-
6 votes
-
Why is Finland's biggest retailer urging customers to welcome foreign workers?
15 votes -
IT staffing agency traps tech workers in their jobs, US federal lawsuit alleges
38 votes -
Job boards are still rife with 'ghost jobs'. What's the point?
32 votes -
Service jobs now require bizarre personality test from AI company - 404 Media investigation of Reddit post trend
43 votes -
I applied for a software role at FedEx and was asked to take this bizarre personality test
40 votes -
Is a degree worth it?
29 votes -
70% of US workers lie on resumes, new study shows
54 votes -
Ontario to ban Canadian work experience requirement in job postings
17 votes -
Is understaffing a new norm?
I'm asking this as a genuine question, not as a hot take. Where I'm coming from: My husband and I went to dinner the other night -- apologies from the waitress on being shortstaffed. A sign on a...
I'm asking this as a genuine question, not as a hot take.
Where I'm coming from:
My husband and I went to dinner the other night -- apologies from the waitress on being shortstaffed. A sign on a local store asks for patience with the lack of staff. The people staffing order pickup at a nearby department store aren't enough to keep up with orders. At my most recent doctor's appointment I spent almost 45 minutes in the exam room waiting to be seen (for an appointment I had to make over a year ago). A few hours after the appointment I went to pick up a prescription, and it hadn't even begun to be processed yet. There was only one cashier working, and she was having to jump between the in-person line and the drive-thru lane. At my job we don't have enough substitute teachers, so we're dependent on regular teachers covering classes during their "prep" periods.
This is merely a recent snapshot from my own life that I'm using as a sort of representative sample, but it feels like something that's been building for a while -- like something that was going to be temporary due to COVID but has stuck around and is now just what we're supposed to get used to. I remember that I used to keep thinking that understaffing would eventually go away over time, but it seems like it's just standard practice now?
Is this something specific to my experiences or my local area (I'm in the US, for context)? Are other people seeing the same thing?
Assuming it isn't just me, is there anything out there besides anecdotes that addresses this phenomenon? I don't want to lean solely on gut reactions, but I also can't deny that nearly every business I go to seems visibly short-staffed all of the time.
124 votes -
Some small towns in America are disbanding police forces, citing hiring woes
23 votes -
Sweden Muslim woman who refused handshake at job interview wins case
14 votes -
Abortion laws are driving academics out of some US states—and keeping others from coming
29 votes -
Headteachers warn UK facing ‘dangerous’ teacher shortage as recruitment crisis deepens
26 votes -
Job listings abound, but many are fake
17 votes -
Anyone ever get an international job?
First off, fuck job applications. It's an awful and tedious charade. Creating accounts on hundreds of websites for the resume parser to not work and have to manually upload that all again, to then...
First off, fuck job applications. It's an awful and tedious charade. Creating accounts on hundreds of websites for the resume parser to not work and have to manually upload that all again, to then write a cover letter that's skimmed at best, for a word to be missing from the resume which their detection tech passes before you're given a real shot.
But regardless that's not why I'm here. I'm in the process of applying to jobs, but for the first time I'm applying to jobs internationally (I'm US based). Have any of y'all applied for and received jobs abroad? What was successful and what wasn't? I'm primarily looking into pharmaceutical research or pharmacovigilance/drug safety because that's where English language jobs are in my area of study, but hope to eventually become fluent enough in a different language so I can move back into infection prevention or disease surveillance.
16 votes -
What are your thoughts on using a website/blog as a resume?
Like the title says, I'm curious if anyone has experience encountering digital resumes. Whether you're an employer or you've used a digital resume yourself how well did it work? Were you more...
Like the title says, I'm curious if anyone has experience encountering digital resumes. Whether you're an employer or you've used a digital resume yourself how well did it work? Were you more likely to hire a candidate because they had a well-rounded website that showed off their skills or was it an immediate discard because it didn't conform to normal practices.
I'm graduating with my MS in organic chemistry this May, and I'm trying to work my way in the job market. A website/blog sounds appealing to me because I can show off data annotations and analyses from failed reactions that normally aren't discussed in papers, so I think it would be a good fit.
8 votes -
‘Can’t compete’: Why hiring for child care is a huge struggle
13 votes -
The technical interview practice gap, and how it keeps underrepresented groups out of software engineering
9 votes -
Résumés are starting to look like Instagram—and sometimes even Tinder
14 votes -
The “skills gap” was a lie
11 votes -
How to hire
5 votes -
Five reasons why the company you want to work for won’t hire telecommuters (and four ways to get hired anyway)
4 votes -
How hidden bias can stop you getting a job
6 votes -
Reality check: Does name-blind hiring help improve diversity?
14 votes -
Why do some job adverts put women off applying?
12 votes