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You don’t mind working overtime if need be now, do you?

The sick days are limited but the pizza during office parties is not!

We’re like a family here, so employees don’t really mind answering a phone call or receiving an email after work.

If you think that these phrases sound like warning signs when said in a job interview, that’s because they most likely are; asking about overtime is arguably the company checking to see how willing you are to go the extra mile, the pizza comment means that you might have to put your work above your health in times when you should be resting, and comparing themselves to a family is only accurate if the family the interviewer is referring to is somewhat dysfunctional.

But these three instances are far from the only signs indicating that a certain workplace might not be the best choice. Members of the ‘Ask Reddit’ community recently discussed more of such indicators, after the user ‘photo_inbloom’ asked them about red flags that everyone should be aware of when attending a job interview.

If you’re curious to learn what red flags netizens described, scroll down to find them on the list below, where you will also find Bored Panda’s interviews with the OP themselves and with the director of Lerner College Career Services Center at the University of Delaware, Jill Panté, who was kind enough to answer a few of our questions on job interviews.

#1

“Leave Immediately”: 30 Netizens Discuss Red Flags To Be Aware Of When Attending A Job Interview If they tell you on arrival that the job you applied for is no longer available, but they have a VERY SIMILAR position that JUST OPENED UP - leave immediately.

It's a bait and switch tactic coupled with the sunk cost fallacy. The "new" position will be identical to the original one you applied for - except the salary is significantly lower. They're hoping that you'll play along because you showed up to be interviewed, probably desperate for work and will accept any job - no matter the wage.

Furthermore, the position you applied for doesn't really exist - or at least not at the advertised wage.

sheikhyerbouti , Pavel Danilyuk Report

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Phillipa Engels
Community Member
2 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

treat it as an opportunity to practice your interview skills: you're there anyway, so you might as well waste their time interviewing someone who isn't going to take the job, and develop your own skills while you're at it

Cee Mor
Community Member
2 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

This just happened to my son, it was for a restaurant office management position, when he got there they asked if he could fill coffee beans in bags all day, in a FACTORY!

moggie63
Community Member
2 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Not necessarily true. I was interviewed for a low level insurance job and then offered another, higher paying, job because they thought I had the necessary ability. I took it.

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#2

“Leave Immediately”: 30 Netizens Discuss Red Flags To Be Aware Of When Attending A Job Interview My (female) ex was applying for a manager role. Interview panel included a male ceo, a female leader and don't remember who else.

At the end, my ex directed a question at the female leader about her experiences there as a female leader.

The ceo jumped in before she could answer and answered for her.

That said a lot.

CapnBloodbeard , The Jopwell Collection Report

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#3

“Leave Immediately”: 30 Netizens Discuss Red Flags To Be Aware Of When Attending A Job Interview "We don't like 'clockwatchers' here. We expect everyone to be committed." Expecting more work for no extra pay. Getting mad at you when you leave at 5 even though your stated work hours end at 5.

Leather-Interview-28 , Ono Kosuki Report

In an interview with Bored Panda, the OP shared that they decided to start a thread on the topic after they were laid off from their job. “It was a very toxic environment to work in. I’ve been attending job interviews this week and wanted to be aware of what to look out for,” they shared.

“I found [the discussion] very beneficial because I’m now keeping all these answers in mind as I attend job interviews while looking for a job.”

#4

“Leave Immediately”: 30 Netizens Discuss Red Flags To Be Aware Of When Attending A Job Interview Not telling you the salary.

EffinAyyItsMe , Gabrielle Henderson Report

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Michael Largey
Community Member
2 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

I once applied at a private school what would give you the salary schedule before the gave you the application. It saved them a lot of paper and interview time.

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#5

“Leave Immediately”: 30 Netizens Discuss Red Flags To Be Aware Of When Attending A Job Interview "We only want the best of the best"
Me: "how much are you paying?"
"Minimum wage".

Perfect01Muse , Mina Rad Report

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“I’ve noticed that when management says they treat everyone like family that it ends up being a lie,” u/photo_inbloom said, asked about the red flags they have observed firsthand when interviewing for a job. “When managers say that, they actually have favorites and treat everyone else like garbage. They do not care about you and only see you as a number rather than as a human being.”

#6

“Leave Immediately”: 30 Netizens Discuss Red Flags To Be Aware Of When Attending A Job Interview One red flag for sure is when they talk about how the company is "like a family." 🥴 Like, that usually means they expect you to be super available all the time and put the job above everything else, even your actual life.

xpetiteemilyx , LinkedIn Sales Navigator Report

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PFD
Community Member
2 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

"We're like one big family here, and once you've attended a few domestic disputes you'll soon see the resemblance." - Sam Vimes (roughly)

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#7

“Leave Immediately”: 30 Netizens Discuss Red Flags To Be Aware Of When Attending A Job Interview If the interviewer is late for your interview. If you were late, they wouldn’t even consider hiring you. It works both ways.

VoraciousReader59 , David Gallie Report

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Not Who You Think
Community Member
2 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Shows a complete lack of respect for your time, and there's a good chance that's how you'll be treated if you get the job.

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#8

“Leave Immediately”: 30 Netizens Discuss Red Flags To Be Aware Of When Attending A Job Interview I brought up a company’s awful Glassdoor reviews and they got so mad they ended the interview. Well. Guess I dodged that bullet.

Adorable_xPrincess , Aslan Kumarov Report

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According to the OP, it’s extremely important to pay attention and keep such red flags in mind, especially during job interviews. “I’m guilty of ignoring red flags and I’m trying to get better at not doing that,” they admitted.

“I think that even if a job sounds perfect you need to really dive into what is expected of you and how the company words things when interviewing you. Anything could be a trap and you need to be careful – carefully consider everything they are telling you and perhaps even write it all down. Speak to a friend and get their second opinion on it as well.”

#9

“Leave Immediately”: 30 Netizens Discuss Red Flags To Be Aware Of When Attending A Job Interview "Nobody wants to work anymore" - You're about to find out exactly why nobody wants to work for them.

Seriously, *every single* job I've worked that said that during an interview was toxic and grossly underpaid.

No_Recognition_1426 , energepic.com Report

#10

“Leave Immediately”: 30 Netizens Discuss Red Flags To Be Aware Of When Attending A Job Interview Pre-internet red flags that still apply.
1. Check the condition of employees' cars.
2. Check building condition.

dfgyrdfhhrdhfr , Nick Nice Report

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#11

“Leave Immediately”: 30 Netizens Discuss Red Flags To Be Aware Of When Attending A Job Interview "Well, the overtime isn't *mandatory*, but most folks stick around after hours most days."

Spoilers: The overtime is mandatory.

babyjaybae , Karolina Kaboompics Report

According to Jill Panté, the director of the Lerner College Career Services Center and an expert in professional development and interviewing, it’s important for interviewees to pay attention to potential red flags as they act as an early warning system for what the job may become.

“Paying attention to different types of red flags can help job seekers avoid entering a workplace that may not align with their professional goals,” she said. “For example, if the company is vague about the culture, career advancement, or daily responsibilities and expectations, that could be a warning sign or a red flag that the company is disorganized and may suggest internal confusion and instability.”

#12

“Leave Immediately”: 30 Netizens Discuss Red Flags To Be Aware Of When Attending A Job Interview When you are signing all the forms they give you and you are taking your time to read over every document so that you can fully understand what you are getting into and people come in and start telling you that you don't need to read this and that just sign here and so on.

Elegant-1Queen , Leon Seibert Report

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#13

“Leave Immediately”: 30 Netizens Discuss Red Flags To Be Aware Of When Attending A Job Interview They asked me my political opinion which I didn't think was right.

cleverwall , Tima Miroshnichenko Report

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JK
Community Member
2 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

I had an interview where they asked if I was a Redskins, Broncos or Cowboys fan. I said I'm from Minnesota so I am loyal to the ones that always choke. Then we talked about the virtues of bacon. I got the job, but it was the strangest job interview I've ever had.

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#14

“Leave Immediately”: 30 Netizens Discuss Red Flags To Be Aware Of When Attending A Job Interview When you ask, "Tell me about a time when one of your employees really impressed you." and they cannot give you a SINGLE example.

My current job gave me MULTIPLE examples of how their team members impressed them. That's how I knew I wanted to work there.

In comparison, when I asked this in another interview, the answer was, "There's so many instances and I can't focus on only one." which I interpreted as, "I don't value my staff in the least." I was glad not to get that offer.

Ethel_Marie , The Jopwell Collection Report

Asked about the red flags Jill Panté herself would advise interviewees to be aware of, she emphasized lack of professionalism, unclear expectations, poor communication, lack of flexibility, and high turnover as some of the main ones to watch out for. “These warning signs can indicate deeper problems with the company such as toxic leadership, disorganization, and lack of regard for employee well-being.”

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#15

“Leave Immediately”: 30 Netizens Discuss Red Flags To Be Aware Of When Attending A Job Interview If you have to make any financial investment into the company in order to work there.

I interviewed for a window installation company and did well on the test. They wanted me in sales and said I needed to pay for a laptop. They would cover it and take it out of my checks if I didn't have the cash to pay upfront.

random5654 , Karolina Kaboompics Report

#16

“Leave Immediately”: 30 Netizens Discuss Red Flags To Be Aware Of When Attending A Job Interview A red flag is when the interviewer doesn’t ask about your experience or skills in detail but focuses on your willingness to work long hours or handle excessive workloads. It could mean they expect you to overwork.

itsjordanxx , Tima Miroshnichenko Report

#17

“Leave Immediately”: 30 Netizens Discuss Red Flags To Be Aware Of When Attending A Job Interview One time they said "We expect people to work here for the fun of it, not the money". Inspired by a Dilbert comic, my response was "If you really mean that, then how about you give me your money and I'll give you the fun part?"

copper-feather , pressfoto Report

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Islandchild
Community Member
2 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

I'm afraid I need money to live so it's higher on my scale than fun, but I'd absolutely love it if you provide a fun work environment

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“Asking questions during the interview process is imperative to make sure you uncover or address any red flags as well as making sure the company is aligned with your career goals,” J. Panté told Bored Panda, suggesting that addressing red flags can help clear the air around certain matters, whether it works to the advantage or disadvantage of the company.

“For example, if you want to work for a company that invests in its employees’ career growth, ask questions about a typical career path, opportunities to learn new skills, or the reasons why the previous person left the role. These questions can help you figure out the company’s commitment to their employees.”

#18

“Leave Immediately”: 30 Netizens Discuss Red Flags To Be Aware Of When Attending A Job Interview If they say things like "we've had trouble filling this position" or give hints about having a high turnover rate. There's a reason everyone's leaving.

Learned this the hard way.

undercover_ravioli , Marten Bjork Report

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Michael Largey
Community Member
2 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

"We've had trouble filling this position." "So I assume that you're going to raise the advertised salary."

#19

Recruitment processes that have 4+ rounds spanning months. Broken management structure that cannot make a decision and also delusional a decent candidate won't have better options.

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Child of the Stars
Community Member
2 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

There's no reason I should ever have to interview with anyone except my immediate management more than twice, and it should happen within a week. Either you want to hire me or you don't. I got kids to feed and put a roof over their heads; I don't have time (or the patience) for your b******t.

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#20

“Leave Immediately”: 30 Netizens Discuss Red Flags To Be Aware Of When Attending A Job Interview If they lied about the salary on the posting.

Accurate_Screen_6012 , Andrea Piacquadio Report

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YaMaOnToast
Community Member
2 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

When they give a range but then say they cant go higher than the middle of the range is a big one

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Asking questions is also important if the interviewee doesn't form too good of a first impression of the company, as it might be worth giving the benefit of the doubt.

“The first impression often sets the tone for the overall perception of a company,” J. Panté noted, “But if job seekers experience a bad first impression, I recommend doing a little more research on the company (using resources like Glassdoor or LinkedIn) and giving it a second chance before walking away.

“If you are given the job offer and still have reservations, request another call to address your concerns before making a final decision. For companies, a low job offer acceptance rate should prompt a thorough review of the hiring process to identify areas for improvement.”

#21

“Leave Immediately”: 30 Netizens Discuss Red Flags To Be Aware Of When Attending A Job Interview A major red flag to watch for during a job interview is if the interviewer or company representative speaks negatively about current or former employees. This behavior can indicate a toxic work environment where blame and negativity are commonplace.

Organic-Republic-990 , UK Black Tech Report

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2 months ago

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#22

One of my go-to questions for an interviewer is, "In the past ten years, how many years have your employees received cost-of-living raises that meet or exceed the annual inflation rate? And how often have they also received merit-based increases above and beyond that amount?"

A s****y company won't answer the question.

A good company will give you an honest answer.

A great company will give you an honest answer of "Ten.".

Kalepsis Report

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Charlie the Cat
Community Member
2 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

The company I currently work for have given an above inflation raise every year since I have been there. 6 years this year.

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#23

Making you wait. I had a boss who would do this. We did a lot of interviews, because we had a lot of turnover. Geez, I wonder why. He would say he wanted to see who really wanted it. I would say they’re here early/on time, they want it.

No_Bookkeeper_6183 Report

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LonelyLittleLeafSheep
Community Member
2 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

I'll give the interviewer 15 minutes past the scheduled time. After that, I'm walking. If they don't respect me enough to be on time for the interview, they aren't going to respect you as an employee.

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One thing that can help companies improve their hiring processes while helping interviewees work on their skills, too, is transparency. Discussing this with Bored Panda, Jill Panté pointed out that the more we share with others, the more information and advice people can receive to improve their chances of success.

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“Hearing about different experiences can also provide more details surrounding the job search process as a whole, as well as common interview questions, and the best way to answer these questions. By learning from real-life situations, job seekers can adjust their strategies and build confidence for their own interview.”

#24

Had a guy one time ask me how old my children were. I think he was trying to sus out if I would be able to work all kinds of crazy hours. If they pry too much into your personal life, that’s not good.

Dano558 Report

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Phillipa Engels
Community Member
2 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

I've (F) never not been asked if I plan on getting married or starting a family. They shouldn't ask that s**t but they do. On the other hand, one of the best jobs I've ever had started with an interview where that was asked and the interviewer ended the interview by telling me I was his first choice even though I was less qualified for the position than other candidates but "he liked my smile". I've never felt so unbalanced, but I needed a job and it was only supposed to be for 3 months. I ended up staying for years and it was, without a doubt, the best place I've ever worked

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#25

“Leave Immediately”: 30 Netizens Discuss Red Flags To Be Aware Of When Attending A Job Interview When they can’t even bother to look at your resume like bro if you want me to work for you at least fake it.

gracezeox , Drazen Zigic Report

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Bat cat in a hat
Community Member
2 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

I've had that. I turned up for the interview, the interview was at least one hour late, I had to wait in the shop floor without as much as a chair or a glass of water on a very hot day. Was called to the meeting room, the person interviewing read my cv while I was sitting in front of her and went "Oh no, no, no, you're not really suited for this job. We've probably going to hire the person that was here before you, she was perfect for this position, we got along so well! Since you're here anyway, do you want to hear about the company?" Fúck no, lady, thanks for wasting my afternoon

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#26

“Leave Immediately”: 30 Netizens Discuss Red Flags To Be Aware Of When Attending A Job Interview "These will be your responsibilities, but you might be asked to do take on this and that role." Prepare to take 3 jobs for the salary of 1.

island-breeze , The Jopwell Collection Report

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Mike F
Community Member
2 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

The dreaded "other duties as assigned" which translates to: we're going to train you to do 3 jobs, but pay you for one.

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#27

“Leave Immediately”: 30 Netizens Discuss Red Flags To Be Aware Of When Attending A Job Interview I went into an interview for a low-level admin position, and they made my put my cell phone in a bucket up front, stating "no phones are allowed in the back. it reduces productivity." Big NOPE for me.

GracefulGlowa , Goran Ivos Report

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Me. Just Me.
Community Member
2 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

That screams 2005 to me. Having a cell phone on you is normal and even expected today, unless you are working for the government or a government contractor, or a job where the device is a major radio interference risk, or could injure you or someone else because it's a dangerous job. Yes, our phones are more of a distraction than they used to be, but a good employer will expect you to manage that. A micromanaging employer will do something like this.

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#28

Bull****t psychological questions clearly designed to throw you off of your practiced material. Like, describe yourself in 3 words.

APuffyCloudSky Report

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Not Who You Think
Community Member
2 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

I once was doing interviews alongside a colleague who would ask, "Would you consider yourself a fork, knife, or spoon?" When I asked him what he hoped to gain by asking that question, he said, "Nothing, I just like to hear the answers." He didn't participate in the interview process anymore after that.

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#29

“Leave Immediately”: 30 Netizens Discuss Red Flags To Be Aware Of When Attending A Job Interview If your interview is between 12 to 2, look around. If everyone is at their cubicle eating their lunch. Red flag.

shaka_sulu , Steve Ding Report

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Not Who You Think
Community Member
2 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

SOME people may be there for this or that reason, but EVERYONE (or most everyone) is not a good sign, agreed.

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#30

I interviewed with one of the big ticket networks. It’s based in Southern New England.

The pre-screen call with the hiring manager went well and our views about writing code, source control and documentation were spot on so I thought I’d give it a shot.

When I arrived they took my driver’s license from me and told me they’d hold it while I was on site. Then they wanted to do a credit check while I was taking a series of grammar, basic intelligence and JavaScript tests.

I told them there’s no way I was going to get my credit dinged with a hard credit check before an offer. The woman from HR… just. didn’t. get. it.

I made sure they stopped the credit check, collected my license, and walked out.

I sat in the car for a minute, thinking about the very odd vibe of the place, how they treated me, and wondered about the culture of a place that would do these things.

Since then, they have been outed for a whole bunch of issues, including [big surprise] HR ethics.

Looking back, I never should have considered working in that place.

I’m very happy where I work now, my boss is smart and flexible and I’m doing good work — as opposed to screwing concert goers.

Near miss!

NorthNorthAmerican Report

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Freya the Wanderer
Community Member
2 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Asking for your driver's license so they can hold it is a BIG red flag. What if they refused to give it back till you completed the interview, or took certain B.S. "personality" tests? If I arrive for an interview and somebody tells me to let them hold my license, I'll nope out of there.

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#31

"You are required to wear clothing that has the company logo. You must purchase it yourself. From the company."

GotPC Report

#32

“Leave Immediately”: 30 Netizens Discuss Red Flags To Be Aware Of When Attending A Job Interview I haven't seen this one yet.

When your interviewer stops the interview to take a phone call or talk to someone else about some kind of work thing that could obviously wait.

Whether it's understaffed, management isn't organized, or some kind of a sick test every job I've ever had do this turned into a s**t show.

Personal/Work emergencies aside, they're asking whether they can disrespect you and you'll take it.

ordaia , Dane Deaner Report

#33

“Leave Immediately”: 30 Netizens Discuss Red Flags To Be Aware Of When Attending A Job Interview If they ask you to do work for free during the interview.

driving_gilly9360 , John Schnobrich Report

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LonelyLittleLeafSheep
Community Member
2 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

"I don't work for free, but I'm happy to do it for you at my contractor rate of $100 per hour."

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#34

“Leave Immediately”: 30 Netizens Discuss Red Flags To Be Aware Of When Attending A Job Interview When they feel the need to reassure you in the interview that at that company, they “work hard, but also play hard.”

They don’t play hard - it’s a sweatshop and they’re just trying to convince that’s it’s anything but one.

Spicy-Princess , Sigmund Report

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Dawn Eyestone
Community Member
2 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

In tthis context, "we play hard" means "we drink a lot of alcohol to cope with this terrible job".

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#35

“Leave Immediately”: 30 Netizens Discuss Red Flags To Be Aware Of When Attending A Job Interview I was asked when I planned to get pregnant, since I (at the time) was a woman in my 20’s. They said it always happens and they end up having to hire someone new. I had no words. 😳

delulu4drama , Walls.io Report

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LonelyLittleLeafSheep
Community Member
2 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Your words should have been "not only is it illegal to ask that question, it's sexist and inappropriate. Would you have asked a man that question? No? Then move along to the next question or get bent."

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#36

“Leave Immediately”: 30 Netizens Discuss Red Flags To Be Aware Of When Attending A Job Interview Fast paced environment = we don’t know what we are doing, but we have the money to throw around to see if it’s working.

nohurrie32 , Medienstürmer Report

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Mike F
Community Member
2 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

It actually means that they have no clue how to schedule their workload.

#37

I once turned down a job offer because they mentioned that the previous person in the position had quit after a few months, and most of the people I interviewed with seemed stressed out.

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#38

Caginess about the salary. One job I got handed my predecessor's email, and they were openly talking about how I was underpaid because I was underpaid. They had £22k more in the budget than they paid me, and cheapskated me on that. I lasted 9 months, and was furious. They f****d me for no reason other than they could.


ANY job advert that says "competitive salary" I contact them and say "I have a competitive CV. Shall we stop the b******t now?"

iamjurassicmark Report

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#39

“Leave Immediately”: 30 Netizens Discuss Red Flags To Be Aware Of When Attending A Job Interview I was asked if I was married or had kids. I said no. He said, “Good.”.

ProsciuttoPizza , charlesdeluvio Report

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LonelyLittleLeafSheep
Community Member
2 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

I would have said "not only is that an entirely inappropriate question, but it has no bearing on my qualifications for this job. And it's none of your business."

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#40

"We're a family" - A dysfunctional one with a narcissistic mom and abusive alcoholic dad.

"Work hard, play harder" - aka we're *all* functional alcoholics and sleep is for the dead.

"Untracked PTO" - This one *can* be a green flag as long as they immediately clarify everyone takes at least 8-10 weeks a year, otherwise it's a nice way of saying "there's no need to track it because we don't take any".

"Up to $X a year performance bonuses!" - You're going to make minimum wage.

Buzzword bingo when you ask what you'd actually be *doing*. It either means you'll be bored out of your skull, or regularly berated for not being Superman.

"So if you make it to the sixth round of interviews, you can expect..." - They're not really going to hire anyone. Cut bait.

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#41

Being hired on the spot. I always thought it meant I was a great candidate, and if they didn't hire me on the spot I bombed the interview. Looking back, they only hired me on the spot because they were desperate to find another person ASAP. Every job I've had where I was hired on the spot made it very clear why their turnover rate was so high. The ones I waited a bit for the job offer ended up being great places to work.

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Barbara Panda
Community Member
2 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

I was so excited when I was hired on the spot for an executive assistant role to a C level executive. I found out why after about 2 weeks. I still have nightmares from that place.

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#42

One time at the end of my interview she asked if I had any questions, and I asked "So how do you like working at X company?" and she said "well I like the pay". I assume the interview was probably recorded so she couldn't say anything directly bad about her company but was enough info for me that the culture is probably not all that good.

Keep in mind you are interviewing the company just as much as they are interviewing you! Make sure to come prepared to ask questions as well. You can find out some red flags through those.

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#43

In my experience every manager that told me they weren’t a micromanager was a micromanager. I’ve learned to dig deeper when people say this to figure out what they consider micromanagement.

For example, asking them how they personally stay up to date on what their team is working on. One guy that said he wasn’t a micromanager actually had a system of tracking that involved his reports to update tickets, fill out forms, and submit an email status update every week.

Just because someone automated their micromanagement doesn’t make them not a micromanager….

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Alyssa Phillips
Community Member
2 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

I don't think once a week updates would be too terrible. The rest of it is not great. I had a manager who wanted hourly updates. One person every shift got designated as the performance operational supervisor, and yes we made jokes about it being a POS title. That person spent the entire shift tracking down every team member and typing up an email for the manager on what each person was doing. The problem was, by the time you track down everyone it was time to send another email.

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#44

Books of the 12 apostles sitting out on the conference table and it's not a church... Run.

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Michael Largey
Community Member
2 months ago (edited) DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Our local lawn mower dealer had Biblical verses all over the walls of his store. But he kept religion and commerce strictly separate. None of the verses were even remotely reflected in the store's policies or business practices.

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#45

When they tell you that a role you’ll be working closely with are really passionate about what they do before asking how you’d deal with a difficult person. And then having that question asked again by someone different in another round of interviewing. I get it - you’re telling me that I’ll be working with a rude, entitled a*****e if I’m hired.

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Mike F
Community Member
2 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

"His bark is worse than his bite", I wish I had paid attention to that statement but I thought it was an inside joke. Nope.

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#46

“Leave Immediately”: 30 Netizens Discuss Red Flags To Be Aware Of When Attending A Job Interview Employees are either new hires or have been there for 15+ years with no in-between. There is no room for improvement - it's better to leave for advancement.

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Kaedyn Walsh
Community Member
2 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Hey now. People with years/decades at a place usually means the pay and benefits and overall people are amazing and worth staying.

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#47

The biggest red flag I every got was, "we're looking to replace this woman whose dying of cancer. I'm trying to get her to quit but she won't. We'd have to put you in a small place in the basement but when she dies, you'd get her place."

Not exactly warm fuzzies

[EDIT I just wanted to add that this was at a medical school, no less.].

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#48

I had an interviewer straight up ask if I’d ever been an addict.

Also if they bristle when you ask why the position is open/why the last person didn’t work out. If they won’t answer that simple question, run.

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JK
Community Member
2 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Not a legal question. Read the application documents that you signed prior to the interview.

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#49

When your interviewer starts negging your resume. He went line by line and came up with an extremely belittling way to describe everything I listed. I attempted to defend a couple things and he laughed.

I realized I would have to work for this abusive duchebag narcissist and noped out.

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Michael Largey
Community Member
2 months ago (edited) DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

I had moved to another part of the state to get married so I applied for a job with a local school district. The interviewer said in a nasty tone "So what have you been doing since then? Just kicking around?" I replied "No, I'm still employed by my old school until my contract runs out in August. That's how teacher contracts work in this state. Why don't you know that?" Amazingly I didn't get the job. It went to an administrator's wife, and I'm sure that was a done deal long before I showed up for the interview. They were just going through the motions and couldn't even be bothered to be polite about it.

#50

It can be difficult being blunt with people about such things, but if you can ask about turnover, that's a good thing to look at.

High turnover likely means the job and/or boss sucks.

Otherwise, anything where you need to give them money in order to apply/get the position.

When I was a kid I responded to an ad about a job, came to find it was Cutco where you had to buy a bunch of knives to sell them. F**k that.

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Adam Weber
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2 months ago

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#51

No HR department, or the “family” is running HR. Worked for a small business, son was owner, mother was management as was cousin and brother. The owner was super verbally abusive but who am I going to complain to? His mother? Or his cousin who views him like an uncle? They also said “we’re like a big family here!” Which was true… just a super dysfunctional family.

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Michael Largey
Community Member
2 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Family - a group of people you didn't choose and who are hard to detach from.

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#52

If you show up and it's not what you were told to expect it's probably nonsense.

My example is an interview i to went years ago. I'd had several phone interviews and seemed it was going well. They asked me if I could come in for an in person. The first flag was something in the appointment email that made me look up the address and it was a hotel conference center. I asked if this was an office or what? They admitted they were doing interviews in a conference room because they were doing a lot of hiri g and had managers and HR flying in from around the country.


I arrived at a giant conference hall with hundreds of applicants for the position I interviewed for. We checked in, got numbers, and waited and waited. Then sat through several rounds of group interviews with panels of Interviewers.

I talked to a few people while we waited and found out we'd all been told it was another round of interviews for people that had good prospects for getting hired. It was not. It was a circus. A guy i talked to on the way out was near tears. He'd taken an unpaid day off and borrowed a car to drive there. He'd told his wife he was coming home with a great job.

The whole thing was degrading and insulting.

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Sue User
Community Member
2 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

I was once asked to meet an intervier at a coffe shop, not the office. As a single woman, red flags are flying. My friend said they probable dont want the people in the office to know they are hiring. Still a red flag.

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#53

This is more anti multi-level marketing. But if they ever start with a presentation just turn around and leave. They're trying to sell you on their pyramid scheme.

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Freya the Wanderer
Community Member
2 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

I went to an interview - er, make that a so-called interview - like that. About 20 of us sat in a room and watched a video in which people started out with sob stories about how broke they were, but after signing on they suddenly were rolling in dough. After 20 minutes of this male bovine manure, I was about ready to stand up and yell "Cut to the chase!" or "Meanwhile, back at the ranch." I snuck out on the pretense of taking a whiz.

#54

Told me they'd love to have a meeting just between me and them.

Fast forward to the Zoom interview: "Give us just a minute as we wait for all the candidates to log in".

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#55

If they seem too relieved that someone actually showed up for the interview.

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#56

“We love new grads” yep because we don’t know any better.

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#57

One I never see people mention that I absolutely should have paid attention to:

Any implication that the role you're taking on is easy and/or not that important. Either this or any signs they may be underestimating the amount of work involved.

Seems like a no-brainer, but this gets let slip at interviews a shocking amount.

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#58

When they lowball you during the interview and asked you if you are willing to do everything for the company's success.

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#59

An all day “group interview” in their office.

Red Ventures in North Carolina did this, it was their 3rd round. I politely declined..I’m not taking a PTO day to do an unpaid group project with strangers I’m competing with for a job that I may not get.

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#60

I asked if the promotion ladder could be clearly defined/ laid out and what systems they had in place to develop existing talent. I was in the interview at a personal request due to a lack of experience in the department.

I obviously struck a nerve; after a closed door chat, management was adamant that this was a performance based company and promotions were applied accordingly. They were apparently not hard up enough for experience - I was not invited to join the team.

If a company cannot detail employee retention and development outside of money, I personally don't want to work there. Strangely, they were touting their new pet insurance benefit as a big selling point.

This was an aerospace company and not a small one.

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#61

If they show off their game room with foosball, pinball machines and other recreational equipment.

Not necessarily a red flag, but it usually is.

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Sue User
Community Member
2 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Add " we cater dinners". That with recreation means " you will live here".

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#62

"We want you to start tomorrow morning." That usually means they're so short staffed they NEED you there. What happened to the rest of the staff?

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#63

When the interviewer spends more time talking about how great they are than about the job!

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#64

Pushing "self starter" or "early responsibility" when those do not make sense for the position.


This typically means the place has high turnover and little institutional infrastructure and you will be expected to perform regardless.

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Chris Ulm
Community Member
2 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Or that it’s sales when the job m description has nothing about sales in it.

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#65

No matter the position even entry level, if you're an external candidate, ask them this - if your decision comes down to an internal hire versus an external hire, what would make one stand out over the other?
If they say everyone gets asked the same questions so it's an even playing field, or something like that, you just found out there are internal candidates and external candidates are only there to statistically even it out.
The job will very likely go to the internal candidate.
Works nearly every time.

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#66

Love bombing. Usually the sign of a narcissist manager.

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#67

Watch out for vague answers about the company culture or job expectations. It might mean they’re hiding something.

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#68

If the company says they'll send you a check for you to buy all of your office equipment from a specific website, run! It's a scam and you will be out all of that money, have no job, and most likely nowhere to bank.

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#69

If you can't find the job title/role you're applying for listed with any current/past employees. Like checking Glassdoor and you don't see any reviews from anyone with the role. Companies will change the name of a role to make it harder to compare salaries across external websites. Always a red flag if you notice this AND if they baulk when you ask if the current role you're applying for has been previously referred to as another title.

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#70

When they don’t ask a question, not one! They read me my resume and asked if I had questions. I asked many for over an hour. Some they knew, some they didn’t. I left. I laughed.

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#71

I was a senior level, 20+ year experience, licensed Architect in a large firm exploring some other well known firms. At one, a second or third meeting with design leaders, the two principals in the room started arguing with each other about the design direction of the firm. A job interview had just become a comedy routine. My contact later called to apologize and I wished them good luck.

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#72

I just had this one happen to me.

"I don't know where [US state] gets off making those wage transparency laws. Only ever causes trouble. I'm going to tell you what I tell all of my employees, I can't stop you from talking about your wage. [US state] is also an at-will state."

Dude literally admitted he's willing to break the law because he knows he can get away with it. Bullet dodged.

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#73

Not necessarily an interview, but if you find out a LOT of the staff know each other outside of work. You’ll never advance due to nepotism. Trust me, I’m working at a place currently that does this.

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Kelly Scott
Community Member
2 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Or actually complain because you'd rather go home after work than hang out with them. My dudes, you're my coworkers, not my left and right arms.

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#74

Excessive use of the words "work culture" "team building".

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Mike F
Community Member
2 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Team my @ss. I'm printing this stuff you're estimating it, we're not a team.

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#75

If you're asked any questions whatsoever about your religion or personal beliefs, even if it's a seemingly innocuous "so where do you go to church?". It's not technically illegal to ask this, but since proving discrimination against an employer is incredibly difficult even in the best circumstances some people - specifically Americans in the Midwest/South - will ask stuff like this in a seemingly "innocent" manner.

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Freya the Wanderer
Community Member
2 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Admittedly I'd be tempted to answer "The Satanic Temple" just to grind somebody's gears. I wouldn't actually do this, of course.

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#76

I avoid any companies who want to use behavioural-based questions as part of the interview, where you're given a hypothetical situation and then asked to provide an example of you doing such a thing. They're f*****g ridiculous and clearly for interviewers who don't know who to conduct an interview.

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