineer with 5 years experience of PHP development on a LAMP stack, but if you donât tell me explicitly, I donât know. As a Technical Recruiter, Iâve seen far too many CVs where the candidate never mentions what technologies they use. My preference is to speak to candidates where I can immediately see that they are a strong match for the role. I probably will pick up the phone for a chat to a candidate who hasnât listed their skills, but it wonât be my top priority when I have 3 great CVs that I am chasing instead. 3. Attenion [sic] to detail Almost every candidate puts âattention to detailâ in their CV. Yet those same CVs contain spelling and grammar mistakes and other errors. âMistakes on CVsâ is often listed as the number 1 reason hiring managers reject an application. Using a recruiter helps because they proof-read and edit your CV, but mistakes also frustrate us. On a related note, applying to a job that isnât relevant fails to show attention to detail. Youâve seen the job title (e.g. Project Manager) and hit apply without properly reading the advert. Unfortunately, youâre a construction Project Manager applying to an IT Project Manager position leading Agile digital projects â" not gonna happen. Read the advert carefully to ensure that the role is suitable for you. If it isnât, youâre unlikely to hear back. 4. (Ir)relevant It is a truth universally acknowledged, that a job seeker in possession of a desire for a new role, must demonstrate transferable experience. Rewrite your CV for every application and tailor it to precisely what is asked for. Is that experience relevant to the job you want? If not, ditch it. Your CV doesnât need every detail about your entire life and work history, just what will get you an interview. I recently had a candidate looking for a Junior iOS Developer role. He graduated a year ago and has worked in a department store for the last year in the computer department. His CV was two pages long, all irrelevant to his stated career goal â" his experience was in sales and customer service, not development. At the end, I found two lines about personal iOS development, with a link to his App Store profile. I looked and saw 4 high quality apps. Most recruiters give up after 30 seconds if they see nothing relevant. 5. Thatâs not what my sources tell me This is the 21st century. People have Facebook , Twitter, LinkedIn accounts. You will be researched. Any discrepancies between your online presence and CV will ring major alarm bells. I recently saw a candidate with significant differences between the dates on his CV and the dates on his LinkedIn profile. You should never lie on an application as it is easy to get found out. Furthermore, if you put reference details on your CV, donât be surprised if people call them â" any problems with references, your chances of an interview are ruined. Only give references on request, and let your referee know to expect a call. 6. Youâre just not quite right Your CVâs OK, your skills are OK, your experience is OK⦠Youâre just not quite right. Thereâs no exciting feeling looking at your CV that youâll be my next placement, so your application goes nowhere. This isnât your fault; itâs the gut feeling of the hiring manager or recruiter. It isnât fair on you, but with fifty CVs awaiting review, yours is put down, forgotten. In an ideal world, every candidate would get a detailed reason why their application isnât progressed. Unfortunately, thatâs never happening â" weâre all too busy. A recent advert received over 100 responses; 10 were worth speaking to. To call all the other 90 candidates who applied would have taken all week, and I wouldnât have done any work on the dozen other roles needing coverage. However, if you ensure your application is well-formatted, relevant, and shows strong correlation to the role applied for, youâll get a call back! Related: Top 5 Interview Howlers of All Time. Image: Shutterstock
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