HR News

Job interviewing, to the extreme

By Tiffany Hsu for the Los Angeles Times 

Some firms are using offbeat interview practices to get a real-time look at how prospects tackle problems, think on their feet and work as part of a team. 

Danielle Bemoras showed up for her job interview with a social networking company prepared for some tough questions. Instead, she found herself in the middle of a psychology experiment.

The company had invited a fellow job seeker to the dinner meeting in Chicago, looking to see how the rivals would handle the pressure of a joint interview.

Awkward? No question. But Bemoras just rolled with it. She avoided alcohol to keep her head clear. She skipped the sushi to prevent chopsticks mishaps. And rather than try to upstage her competitor, she was respectful and collegial.

“I was in a sorority and had gone through that type of thing during rush,” said Bemoras, now 22. Her clutch performance won her a marketing internship followed by a full-time position with SceneTap, a digital night-life guide headquartered in Austin, Texas. Continue reading

Candidats, attention : les recruteurs vous « googlisent »

Par Corinne Zerbib dans La vie du Labo 

Une auxiliaire de puériculture qui expose son goût pour les drogues illicites sur un forum, un chirurgien qui apparaît en photo sur Facebook lors d’une soirée visiblement débridée, une infirmière qui expose sur son blog ses opinions politiques extrémistes et haineuses … Quelques clics suffisent pour tout savoir sur les candidats à l’emploi. Continue reading