> And a lot of the jobs are jobs that the person would do well in, but the employers don't bother to see it. I know there are jobs that I would have done extremely well in, but the companies were just black boxes.
Oh yes. One sticks in my mind. All of these details were present in my resume.
Job Ad:
> Expert level health insurance system knowledge and experience interfacing between EHR providers and partners.
Me: Director of Product for a claim benefits management software company (i.e. the software that insurers use to run their business, cut checks to providers, process premiums, calculate deductibles, etc., repricing, the whole nine yards). Also have worked extensively with EPIC, Cerner, ESOsuite. Have also worked in platform development, third party API integrations.
I get that it was probably the boilerplate, but stung that twenty minutes later:
"We apologize, but we are looking for someone whose skillset and experience better our aligns with our requirements for this position."
Huh. I may well not have been the ideal candidate, but not sure how much more closely my experience could have been "aligned".
Generally recruitment tools have 3-4 options to pick, all of them carefully worded so that the reply to the candidate cannot be used against the company.
In your case it looks to me you were over-qualified. That's a real thing, since generally it means there will be salary issues later on in the process or you will be too senior compared with the people you work with (and leave)
Its frustrating but they did you a favor. Keep it up, something will turn up.
It's extra frustrating because after months of not working, I'm getting rejected for "too much experience" when applying to a lower-level job, getting "not enough" experience for senior-level jobs, etc...
Oh yes. One sticks in my mind. All of these details were present in my resume.
Job Ad:
> Expert level health insurance system knowledge and experience interfacing between EHR providers and partners.
Me: Director of Product for a claim benefits management software company (i.e. the software that insurers use to run their business, cut checks to providers, process premiums, calculate deductibles, etc., repricing, the whole nine yards). Also have worked extensively with EPIC, Cerner, ESOsuite. Have also worked in platform development, third party API integrations.
I get that it was probably the boilerplate, but stung that twenty minutes later:
"We apologize, but we are looking for someone whose skillset and experience better our aligns with our requirements for this position."
Huh. I may well not have been the ideal candidate, but not sure how much more closely my experience could have been "aligned".