About 3 years ago I did a video interview through Hirevue, you aren’t assessed by people but an algorithm that listens out for the words you use, your facial expressions and inflection. This and the gamification assessments were really off-putting aspects of job hunting.
I think if a prospective employer wanted me to do a video interview like this, I wouldn’t want to work for that company. All the issues that Atrioc raises are valid, not to mention it’s just pure laziness from those hiring and doesn’t give you a great impression about your potential future employer and the decisions they make about something as fundamental as the hiring process.
@@Lucio20 The one I had to do wasn't AI modeled (this was 2020 so early covid) but had pre-recorded questions asked by real people. The whole process is extremely miserable and I had to do timed free response questions as well that I had to type out.
That is so wrong, what is someone speaks in AAVE dialect/ African American English, the algorithm can discriminate the candidate as "not proper English"
@@Lucio20 maybe is the states, but actually in the UK I’m pretty sure they can ask for that information but you can say you would rather not provide it. It’s kept separate from the rest of the application, and is just there to see if they are attracting diverse candidates I think.
these video interviews are humiliating and awful. I just got a new job after a month, 70 applications and cover letters, and probably 5 of these video interviews. I even got rejected from Costco after doing three rounds of interviews... I turn up on the first day and the job is entirely different to the one described on the listing, and it became immediately clear they didn't read my resume or cover letter at all. The job is easy and I need work but I can only imagine the hiring BS and jumping through hoops only gets worse once I finish my degree and start applying for more technical positions
I did a video interview when I was still in high school at the start of the pandemic and damn was it terrible. I re-recorded it at least 15 times and just sat there after I was done in silence. Whoever came up with the concept should have to try and do one.
That video interview thing is so wack. I've done aton but only for minimal wage jobs at like a grocery store. And then you have to answer several more question in text, and after that is done they ask you for your whole complete profile so you answer even more questions and add a profile picture and stuff on their job page. Those are optional but they say you are more likely to be hired if you tell them everything about you. I hate minimal wage job searching. It sucks. Edit: Just to add to this, you also have to give a personal cover letter, so basically you give them everything about you 4 times to probably not get the job. Fuck, the job market sucks so bad
Why would companies care at all about any of that stuff for a minimum wage job? And why would anybody looking for a minimum wage job put themselves through any of that when there's plenty of places that will hire you on the spot.
I've had my hr manager openly make fun of interview videos in front of me. It's unbelievable how rude they are about it and can only do so because its not in person
@@karlomolnar2780naw man. Uncle Ted was always right. Staring into a little camera to recite pandering nonsense is a prime example of the decline in society.
I also did a video interview using the Kira Assessment tool for a dental school. It was the worst "interview" experience of my life because it asked a complex question that was 3 sentences long and only gave me 2 minutes to finish. To make matters worse, I was not used to recording myself, so every flaw I saw in my mannerisms (during practice) made me incredibly nervous for the actual recording. I ended up stuttering a lot and finishing only half of my answer before it cut me off. It's so weird talking to no one and only having one single take to do it. I was torn up about it for days, and I haven't heard back from that dental school in 3 months. I felt humiliated to say the least. Meanwhile, I did an actual in-person interview with a different dental school which went relatively great. I was talking to actual human beings and not to a camera on my laptop. Personally, I just feel like the video interviews are not a fair assessment of someone's character/interviewing capabilities.
I started doing one of these once and I also despised it. I messed up on the first question and just felt so awkward and uncomfortable that I just gave up the interview. Now anytime I see one, I just completely pass up the job. It’s a red flag in my eyes, as I’m sure many others as well. No need of wasting my time doing that. Companies using this will most certainly miss out on some great candidates
Did a hireview interview some weeks back. The company thankfully had some good videos giving me an introduction to the process and they were generous with attempts allowed and prep time between attempts. Was a good half an hour of questions in total. I heard back a week later! Had a behavior interview with real folks over video call and honestly did super well. Hoping the tech interview goes well and I can report back that I did actually get a job after doing hireview as the first step.
Years ago I did an interview to work at Chitpole for an entry level job. Everyone I saw including myself were well dressed, meanwhile this one kid comes in with brown cargo shorts and a t-shirt and carrying a coka-cola bottle. I didn't get the job but I went into the same Chitpotle a week later and saw the kid working there. Needless to say he must've knew something I didn't to get the job
Before I got to do a Hirevue interview, I had to do a 40 question exam showing I knew basic reading and math, and a 30 question exam that had “no wrong answers” but was very clearly skewed.
I hate having to do those freaking personality tests when applying to be a ski lift operator, I’m going to work hard and show up on time, why do you want to know precisely how extroverted I am?
I did one of those virtual "interview" things last spring for a plasma donation company, it was just a precursor to an in-person interview. I didn't get anything because they don't hire seasonal workers and I go to university out of state. Tangentially all of my family's suggestions also did not accept seasonal workers, including Target.
At one of my previous jobs they used to use the video interview a TON. During one of my interviews for a management position one of the questions was "What makes you a great leader?" and there was a little bit of lag at the start of my answer so I went to click redo and instead hit submit so my boss just got a video that was me taking a breath to start answering, pausing for a sec and then stopping the video...Shit ruled.
"what is your impression of our culture" is such a stupid question. I am going to be asking you about your company culture not the other way around lol
When I "auditioned" for a job in another state it was like a VOD you couldn't re-record and I told them I would rank the associates last when it came to employees, customers, or upper management. I got the job
I think we live in an unfortunate reality where who you know/are related to is FAR more important than any other qualification. Like maybe I'm just being silly but it definitely feels like in the last few decades people will no longer take a chance on a random new hire, you HAVE to have an in at the company.
That is… an interesting way of looking at things. Maybe for your field or small town of 300 people. I’ve never had that issue nor has anyone I’ve talked to.
It's definitely true for the entry level, where you're competing with thousands if not tens or hundreds of thousands of people who also don't have much on their resumes. Getting my first job out of college was crushing, just failure after failure after failure. I even only got out of it because a friend had a job opening on his team. And man, getting that first job under your belt makes getting every new job after so, so much easier it's not even funny. But if I didn't have that connection to get my foot in the door, I could've gone unemployed for so much longer. Maybe I would've even given up at some point.
@@Purriah It's probably less true in a small town of 300, because everyone living there would be someone you know (or a friend of someone you know). So "knowing them" becomes less of an advantage, because the hiring guy will know everyone that's applied. "Who you know" > "What you know" is definitely true for entry level jobs when you have just graduated, because for most of those jobs they're looking for personality fit rather than existing skillset. If someone at the company can vouch that Applicant X is a good fit in terms of personality, they'd almost certainly get the job over Applicant Y even if their qualifications and experience was the same.
"Please waste time writing a cover letter for us and the 10 other companies you are applying to so that we know you really want the jobs." - HR "TLDR lawl" - HR
In the UK, I am applying for degree apprenticeships and I thought it was just the norm now. I have done probably around 10+ and expecting to do more in the near future. I just saw it as a way to handle more applications however now I can see that there is likely some bias occurring based on appearance as well.
I had one of those video interviews just the other day. I did the exact same thing the sky west gal did. Except I know for a fact that they said I get two chances to answer each question. That was a fucking lie lmao. I just immediately exited the interview after that. They then scheduled a phone interview that I'm doing tomorrow. Talking to an actual person makes it so much easier, idk why though. I am extremely introverted but doing that video interview was the worst thing ever lmao
I did one of these for an engineering internship recently. I did end up getting it, but honestly the video interview felt mostly like something to see if you would do it, than an actual assessment. No one once asked me any skill based questions, idk how they know I'm qualified P.S: they added a second attempt, probably to prevent that one poor woman's problem
Had one about a year and a half ago for an internship. Didn’t get the internship. Applied for another internship with the same company this year. Got an internship and didn’t have to do the prescreen.
Had to do a video pre-interview back in 2018. It sends a randomized question and gives you 90 seconds to think then gives you 60 seconds recorded to answer. And it didn't let you review anything. Managed to get the job but goddam that was a rough pre-interview.
I did one for a security guard job. Took 45 minutes. It was like 15 questions that we had to answer right away within 3 minutes. It felt like it was designed to see if you would falter in a stressful situation. I got the job btw
I did do one to become an RA, and I did get through the prescreening and then had to do a group interview process AND then another interview individually that was exactly the same as the video but live. I was stupid and just said sure to do the RA for the living-learning community, so I had to do another interview for that. I did get it and was not fired. They doubled the pay the next year, though, but hired me for a worse position that I declined. Apparently, the management went to shit and I got a bunch of scholarships so I kinda still won
I did a video interview for Target in 2021 and actually landed a job there. You only got three resets for like 6 questions and your responses had to be about a minute. I think I did alright but I believe they were very desperate for the holidays coming up.
I wouldn’t even apply for a job that tried to make me take an aptitude test or record a one way interview. I also don’t apply for any jobs that require a cover letter unless it’s for a company I actually like.
i did one during covid and after i landed the job i was talking to the recruiter and he said he thought they were dumb, never looked at them, and only did it cuz HR wanted to
Yeah I was posting on the MM discord about how much I hate them 🥴. Am actually pretty OP in person to person interviews but they're just shit. No way to gauge the tonenyou should use
Funniest timing I just had to do one of these for a retail job I applied for, weirdest shit, but honestly I prefer it to a job deciding on me by just resume especially in retail and what not
What does hearing have to do with READING a question and then answering? It's a VIDEO interview, they can use sign language no? How soo many people thumbs up that comment without using their brain first is shocking.
@@Humineralthe person (or algorithm) reviewing the interview clip will likely not know ASL and will therefore completely disregard the applicant. in addition, the recording makes the disability visible, where otherwise one of the few protections disabled people ever have against job discrimination is some ability to not disclose the disability until hired.
your spouses exception would need to be clarified before proceeding into the video interview. If she cannot speak, the AI won’t be able to do its job, so you would just specify that before applying to the job and have a real interview. They ask those types of questions before extending an invitation to a hirevue interview
Back when I worked at McDonald's in the 2010's, we got 1 free meal on days we worked, so that might be real. The Healthcare, though? Is that just the state insurance? Mn state insurance isn't bad. They actually covered all but $3 for medicine when I used them back then
I did one of these when applying for best buy (geek squad iirc) and it was rhe most embarrassing thing ive ever done. I dont even take pictures of myself. It was so fucking awkward.
I was supposed to do one of these but I straight up didn't do it and they reached out to me for a f2f interview instead lmao. Got the job though and now I'm a software engineer.
this is assuming you can even get an interview/call back now a days. ive applied for 15 jobs and have gotten contacted by 1 and then left on ghost when i replied
I work for Walmart, and they actually don't have any job interview for entry-level jobs. I just got a call one day, and they said I had the job after an online application. CLICKBAIT
Did one not too long ago, got the offer for the job. But the job listing was for ‘Digital Marketing’ and the offer itself was door-to-door cold calls. Video interview process was lengthy and pretty random and didn’t really seem to filter anyone, as when I showed up for the in-person interview, it was WITH another person. Like with another active applicant. I didn’t accept the position. I still need a job. Why is interviewing like this.
Its honestly so much worse. An AI scans your video and will prescreen if you dony have enough inflection on keywords. So if you have the slightest nuerodivergence youre fked
Chatgbt has to be the worst coding ai out there when it comes to trying to do statistics. I don’t think it got a single question correct the entire semester when I tried lol
As someone who works in recruitment the reason you actually do virtual interviews is to save time from meeting hundreds of people first high volume roles. You’re not using it to ask illegal Qs although might differ in USA. I’ve worked on the other side of that for grad recruitment and had to watch about 300 graduate interviews. The best were then invited for in person 2nd round.
@@daniellaurin9566 unconscious bias can very much affect people without knowing but we rate the answers rather than person. We’re not grading how they look.
I hate this so much, this tool just allows discrimination to happen. For Examples: -if the interview candidate is pregnant and they don't want to pay maternity leave. -Someone that speaks AAVE or has a heavy accent. -Colour, gender, or any physical appearance would be judged before someone sees your resume.
About 3 years ago I did a video interview through Hirevue, you aren’t assessed by people but an algorithm that listens out for the words you use, your facial expressions and inflection. This and the gamification assessments were really off-putting aspects of job hunting.
dystopian shit
I think if a prospective employer wanted me to do a video interview like this, I wouldn’t want to work for that company. All the issues that Atrioc raises are valid, not to mention it’s just pure laziness from those hiring and doesn’t give you a great impression about your potential future employer and the decisions they make about something as fundamental as the hiring process.
@@Lucio20 The one I had to do wasn't AI modeled (this was 2020 so early covid) but had pre-recorded questions asked by real people. The whole process is extremely miserable and I had to do timed free response questions as well that I had to type out.
That is so wrong, what is someone speaks in AAVE dialect/ African American English, the algorithm can discriminate the candidate as "not proper English"
@@Lucio20 maybe is the states, but actually in the UK I’m pretty sure they can ask for that information but you can say you would rather not provide it.
It’s kept separate from the rest of the application, and is just there to see if they are attracting diverse candidates I think.
these video interviews are humiliating and awful. I just got a new job after a month, 70 applications and cover letters, and probably 5 of these video interviews. I even got rejected from Costco after doing three rounds of interviews... I turn up on the first day and the job is entirely different to the one described on the listing, and it became immediately clear they didn't read my resume or cover letter at all. The job is easy and I need work but I can only imagine the hiring BS and jumping through hoops only gets worse once I finish my degree and start applying for more technical positions
it gets worse 😭
I did a video interview when I was still in high school at the start of the pandemic and damn was it terrible. I re-recorded it at least 15 times and just sat there after I was done in silence. Whoever came up with the concept should have to try and do one.
That video interview thing is so wack. I've done aton but only for minimal wage jobs at like a grocery store. And then you have to answer several more question in text, and after that is done they ask you for your whole complete profile so you answer even more questions and add a profile picture and stuff on their job page. Those are optional but they say you are more likely to be hired if you tell them everything about you. I hate minimal wage job searching. It sucks.
Edit: Just to add to this, you also have to give a personal cover letter, so basically you give them everything about you 4 times to probably not get the job. Fuck, the job market sucks so bad
I had to do a similar one to apply to a school. I didn't get in.
This is actual insanity for minimum wage.
Why would companies care at all about any of that stuff for a minimum wage job? And why would anybody looking for a minimum wage job put themselves through any of that when there's plenty of places that will hire you on the spot.
I've had my hr manager openly make fun of interview videos in front of me. It's unbelievable how rude they are about it and can only do so because its not in person
Those video interviews are dystopian...
Stop saying the word dystopian, please
@@karlomolnar2780dystopian
@@karlomolnar2780 your comment would create something really dystopian
@@karlomolnar2780naw man. Uncle Ted was always right. Staring into a little camera to recite pandering nonsense is a prime example of the decline in society.
Stupid and borderline illegal but not dystopian
I also did a video interview using the Kira Assessment tool for a dental school. It was the worst "interview" experience of my life because it asked a complex question that was 3 sentences long and only gave me 2 minutes to finish. To make matters worse, I was not used to recording myself, so every flaw I saw in my mannerisms (during practice) made me incredibly nervous for the actual recording. I ended up stuttering a lot and finishing only half of my answer before it cut me off. It's so weird talking to no one and only having one single take to do it. I was torn up about it for days, and I haven't heard back from that dental school in 3 months. I felt humiliated to say the least.
Meanwhile, I did an actual in-person interview with a different dental school which went relatively great. I was talking to actual human beings and not to a camera on my laptop. Personally, I just feel like the video interviews are not a fair assessment of someone's character/interviewing capabilities.
I started doing one of these once and I also despised it. I messed up on the first question and just felt so awkward and uncomfortable that I just gave up the interview.
Now anytime I see one, I just completely pass up the job. It’s a red flag in my eyes, as I’m sure many others as well. No need of wasting my time doing that.
Companies using this will most certainly miss out on some great candidates
Did a hireview interview some weeks back. The company thankfully had some good videos giving me an introduction to the process and they were generous with attempts allowed and prep time between attempts. Was a good half an hour of questions in total.
I heard back a week later! Had a behavior interview with real folks over video call and honestly did super well. Hoping the tech interview goes well and I can report back that I did actually get a job after doing hireview as the first step.
My current job I had to do an online interview and I was the only 1 out of about 1000 applicants who got the job. It was scary
Congrats
Years ago I did an interview to work at Chitpole for an entry level job. Everyone I saw including myself were well dressed, meanwhile this one kid comes in with brown cargo shorts and a t-shirt and carrying a coka-cola bottle. I didn't get the job but I went into the same Chitpotle a week later and saw the kid working there. Needless to say he must've knew something I didn't to get the job
Dress for the job you want, lil bro was dressed to work at Chipotle while everyone else was dressed to work somewhere better
I wouldn't be surprised if he had a referral from someone working there and or is extremely charismatic.
@@daniellaurin9566 He sold the assistant manager weed.
Gonna graduate college soon. Wanted to sign for an interview. They made me record a video of me answering a 3 questions. Worst experience of my life
Before I got to do a Hirevue interview, I had to do a 40 question exam showing I knew basic reading and math, and a 30 question exam that had “no wrong answers” but was very clearly skewed.
I hate having to do those freaking personality tests when applying to be a ski lift operator, I’m going to work hard and show up on time, why do you want to know precisely how extroverted I am?
Because the manager needs a friend after his wife left him.
I love the GIGASMUG emote, maybe the background could be dimmed or cut out or something but its so good and can be applied to so many situations
I did one of these once, never again, waste of time. Lazy on the employers part and you're never gonna hear back from it
Brian david gilbert has the best video interview ever uploaded here in youtube but I don't think most companies would let that slide
I did one of those virtual "interview" things last spring for a plasma donation company, it was just a precursor to an in-person interview. I didn't get anything because they don't hire seasonal workers and I go to university out of state. Tangentially all of my family's suggestions also did not accept seasonal workers, including Target.
At one of my previous jobs they used to use the video interview a TON. During one of my interviews for a management position one of the questions was "What makes you a great leader?" and there was a little bit of lag at the start of my answer so I went to click redo and instead hit submit so my boss just got a video that was me taking a breath to start answering, pausing for a sec and then stopping the video...Shit ruled.
"what is your impression of our culture" is such a stupid question. I am going to be asking you about your company culture not the other way around lol
impression? bad you ask questions any person outside the company wouldn't know.
When I "auditioned" for a job in another state it was like a VOD you couldn't re-record and I told them I would rank the associates last when it came to employees, customers, or upper management. I got the job
I’m so excited that I’ll never have to do video recorded interviews. Feel bad for the people graduating and looking for jobs now.
Hirevue is the worst type of dystopian cyberpunk technology and of course THATS the one that actually became real
Yeah cool cybernetic upgrades at the minimum to balance out this post-apocalyptic world we are heading
I think we live in an unfortunate reality where who you know/are related to is FAR more important than any other qualification. Like maybe I'm just being silly but it definitely feels like in the last few decades people will no longer take a chance on a random new hire, you HAVE to have an in at the company.
I think that mostly depends on the company
That is… an interesting way of looking at things. Maybe for your field or small town of 300 people. I’ve never had that issue nor has anyone I’ve talked to.
It's definitely true for the entry level, where you're competing with thousands if not tens or hundreds of thousands of people who also don't have much on their resumes. Getting my first job out of college was crushing, just failure after failure after failure. I even only got out of it because a friend had a job opening on his team. And man, getting that first job under your belt makes getting every new job after so, so much easier it's not even funny. But if I didn't have that connection to get my foot in the door, I could've gone unemployed for so much longer. Maybe I would've even given up at some point.
@@Purriah It's probably less true in a small town of 300, because everyone living there would be someone you know (or a friend of someone you know). So "knowing them" becomes less of an advantage, because the hiring guy will know everyone that's applied.
"Who you know" > "What you know" is definitely true for entry level jobs when you have just graduated, because for most of those jobs they're looking for personality fit rather than existing skillset. If someone at the company can vouch that Applicant X is a good fit in terms of personality, they'd almost certainly get the job over Applicant Y even if their qualifications and experience was the same.
@@hyeonmu6576 C'mon, its so easy, just get a college degree
"Please waste time writing a cover letter for us and the 10 other companies you are applying to so that we know you really want the jobs."
- HR
"TLDR lawl"
- HR
In the UK, I am applying for degree apprenticeships and I thought it was just the norm now. I have done probably around 10+ and expecting to do more in the near future. I just saw it as a way to handle more applications however now I can see that there is likely some bias occurring based on appearance as well.
I just realized that marketing monday has a double meaning. Both for marketing as in advertising and economical markets. Genius name ngl.
I had one of those video interviews just the other day. I did the exact same thing the sky west gal did. Except I know for a fact that they said I get two chances to answer each question. That was a fucking lie lmao. I just immediately exited the interview after that. They then scheduled a phone interview that I'm doing tomorrow. Talking to an actual person makes it so much easier, idk why though. I am extremely introverted but doing that video interview was the worst thing ever lmao
In switzerland cover letters are super important for some reason and they fucking suck to make
What a fun title to see when I have my first ever interview tomorrow 😃
How'd it go?
@@dominick1 pretty well :)
@@soulslasherdid you get it
@@Pyrrhonian nope 🫠
This thumbnail is funny as a teenager who got hired from Walmart without a single interview 😂
I did one of these for Yik Yak in college. Most awkward experience I've ever gone through.
I had a virtual meet and greet with walmart about a month ago and those fuckers never called and didnt pick up when i tried calling them.
I did one of these for an engineering internship recently. I did end up getting it, but honestly the video interview felt mostly like something to see if you would do it, than an actual assessment. No one once asked me any skill based questions, idk how they know I'm qualified
P.S: they added a second attempt, probably to prevent that one poor woman's problem
Had one about a year and a half ago for an internship. Didn’t get the internship. Applied for another internship with the same company this year. Got an internship and didn’t have to do the prescreen.
I hate those prompt interviews, I stuttered through it, would of felt more comfortable talking to a human.
Had to do a video pre-interview back in 2018. It sends a randomized question and gives you 90 seconds to think then gives you 60 seconds recorded to answer. And it didn't let you review anything. Managed to get the job but goddam that was a rough pre-interview.
I was wondering why I got interview recordings in my feed. This explains it.
BTW at the end KodaBear said quality control
I did one for a security guard job. Took 45 minutes. It was like 15 questions that we had to answer right away within 3 minutes. It felt like it was designed to see if you would falter in a stressful situation. I got the job btw
I did do one to become an RA, and I did get through the prescreening and then had to do a group interview process AND then another interview individually that was exactly the same as the video but live. I was stupid and just said sure to do the RA for the living-learning community, so I had to do another interview for that. I did get it and was not fired. They doubled the pay the next year, though, but hired me for a worse position that I declined. Apparently, the management went to shit and I got a bunch of scholarships so I kinda still won
I did a video interview for Target in 2021 and actually landed a job there. You only got three resets for like 6 questions and your responses had to be about a minute. I think I did alright but I believe they were very desperate for the holidays coming up.
Companies will soon start asking for highlight videos from previous jobs
5:45 best buy
I wouldn’t even apply for a job that tried to make me take an aptitude test or record a one way interview. I also don’t apply for any jobs that require a cover letter unless it’s for a company I actually like.
Yeah you can afford to be picky, you live with mommy and daddy
i did one during covid and after i landed the job i was talking to the recruiter and he said he thought they were dumb, never looked at them, and only did it cuz HR wanted to
Lol big A finding out about how all the Canadian banks 'interview' for internships
i did video interviews when i was applying for news stations. they want u to record yourself basically doing a cover letter
if i ever get into a interview and see atrioc as the recruiter id be ecstatic
Yeah I was posting on the MM discord about how much I hate them 🥴. Am actually pretty OP in person to person interviews but they're just shit. No way to gauge the tonenyou should use
Funniest timing I just had to do one of these for a retail job I applied for, weirdest shit, but honestly I prefer it to a job deciding on me by just resume especially in retail and what not
kodabear said he works in quality control
I had to make a video to apply for McDonalds in Denmark in like 2018. Felt so weird and awkward to record. No surprise I didn’t get it
Spouse is deaf, these kinds of video interviews are explicitly discriminatory and illegal.
What does hearing have to do with READING a question and then answering?
It's a VIDEO interview, they can use sign language no?
How soo many people thumbs up that comment without using their brain first is shocking.
@@Humineralthe person (or algorithm) reviewing the interview clip will likely not know ASL and will therefore completely disregard the applicant. in addition, the recording makes the disability visible, where otherwise one of the few protections disabled people ever have against job discrimination is some ability to not disclose the disability until hired.
@@Humineral what if the recruiter doesn't know sign language and doesn't feel like getting someone who does for the interview.
@@skylarrose4176 How is that any different than a regular interview?
your spouses exception would need to be clarified before proceeding into the video interview. If she cannot speak, the AI won’t be able to do its job, so you would just specify that before applying to the job and have a real interview. They ask those types of questions before extending an invitation to a hirevue interview
Back when I worked at McDonald's in the 2010's, we got 1 free meal on days we worked, so that might be real. The Healthcare, though? Is that just the state insurance? Mn state insurance isn't bad. They actually covered all but $3 for medicine when I used them back then
THEN WHY DO THEY ASK FOR THEM!?!?!?!?
I did one of these when applying for best buy (geek squad iirc) and it was rhe most embarrassing thing ive ever done. I dont even take pictures of myself. It was so fucking awkward.
He's like targets beneath me lol
Not me legit doing this for an internship 2 hours ago
goated background song
Ive done one of these automated video interviews got no response
I was supposed to do one of these but I straight up didn't do it and they reached out to me for a f2f interview instead lmao. Got the job though and now I'm a software engineer.
this is assuming you can even get an interview/call back now a days. ive applied for 15 jobs and have gotten contacted by 1 and then left on ghost when i replied
God.. I hate hireview interviews. I always fail them despite doing the practice session. Watching the timer turns off my brain.
You have to do this for target and it was just as shitty with its questions 😂
another fire clip big a
I work for Walmart, and they actually don't have any job interview for entry-level jobs. I just got a call one day, and they said I had the job after an online application. CLICKBAIT
Thanks god iam an engineer and I dont have To do any of this shit. Cant even remember when I would have written cv. Maybe at school
i did a video interview for vodafone once. that shit is awful.
Delta Airlines dude
If you want free food work at a pizza place, not a chain tho.
I'm pretty sure Nvidia had me do a video interview back in 2021
So big a needs to reapply
Did one not too long ago, got the offer for the job. But the job listing was for ‘Digital Marketing’ and the offer itself was door-to-door cold calls.
Video interview process was lengthy and pretty random and didn’t really seem to filter anyone, as when I showed up for the in-person interview, it was WITH another person. Like with another active applicant.
I didn’t accept the position. I still need a job. Why is interviewing like this.
Lmfao one of the colleges im applying to has one of these 💀
Its honestly so much worse. An AI scans your video and will prescreen if you dony have enough inflection on keywords. So if you have the slightest nuerodivergence youre fked
Big A, tighten the screw on your microphone, it’s loose!
AATRIOC PLEASE LET ME SHARE MY VIDEO INTERVIEW WITH YOU ON THE STREAM IT WAS AN ABSOLUTE ROLLERCOASTER SPANNING NEARLY 5 MONTHS
I got an internship doing that
Chatgbt has to be the worst coding ai out there when it comes to trying to do statistics. I don’t think it got a single question correct the entire semester when I tried lol
The idea is thay you spend 30 minutes trying and retrying prompts untill it kinda works, instead of just spending 10 minutes to actually learn
They definitely give u free food at McDonald’s If you close
I've seen my friend do a video interview lol
How did chat not link erobbs streamable application. Disappointed in yall
I have done literally 6 hirevues this month
Actually maybe apply for CEO of Google because you'd probably be more interesting than the current guy 😂
At first I loved the background music but in the end my ears where hurting.
As someone who works in recruitment the reason you actually do virtual interviews is to save time from meeting hundreds of people first high volume roles. You’re not using it to ask illegal Qs although might differ in USA. I’ve worked on the other side of that for grad recruitment and had to watch about 300 graduate interviews. The best were then invited for in person 2nd round.
Still can be discriminatory if you get your first impressions from how they look, instead of a resume with only an objective metric, their skills.
@@daniellaurin9566 unconscious bias can very much affect people without knowing but we rate the answers rather than person. We’re not grading how they look.
I hate this so much, this tool just allows discrimination to happen. For Examples:
-if the interview candidate is pregnant and they don't want to pay maternity leave.
-Someone that speaks AAVE or has a heavy accent.
-Colour, gender, or any physical appearance would be judged before someone sees your resume.
Yea, but what was the job, KodaBear82388?!