Thursday, April 2, 2009

I miss the rejection letter

A while back Louis CK was on Conan O'Brien. He had a great bit on "Everything's Amazing, Nobody's Happy." Basically how things are amazing right now and people still have room to complain. My cell phone has more abilities than the first five computers I ever owned combined. And yet I still find time to complain about what it can't do.


Similar thing with the job market. Searching for jobs has never been easier. In good job markets you can put a profile up on job boards and sit back and wait for people to find you. In tougher markets, you can search and apply from the comfort of your computer. No resumes to print, cover letters to write with awkward salutations, no envelopes or stamps. You apply, and 5 minutes later it can be in the hands of the HR department. It's amazing. You can sit in any internet connected location in the world and look for jobs in any major metropolitan city in the western world and then some. The 'web 1.0' way of doing it was a bit cold and non-personal, so sites like linkedin.com have stepped in to meet that need. (My profile's here) There are other avenues as well. EMC has a twitter account for jobs. It's never been easier for job seekers and employers to find each other.
As the Joe Walsh song says: "I can't complain, but some times I still do". I miss the rejection letter. I still get them every once and a while, but haven't gotten any on this latest round of job searching. And I think it's an artifact of living life at internet speeds. So I've sent resume's and inquiries to a handful of opportunities but haven't received any kind of response. Others I have recieved a canned response from the HR application they used to allow you to apply, or an auto-reply email from the HR@company.com email box. I guess I can forgive the lack of response. The flood of potential applicants and the number of dead ends therein would make it a fools errand to respond to them all personally. With the ease of applying for jobs, a person can apply to several dozen jobs in an afternoon. So the likely hood of someone in HR responding to someone who's already taken another job is pretty high. So I guess I shouldn't be surprised that HR doesn't get back to me personally. But it doesn't mean I have to like it either. Some times it would be nice to know that a real person at least received my application. It would be nicer still to know that I didn't get it so I wouldn't be left to wonder.
Oh well, even though everything is great, I'm not completely happy...

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