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by izelnakri
1330 days ago
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I think these should actually be written in the job ads because I wouldn’t want to work for a colleague who has your mentality. I worked with many bunch of sit-on-your-chair claim your paycheck at the end of the month types, another colleague another competition types, and this one is the most complex: overly-invested/$feelingLikeOwnerYetOwnNoShares types but yet I have no way to screen them during the interview process and a single mention in the job ad description could help me save some time: Companies should immediately tell if they would reject job-hoppers, or particularly screen for loyalist in tech(ones with delusion given commercial activity in IT), that is a company I can respect! |
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Job-hopping isn't some arbitrary threshold that gets crossed. It's more of a pattern that gets identified while evaluating a person's resume.
When I say "job hopper" I don't mean someone who has 10 years of experience across 3 or 4 different jobs. The "job hopper" resumes I see are some times as extreme as 12 jobs in 10 years, or occasionally people who have never reached the 1 year mark at any company. If someone can't last a full year as an FTE at any company, it's hard to argue that there isn't a problem.
It's not a big deal for someone who is 1-2 years into their career. But when someone is 10 years into their career and they're not staying anywhere long enough to really make an impact, why would any hiring manager reasonably expect that to be different after hiring them again for job number 11 or whatever it ends up being? The most likely outcome is that the pattern continues.