When job hunting, I'll skip those companies that require me to type out my resume. That's why I wrote the resume in the first place. Similar feelings towards those that want it in Microsoft Word format. Companies have their own filtering mechanisms, and so do I.
Froedlich|4 years ago
They ask for a resume and tell you when to be there.
You show up at the appointed time with the resume. After waiting half an hour. a secretary hands you a generic Office Depot tear-off employment application.
After another forty-five minutes to an hour, you get to see whoever's in charge of hiring. They're looking at the Office Depot sheet, and about half the time they don't even have your resume, which was probably round-filed by the secretary.
The hiring person isn't sure what job you're applying for, so they leave the office to consult with someone else. Twenty minutes later they return and either tell you they're not hiring, or they'll call you next week. (they don't)
My usual response was to send them an invoice for two hours of office workflow consulting at my entirely reasonable rate. None of them ever paid up, of course, but they stole two hours of my time.
alx__|4 years ago
To me that means their hiring process is extremely formal and not worth my time.
klyrs|4 years ago
antisthenes|4 years ago
What's wrong with .docx format? You can create it using open source office software. In my experience most forms are smart enough to parse .docx just as well as the obsolete .doc.
Besides, what other formats do you want them to accept? PDF, sure, TXT, sure. It seems silly to avoid word documents.
jstx1|4 years ago
boring_twenties|4 years ago
david_allison|4 years ago
netizen-936824|4 years ago