Posted on 01/11/2013 10:46:29 PM PST by grey_whiskers
A few months ago I went to an all expenses paid job interview in another city. The interview went well and I was one of the top 2-3 candidates. However I did not get the job, which is fine by me for reasons that I will mention later on in this post. I did however find the rejection email interesting because it is one of the better examples of what passes for communication in the corporate environment today.
Here is the name-redacted email..
(Excerpt) Read more at dissention.wordpress.com ...
Cheers!
The point is, it’s “boiler plate”, a fixed form which presents a blank uncomprehending and uncaring face, whatever the words may purport to convey.
BTW, the term “boiler plate” refers to a permanently engraved printer’s plate carrying a fixed text.
At least he got something.
I think he should put on his big boy pants and grow a pair.
That was just another occutard whine, “They didn’t hire me and they used polite boilerplate to reject me”. Call the whaa-bulence.
Honestly, that was pathetic. And that BS that it wasn’t done that way pre-eighties is just ignorant and sad. Secretarial school use to teach how to write those letters on manual typewriters.
I don’t know where the “today” came from, considering how common this sorta thing has been since the beginning of writing. Compootors may make us less forthcoming, honest, spontaneous, communal, or whatever, in many ways. But imagine what it used to be like in more rigidly hierarchical times. Do you think a boot black and his “guv’na” had genuine exchanges, or was it way mire formality tva. We can even imagine?
I don’t know where the “today” came from, considering how common this sorta thing has been since the beginning of writing. Compootors may make us less forthcoming, honest, spontaneous, communal, or whatever, in many ways. But imagine what it used to be like in more rigidly hierarchical times. Do you think a boot black and his “guv’na” had genuine exchanges, or was there more empty formality than we can ever imagine?
My comment:
“Reads to me like a pretty good letting-you-down-easy message that gets to the point and over with in the first paragraph. No beating around the bush or having to read all the way to the end. I suppose it could have had the subject line We are not hiring you so you wouldnt even have to open it other than to satisfy any remaining curiosity.
“Id be mildly interested in reading your idea of a better, less anodyne message.”
Nice boilerplate!
And you're right: The author is a fool. No company wants to cite the true reasons ("affirmative action" etc.) for not hiring someone, which would open the door to litigation, and they have to write something, so they send platitudes.
Regards,
Exactly.
Then he retreated to Mommie & Daddie's basement to pound out his useless plaint.
Sheesh. Be a man: get up, dust yourself off, and go do it all over again. What a worthless POS...it's no wonder he wasn't hired because behavior like this is sure to have come through in the interview. I sure wouldn't hire a person like this for my team at work.
The letter was respectful and friendly. They went to he trouble to send it. I think the author is too sensitive. Btw, they were letting him know they were not going to have a relationship.
Man iI dont know who peed in that guys post toasties but he is seriously depressed. Thats just a standard HR form to cover their butt and prevent lawsuits. Nowdays you are lucky if you get anything. The typical response is nothing forcing you to call and the HR dept to say No Thank You. What did they guy want? A letter that said we think you are manic depressive and we worry that you might come to work one day with an assault rifle...
Man iI dont know who peed in that guys post toasties but he is seriously depressed. Thats just a standard HR form to cover their butt and prevent lawsuits. Nowdays you are lucky if you get anything. The typical response is nothing forcing you to call and the HR dept to say No Thank You. What did they guy want? A letter that said we think you are manic depressive and we worry that you might come to work one day with an assault rifle...
I think I see a reason they may have gone with another candidate: Our correspondent is obsessive and voluble over a slight thing.
Another way of looking at the email is that he was given the respect of an answer. That suggests to me that the Co. may not want to burn any bridges. As for “boilerplate”, maybe it would have helped if he included little animated butterflys on the borders? Geeez.
Being told you’re among the “top 2-3 candidates” means you’re toast. The rejection letter needn’t have been sent.
Being told you’re among the “top 2-3 candidates” means you’re toast. The rejection letter needn’t have been sent.
Bingo.
Some (most) companies won’t even bother sending you an explicit message saying you were not selected, for many reasons, one of them also including not wanting to give away any information on the inability of the company to keep the position open due to economic / financial factors.
Thanks for the ping!
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