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50 points
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You are looking at job applications from the wrong perspective. You are seeing the job description and seeing minimum requirements, when in 90% they are describing the ideal candidate that will probably never show up.

And I want to emphasise, you shouldn’t lie, you shouldn’t pad your résumé, but you should also not volunteer to testify against yourself.

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24 points

Yes, minimum requirements are not actually minimum requirements. So silly for people taking things literally.

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19 points

That’s the thing, they aren’t minimum requirements. They’re a form that HR fills out based on what HR thinks the job is, not based on what the actual job is.

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15 points
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i often see a list of minimum and preferred.

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0 points

They’re not usually labeled “minimum requirements”

That may be what you’re interpreting, but they’re usually titled “ideal applicants will have the following” which isn’t the same thing

It feels like the same thing to people with rigid views on the world, but they are not the same.

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6 points

I frequently see a list of minimum separate from preferred. Here’s an example.

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4 points

It’s not people with rigid world views, but people who don’t know the social cues/“legalese” of job speak.

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1 point

People here expecting a bureaucracy to behave not only like a person, but like a honest and transparent person with simple and plainly stated goals…

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27 points

My wife is super bad at not volunteering information.

She’s partially deaf and a few other issues that make phone conversations hard, so she often asks me to sit in and listen to explain anything she didn’t catch, and make sure she heard everything correctly.

I’m often making the neck cut “stop talking/mute mic” motion to get her to stop saying things the other people don’t need to hear.

For instance, she quit a previous job over an employee basically stalking her while she was on the property, and screaming in her face over any imagined sleight. This employee was a problem with others as well, but who you know is more important than how you work in some places so nothing was ever done.

The other places she interviews with don’t need the whole back story of why she quit. “Safety concerns” is completely correct, and leaves out the possibility that the new job might think you don’t work well with others. She does. The other guy didn’t.

So every time she starts telling the potential employer about it, I cut her off to remind her of that.

I’m very much the “ALL my information is need to know and you don’t need to know” kind of person when it comes to things like that, and she just kind of vomits words all over the place when she feels uncomfortable.

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10 points

i’ve heard the first rule of negotiations is don’t answer any unasked questions.

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That’s good advice, but my problem is that my line of thought is connected to every other line of thought. It’s quite the task to know where an answer to a question ends.

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5 points

If s not a requirement if it is optional or noce-to-have!

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8 points

Which means the company is lying. Respond to them with this knowledge in hand, any way that you see as appropriate.

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