Hiring Manager sent an interview request without mentioning the job posting - Is it okay to ask for job description?

Interviews General Queries 2 years ago

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Posted on 16 Aug 2022, this text provides information on General Queries related to Interviews. Please note that while accuracy is prioritized, the data presented might not be entirely correct or up-to-date. This information is offered for general knowledge and informational purposes only, and should not be considered as a substitute for professional advice.

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manpreet Tuteehub forum best answer Best Answer 2 years ago

 

I'm a student studying Computer Science. My university has an online job website where faculty and professors post job interviews for full time students to apply to (work-study positions). A bunch of jobs are shown, students upload resumes and apply with cover letters. I applied to a bunch on the deadline (two days ago), with just my resume. I did a brief reading of the job postings and applied to whatever I found was interesting (didn't have to be CS related).

I got an email today with the title "My first name last name - Invitation for an Interview". The body of the email mentioned that he would like to invite me for an interview (today or tomorrow), if I'm still interested, if yes, then to come to the address mentioned below and to ask for him or another lady. I was also told I can call him directly at the number below. He mentioned that he will be at the office 8:30am - 6pm. The email ends with his signature which includes the office location, his number and a couple other numbers (client care number, customer feedback number etc.).

I should've posted this earlier but I replied saying "thanks for the quick reply, I applied to multiple jobs through my universities career website and they took down the job postings recently. Is it possible if you can send me the job description for the job we are talking about? It will be greatly appreciated. Thanks."

My friend said this is making me look bad (as if I applied to random jobs without reading them).

  1. What should I have done in this position?

  2. What should I do now? I got the email 2pm, responded 2:50pm, and no response yet (5pm). I read his email again and I'm starting to think he isn't expecting an email response, let alone one which asks him to look up the job posting again (he only mentioned to come to the location below if I'm interested and to ask for him, or to call him directly).

I failed to save the information which has been taken off of the university career network website and have no way of determining what this job posting is. I saved the first 50 I applied to but I then saw a "my applications" section in the website which had all the job postings I applied to, so I thought they would be there after the deadline. Turns out they aren't. My mistake for sure, and I doubt the hiring manager knows the website 'either. Also, the company is the university (all jobs are for the university), just the department, professors, job postings are all different.

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manpreet 2 years ago

 

I think you're overreacting, though it's kind of an awkward situation.

What should I have done in this position?

What you should have done was save the job descriptions to the jobs you apply to somewhere so you have access to them. Be aware that sometimes this will happen in the future, too, with fulltime jobs, where a job posting is taken down publicly after interviews are scheduled.

Or, if you applied to so many that you literally cannot keep track, either apply to less or make a system to keep track of which you have applied to.

What should I do now? I got the email 2pm, responded 2:50pm, and no response yet (5pm). I read his email again and I'm starting to think he isn't expecting an email response, let alone one which asks him to look up the job posting again (he only mentioned to come to the location below if I'm interested and to ask for him, or to call him directly).

First, make sure you look the interviewer up online to get a feel for what department they likely work within so you can figure out a rough area. This might help you remember.

Second, you can just call the person who emailed you sometime tomorrow before showing up. It sounds like the email basically said to do that so I'd just do so.

Assuming you can't get any of this, I would go regardless. A few reasons:

  • When you are in university, it's beneficial to get practice interviewing anyways
  • The interview process is probably way less formalized than you are expecting
  • Not showing up to the interview if you end up wanting it is far worse than any alternate situation

My guess is that as clunky as the site is for you to use it's even worse for anyone trying to hire on it, you might even be able to build some rapport over this, too!

A lot of people (academics too) end up swamped in email. You might end up with a response late at night, never get one, get one in two weeks... you just never know.


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