career

I Submitted My Application to the Company and Never Heard Back – Should I Be Offended?

Credit: iStockphoto.com

Credit: iStockphoto.com

When you contact someone it’s human nature to expect a response – any response – and that extends into our professional lives. It’s bad for business to leave colleagues and clients hanging in silence.

To go a step further, when you spend a great deal of time creating accounts, filling out multiple online forms, uploading documents, and any other job application requirements, it feels that common human decency would dictate the expected response in this situation more than any other. Unfortunately, that is often not the case.

Should you be offended? Probably. The process is broken. And while this is not an apology for employers who don’t get back to you, it’s fair to offer an explanation for what may be going on behind the curtain. Let’s agree on this – the process is not great, but to understand why involves basic math. 

Corporate recruiters get that they have extremely limited time and resources to fill a job with a good candidate – and are under intense pressure to do so. 

An in-house corporate recruiter at a mid-sized company may have 20-50 jobs to fill at once, so for the math let’s say 35. The same technology that allows you to submit a job application online allows thousands of other people to do the same thing at the exact same time and suddenly there are 5,000 applications per job. 35 x 5,000 = 175,000 applications and resumes to wade through. That’s inhumane to the recruiter and the candidate, and simultaneously results in nearly impossible odds of being found.

Additionally, companies measure the performance of their recruiters by several metrics, which can often be at odds. These include “Days to Fill” (emphasizing speed), “Quality of Hire” (emphasizing candidate credentials), and “Cost per Hire” (emphasizing filling jobs without outside help from agency recruiters or expensive sourcing tools). What you end up with is a frazzled recruiter who is frequently under-resourced and saddled with unrealistic expectations.

Therefore, rather than spend time lovingly going through all the resumes received to find the ideal candidate, the focus is on letting their computer systems rank the candidates based upon the match to the job description, and to as quickly as possible gather a stack of five to ten resumes of qualified candidates to present to the hiring manager.

Make no mistake, the process is broken from the applicant side, too – follow-up, responses, or other communications are rare – but this is the reality.

If you submitted an application and feel slighted you haven’t received a response, consider the following recommendations:

  • Be focused with your follow-up. Find the right person, and send them a note just once.

  • Research and find the name of  the hiring manager. If you are able to follow-up directly with the hiring manager you will ease pressure off the recruiter.

  • Be respectful and empathetic in all of your interactions with whoever is involved, from the recruiter to the receptionist.

  • Be prompt and be prepared. Do not spend considerable time and effort breaking down the door and then fumble around for something to say.

  •  Know when to move on to pursuing the next job opportunity. It’s not a great idea to put all your hope into one posting with one company; apply to jobs at other employers, too, since there’s a possibility this one could fall through.


Philip Roufail contributed to this article.

Scott Singer is the President and Founder of Insider Career Strategies Resume Writing & Career Coaching, a firm dedicated to guiding job seekers and companies through the job search and hiring process. Insider Career Strategies provides resume writing, LinkedIn profile development, career coaching services, and outplacement services. You can email Scott Singer at scott.singer@insidercs.com, or via the website, www.insidercs.com.

10 Resume Errors To Avoid Like The Plague

iStockphoto.com | Bohdan Skrypnyk

iStockphoto.com | Bohdan Skrypnyk

When it comes to building an effective resume, the basics matter.

Two recent, very real, resumes reminded us that even great candidates with years of experience can have resumes that look like an afterthought. These resumes broke every rule and were replete with errors unacceptable for a professional resume - or any professional document, really. To be clear — there is no friendly audience for a resume with basic mistakes. Fair or not, in the mind of the recruiter or hiring manager, a sloppy resume can translate to the perception of a sloppy worker – and sloppy workers don’t get hired.

Here are some instant resume deal-breakers to avoid like the plague:

  1. Punctuation errors. If you don’t end a sentence with a period, the perception is that you either do not know basic grammar or you did not bother to proofread your resume.

  2. Misspelled words. You live in an era when a machine will check your spelling for you. The process is effortless. Combined with the aforementioned “proofreading,” there should never be a misspelled word in a resume.

  3. Verb Tense Disagreement. If you are working, your current position’s description should be written in active present tense. Be consistent.

  4. Using “I”. Your resume is not an auto-biography. It’s not even a work biography. It’s a marketing brochure with a singular goal — land the interview so you can tell your story in person and get hired. Your resume should not be personal and should be pronoun free, starting with “I”.

  5. Non-uniformity. No matter what formatting style you choose, it should be used throughout the document. For example, if you choose to describe your work history with one or two lines followed by three bullet points, make sure ALL the positions have bullet points. You shouldn't have half with bullet points and half with small paragraphs.

  6. Difficult to read. Even if your resume is the greatest resume ever written, it may be the 25th resume a recruiter has looked at in a given day and if it looks insurmountable – dense paragraphs, overly complicated verbiage – they won’t want to bother.

  7. Insufficent White Space. White space is the space that contains no text, and it should be used generously. A resume should not look like a series of big, gray, long paragraphs. The intelligent use of separating important details about your achievements, work history, and skill sets more effectively communicates your professional brand. Scannability by the reader is the name of the game.

  8. Repeating information. Every line of a resume is prime beachfront real estate that must be developed with the utmost care. Don’t waste precious space with the exact same thing instead of highlighting your many successes. Show something new throughout the text.

  9. Being insufficiently specific. For example, “prepared reports for managers”, is generic, uninteresting, and does not help you. What type of reports? How often? Why? Now you have, “Prepared critical monthly investment reports for C-level executives who relied on data to make high-level long term strategic decisions for global operations.” Much better. I think I know more about who you are now.

  10. Including too much personal information. Age and marital status come to mind. And for security reasons, do not put your full home address on your resume – your city, state, and zip code (optional) will suffice.


Philip Roufail contributed to this article.

Scott Singer is the President and Founder of Insider Career Strategies Resume Writing & Career Coaching, a firm dedicated to guiding job seekers and companies through the job search and hiring process. Insider Career Strategies provides resume writing, LinkedIn profile development, career coaching services, and outplacement services. You can email Scott Singer at scott.singer@insidercs.com, or via the website, www.insidercs.com.

Keep That College Degree Working For Your Career – Long After Graduation

iStockphoto.com | Nutthaseth Vanchaichana

iStockphoto.com | Nutthaseth Vanchaichana

Many people out there want to help you with your career. The good news is that your college – from which you graduated long, long, ago – has an entire staff committed to just that.

Whether you’re a recent graduate or a professional well into your career, your alma mater may provide helpful career benefits long after it has stopped cashing your tuition checks. Successful alumni contribute to a school’s reputation and to its endowment, so it has a vested interest in aiding its former students.

Here are some potential lifelong career boosting benefits your college/university may offer:

Career Placement & Support: Most colleges have a career services office that provides everything from individual career coaching to career fairs. Advisors can facilitate connections to potential employers with whom they've built relationships. Some schools have their own job boards to which you can upload your resume. You might even be able to attend their career fairs, too.

Continuing Education: Many schools offer alumni classes at a reduced price through programs designed for busy adult professionals. Whether you want to earn an additional degree or audit classes, going back to your old school, so to speak, is a cost-effective way to bring your skills and knowledge up to date.

Digital Career Resources: You can find a wealth of webinars, podcasts,  virtual career fairs, and on-demand presentations with alumni, career professionals, and industry insiders. In fact, go to YouTube, and you can probably find these originating from a wealth of schools.

Professional Networking: Chances are there is an alumni group where you live that hosts mixers, seminars, fundraisers, or meet-ups for the big game (although these days, Zoom is the preferred platform). These events give you access to prominent alumni. A well-timed introduction can facilitate a career-changing conversation. Events like these are worth exploring post-pandemic.

School Reputation: A strong ranking enhances a school's profile, boosts enrollment, and improves the market perception of degrees conferred to students and alumni alike. If your alma mater has risen in the annual rankings, your earning potential grow with it.

College Friends: You may be surprised who you end up working with during the course of your career. It may be a fraternity brother or sorority sister, or the drummer in your college band. It may come in the form of a referral at a critical time or even investment money. The people with whom you went to college are an unofficial career services office dispersed through every field all around the world. 


Philip Roufail contributed to this article.

Scott Singer is the President and Founder of Insider Career Strategies Resume Writing & Career Coaching, a firm dedicated to guiding job seekers and companies through the job search and hiring process. Insider Career Strategies provides resume writing, LinkedIn profile development, career coaching services, and outplacement services. You can email Scott Singer at scott.singer@insidercs.com, or via the website, www.insidercs.com.