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pytrin | 9 years ago
I'm not a hiring manager, but as the CTO I do review a lot of resumes incoming for technical positions we are hiring for.
The vast majority of applicants do not appear to be taking any time at all aside from selecting their resume to upload and clicking submit. It doesn't seem like they even read the job requirements, since 90% of them do not meet the minimal requirements we post. Some of them are not even developers, but they apply for a developer position.
If someone does appear to be relevant and did also include a cover letter relevant to the position, I will respond, regardless if they're a fit or not.
For me the biggest pain is the sheer amount of irrelevant submissions, which makes you numb after a while. This is why I don't believe in job postings anymore and mostly do headhunting.
Hope this helps!
junke|9 years ago
lj3|9 years ago
What minimal requirements are those? Most companies post a laundry list of every little framework and tool they're working with looking for the unicorn that already has years of experience in the same exact stack. Years of those types of posts have trained engineers to apply anyway, since most employers don't really care if you have every requirement on the list.
pytrin|9 years ago
Other candidates apply with 0 development experience - their resume frames them as "project managers" or "Search engine specialist" with no development related prior experience anywhere. I feel I wasted my time everytime I go through one of those.
dx034|9 years ago
madaxe_again|9 years ago
We would always give detailed feedback to everyone who came to interview, but candidates who fell far from the field didn't get more than the automated reply. Originally I tried responding to everyone, but it's a sucker's game. It isn't just the time spent replying in the first place, even if it only takes a moment, it's the replies asking "why do you think you're qualified to tell if I'm qualified", "here's my creative writing piece from 11th grade, for a developer position, read it please", "I'll sue you, fucker! I know my rights!", "ok I understand can you teach me to program?", "ok I understand, here's my startup idea, what do you think?".
All it takes is one candidate who responds irrationally to a rejection and your entire day, and attitude to other candidates, can be blown up.
So, just like there's a bar for an invite to interview, there's a bar for a positive rejection.
sameera_sy|9 years ago
kutkloon7|9 years ago
You are basically saying that you don't send a simple email because people don't send you a proper resume. However, by sending you a resume they have already put in a lot more effort than you do. It comes across as very arrogant when you don't even send an automated mail. I would even argue that it IS arrogant.
pytrin|9 years ago
Honestly, if you'd seen the kind of resumes we received you would not think most candidates put any effort at all. Like another person said here, it looks like most of them are spamming all job listing on those sites.
jarofgreen|9 years ago
I have (tho admittedly, not in the tech sector). But I can believe it.
slosh|9 years ago
nateps|9 years ago
I'm one of our founders and CTO, and we individually contact every applicant to our jobs. Lever has the ability to respond via a general email address for your company or your own email, so you can choose the appropriate level of personalization per email template.
deedubaya|9 years ago
When you do hire, how do you collect/manage your applicants?
pytrin|9 years ago
erichurkman|9 years ago
I view referral rates as a trailing indicator of culture — if you enjoy working at company X, you'll refer your friends to work there, too. If you hate it or don't believe in its prospects, you won't.