Resume
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@scottalanmiller Ohhh a flask I gotcha
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@Obsolesce said in Resume:
@scottalanmiller said in Resume:
@Obsolesce said in Resume:
@scottalanmiller said in Resume:
What do you put in your cover letter when turning in Resumes?
I would never do a cover letter. Tells the hiring manager that you are desperate and don't understand the statistics of hiring. It's too much time investment on a single submission.
There are jobs that require cover letters, you don't want them. You are already working at one of them.
I did alot of interviewing for fun a few years ago. I would get interviews lined up and intentionally try to bomb them. What I found out is that almost in every single case, the more confident/cocky I was , the more desirable I was to the employer. Most people think it's the opposite, that you should be humble and not oversell yourself in an interview.
Now here's the big thing... Can you backup the sales job you made about yourself? Do you know the technologies?
Simple things like spinning up tech in your lab before an interview will help you tremendously. If there is an area of tech that I know they are going to ask me about (The job description is the cheat sheet) . I will go gain knowledge in that area before the interview. I will not only answer their basic questions, but provide additional info like best practices around the tech.
True. I do best in interviews I care the least about. Kinda sucks.... but it is what it is lol. The trick is treating jobs you really want like that. If it's a job I really desire, I get more anxious and do worse, I guess because I feel I then have something to lose. But I really don't, so ya. Mental stuff.
Considering drinking before (or during) an interview. Not for everyone, but I've done it.
Hmm, a glass of wine perhaps. That's brilliant haha
Generally it's actually just a beer.
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@scottalanmiller said in Resume:
@Obsolesce said in Resume:
@scottalanmiller said in Resume:
@Obsolesce said in Resume:
@scottalanmiller said in Resume:
What do you put in your cover letter when turning in Resumes?
I would never do a cover letter. Tells the hiring manager that you are desperate and don't understand the statistics of hiring. It's too much time investment on a single submission.
There are jobs that require cover letters, you don't want them. You are already working at one of them.
I did alot of interviewing for fun a few years ago. I would get interviews lined up and intentionally try to bomb them. What I found out is that almost in every single case, the more confident/cocky I was , the more desirable I was to the employer. Most people think it's the opposite, that you should be humble and not oversell yourself in an interview.
Now here's the big thing... Can you backup the sales job you made about yourself? Do you know the technologies?
Simple things like spinning up tech in your lab before an interview will help you tremendously. If there is an area of tech that I know they are going to ask me about (The job description is the cheat sheet) . I will go gain knowledge in that area before the interview. I will not only answer their basic questions, but provide additional info like best practices around the tech.
True. I do best in interviews I care the least about. Kinda sucks.... but it is what it is lol. The trick is treating jobs you really want like that. If it's a job I really desire, I get more anxious and do worse, I guess because I feel I then have something to lose. But I really don't, so ya. Mental stuff.
Considering drinking before (or during) an interview. Not for everyone, but I've done it.
Hmm, a glass of wine perhaps. That's brilliant haha
Generally it's actually just a beer.
A "glass" as in a serving... the same amount of alcohol in a beer
12 oz beer, 5 oz wine (average?)
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Obviously drinking from a flask during an interview (with hr and whoever) is going to be totally subjective based on the audience
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@Obsolesce said in Resume:
@scottalanmiller said in Resume:
@Obsolesce said in Resume:
@scottalanmiller said in Resume:
@Obsolesce said in Resume:
@scottalanmiller said in Resume:
What do you put in your cover letter when turning in Resumes?
I would never do a cover letter. Tells the hiring manager that you are desperate and don't understand the statistics of hiring. It's too much time investment on a single submission.
There are jobs that require cover letters, you don't want them. You are already working at one of them.
I did alot of interviewing for fun a few years ago. I would get interviews lined up and intentionally try to bomb them. What I found out is that almost in every single case, the more confident/cocky I was , the more desirable I was to the employer. Most people think it's the opposite, that you should be humble and not oversell yourself in an interview.
Now here's the big thing... Can you backup the sales job you made about yourself? Do you know the technologies?
Simple things like spinning up tech in your lab before an interview will help you tremendously. If there is an area of tech that I know they are going to ask me about (The job description is the cheat sheet) . I will go gain knowledge in that area before the interview. I will not only answer their basic questions, but provide additional info like best practices around the tech.
True. I do best in interviews I care the least about. Kinda sucks.... but it is what it is lol. The trick is treating jobs you really want like that. If it's a job I really desire, I get more anxious and do worse, I guess because I feel I then have something to lose. But I really don't, so ya. Mental stuff.
Considering drinking before (or during) an interview. Not for everyone, but I've done it.
Hmm, a glass of wine perhaps. That's brilliant haha
Generally it's actually just a beer.
A "glass" as in a serving... the same amount of alcohol in a beer
12 oz beer, 5 oz wine (average?)
Takes the body the same amount of time to metabolize both of these
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@DustinB3403 said in Resume:
Obviously drinking from a flask during an interview (with hr and whoever) is going to be totally subjective based on the audience
" hello president of X company, would you like a pull from my Flask? "
That'll land me a job for sure.
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@DustinB3403 said in Resume:
Obviously drinking from a flask during an interview (with hr and whoever) is going to be totally subjective based on the audience
" hello president of X company, would you like a pull from my Flask? "
That'll land me a job for sure.
I've definitely gotten a job after doing shots with the future boss.
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@Obsolesce said in Resume:
@scottalanmiller said in Resume:
@Obsolesce said in Resume:
@scottalanmiller said in Resume:
@Obsolesce said in Resume:
@scottalanmiller said in Resume:
What do you put in your cover letter when turning in Resumes?
I would never do a cover letter. Tells the hiring manager that you are desperate and don't understand the statistics of hiring. It's too much time investment on a single submission.
There are jobs that require cover letters, you don't want them. You are already working at one of them.
I did alot of interviewing for fun a few years ago. I would get interviews lined up and intentionally try to bomb them. What I found out is that almost in every single case, the more confident/cocky I was , the more desirable I was to the employer. Most people think it's the opposite, that you should be humble and not oversell yourself in an interview.
Now here's the big thing... Can you backup the sales job you made about yourself? Do you know the technologies?
Simple things like spinning up tech in your lab before an interview will help you tremendously. If there is an area of tech that I know they are going to ask me about (The job description is the cheat sheet) . I will go gain knowledge in that area before the interview. I will not only answer their basic questions, but provide additional info like best practices around the tech.
True. I do best in interviews I care the least about. Kinda sucks.... but it is what it is lol. The trick is treating jobs you really want like that. If it's a job I really desire, I get more anxious and do worse, I guess because I feel I then have something to lose. But I really don't, so ya. Mental stuff.
Considering drinking before (or during) an interview. Not for everyone, but I've done it.
Hmm, a glass of wine perhaps. That's brilliant haha
Generally it's actually just a beer.
A "glass" as in a serving... the same amount of alcohol in a beer
12 oz beer, 5 oz wine (average?)
Takes the body the same amount of time to metabolize both of these
Yup
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@scottalanmiller said in Resume:
@DustinB3403 said in Resume:
Obviously drinking from a flask during an interview (with hr and whoever) is going to be totally subjective based on the audience
" hello president of X company, would you like a pull from my Flask? "
That'll land me a job for sure.
I've definitely gotten a job after doing shots with the future boss.
after the interview? absolutely
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@Obsolesce said in Resume:
@scottalanmiller said in Resume:
@Obsolesce said in Resume:
@scottalanmiller said in Resume:
@Obsolesce said in Resume:
@scottalanmiller said in Resume:
What do you put in your cover letter when turning in Resumes?
I would never do a cover letter. Tells the hiring manager that you are desperate and don't understand the statistics of hiring. It's too much time investment on a single submission.
There are jobs that require cover letters, you don't want them. You are already working at one of them.
I did alot of interviewing for fun a few years ago. I would get interviews lined up and intentionally try to bomb them. What I found out is that almost in every single case, the more confident/cocky I was , the more desirable I was to the employer. Most people think it's the opposite, that you should be humble and not oversell yourself in an interview.
Now here's the big thing... Can you backup the sales job you made about yourself? Do you know the technologies?
Simple things like spinning up tech in your lab before an interview will help you tremendously. If there is an area of tech that I know they are going to ask me about (The job description is the cheat sheet) . I will go gain knowledge in that area before the interview. I will not only answer their basic questions, but provide additional info like best practices around the tech.
True. I do best in interviews I care the least about. Kinda sucks.... but it is what it is lol. The trick is treating jobs you really want like that. If it's a job I really desire, I get more anxious and do worse, I guess because I feel I then have something to lose. But I really don't, so ya. Mental stuff.
Considering drinking before (or during) an interview. Not for everyone, but I've done it.
Hmm, a glass of wine perhaps. That's brilliant haha
Generally it's actually just a beer.
A "glass" as in a serving... the same amount of alcohol in a beer
12 oz beer, 5 oz wine (average?)
The point being... beer is seen as social and casual in a "working man" kind of way. Doing shots or requesting a bar tender whip up a cocktail has a different social connotation.
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@scottalanmiller said in Resume:
@DustinB3403 said in Resume:
Obviously drinking from a flask during an interview (with hr and whoever) is going to be totally subjective based on the audience
" hello president of X company, would you like a pull from my Flask? "
That'll land me a job for sure.
I've definitely gotten a job after doing shots with the future boss.
after the interview? absolutely
more... instead of.
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@scottalanmiller said in Resume:
@scottalanmiller said in Resume:
@DustinB3403 said in Resume:
Obviously drinking from a flask during an interview (with hr and whoever) is going to be totally subjective based on the audience
" hello president of X company, would you like a pull from my Flask? "
That'll land me a job for sure.
I've definitely gotten a job after doing shots with the future boss.
after the interview? absolutely
more... instead of.
instead of an interview, take shots with future boss?
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@scottalanmiller said in Resume:
@Obsolesce said in Resume:
@scottalanmiller said in Resume:
@Obsolesce said in Resume:
@scottalanmiller said in Resume:
@Obsolesce said in Resume:
@scottalanmiller said in Resume:
What do you put in your cover letter when turning in Resumes?
I would never do a cover letter. Tells the hiring manager that you are desperate and don't understand the statistics of hiring. It's too much time investment on a single submission.
There are jobs that require cover letters, you don't want them. You are already working at one of them.
I did alot of interviewing for fun a few years ago. I would get interviews lined up and intentionally try to bomb them. What I found out is that almost in every single case, the more confident/cocky I was , the more desirable I was to the employer. Most people think it's the opposite, that you should be humble and not oversell yourself in an interview.
Now here's the big thing... Can you backup the sales job you made about yourself? Do you know the technologies?
Simple things like spinning up tech in your lab before an interview will help you tremendously. If there is an area of tech that I know they are going to ask me about (The job description is the cheat sheet) . I will go gain knowledge in that area before the interview. I will not only answer their basic questions, but provide additional info like best practices around the tech.
True. I do best in interviews I care the least about. Kinda sucks.... but it is what it is lol. The trick is treating jobs you really want like that. If it's a job I really desire, I get more anxious and do worse, I guess because I feel I then have something to lose. But I really don't, so ya. Mental stuff.
Considering drinking before (or during) an interview. Not for everyone, but I've done it.
Hmm, a glass of wine perhaps. That's brilliant haha
Generally it's actually just a beer.
A "glass" as in a serving... the same amount of alcohol in a beer
12 oz beer, 5 oz wine (average?)
The point being... beer is seen as social and casual in a "working man" kind of way. Doing shots or requesting a bar tender whip up a cocktail has a different social connotation.
Oh, I see. I wouldn't do it during the interview unless it was in person and it was the place and time to do it.
Mine have been video interviews mostly. I'm not going to sit on camera at home drinking while potential future boss is sitting at work watching me lol.
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@scottalanmiller said in Resume:
@scottalanmiller said in Resume:
@DustinB3403 said in Resume:
Obviously drinking from a flask during an interview (with hr and whoever) is going to be totally subjective based on the audience
" hello president of X company, would you like a pull from my Flask? "
That'll land me a job for sure.
I've definitely gotten a job after doing shots with the future boss.
after the interview? absolutely
more... instead of.
instead of an interview, take shots with future boss?
Yes
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@Obsolesce said in Resume:
Oh, I see. I wouldn't do it during the interview unless it was in person and it was the place and time to do it.
If it isn't in person, might make even more sense!
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@Obsolesce said in Resume:
Mine have been video interviews mostly. I'm not going to sit on camera at home drinking while potential future boss is sitting at work watching me lol.
I think I'm rare here, but video interviews for me have been like... once. And it was a formality after I'd already been in and met more senior people and already basically been offered the position.
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@scottalanmiller said in Resume:
@Obsolesce said in Resume:
Mine have been video interviews mostly. I'm not going to sit on camera at home drinking while potential future boss is sitting at work watching me lol.
I think I'm rare here, but video interviews for me have been like... once. And it was a formality after I'd already been in and met more senior people and already basically been offered the position.
It's either video or phone for me. Not going to spend $6k to fly me out based on resume alone. Personally, I prefer video over phone. It's easier to talk for me then. Phone is more weird because I feel pressured to not have a bit of silence. But on video, it comes more naturally.
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Try to control phone interview as much as possible.
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@Obsolesce said in Resume:
@scottalanmiller said in Resume:
@Obsolesce said in Resume:
Mine have been video interviews mostly. I'm not going to sit on camera at home drinking while potential future boss is sitting at work watching me lol.
I think I'm rare here, but video interviews for me have been like... once. And it was a formality after I'd already been in and met more senior people and already basically been offered the position.
It's either video or phone for me. Not going to spend $6k to fly me out based on resume alone. Personally, I prefer video over phone. It's easier to talk for me then. Phone is more weird because I feel pressured to not have a bit of silence. But on video, it comes more naturally.
Mine is normally phone or flight. The video step just never seems to happen.