|
|
|
|
|
by nickmyersdt
1439 days ago
|
|
As a hiring manager, it's probably nothing you're doing wrong. There are so many applications for roles, that most get a cursory glance in the first instance. I try and do all the initial application reviews myself, and to look properly at each applicant however (a) I know I'm in a minority and (b) there's such variability in how candidates present themselves that despite my best efforts I go a bit blind after too many. If it would help, I'd happily take a look at your resume and see if I can offer any advice on that would have worked on me (whether that advice is more universally useful I cannot tell you). There are many reasons for rejecting applications, and the specifics about you probably aren't even in the top 5. Don't take it personally and play the numbers game (high volume of applications) or target hiring managers to get traction (otherwise you're likely to have your paperwork reviewes by a recruiter, agent or "hiring team" who are keyword matching at best). |
|
As a SWE, I've been told many times that the ability to pick up new techs and languages should be your bread and butter, and I believe this strongly. If you understand the basics of network requests and REST patterns then most web frameworks are the same. Frameworks are just abstractions on top of the basics. In the real world of job searching, nobody seems to care. They prefer specific names for keywords.
I've also been playing the numbers name for far too long that seems like I'm falling into a sunk cost fallacy. Unemployed since late 2019 and sent out nearly 2000 cold applications. Given a set of inputs defining job experience, what is someone's probability of getting an offer within the next week after 20 applications? After 100? Or after 500?
I tend to hate solving problems that give no visible signs of progress towards seeing the end, but at least when I do these kinds of problems at work, I'm getting paid for it. Right now I am trying to solve such a problem but without compensation, without much motivation.
Getting a job offer right now is biggest challenge that I've encountered in my life. I have not been as confused or clueless, nothing I've done for my career ever came close to stumping me. And it also should NOT have to be the biggest challenge in my life. Better candidates should be things like, how to organize and manage a team for a very large work project, or how to plan your savings strategy for an early retirement. Finding a job should be among the most basic challenges, not super complicated.