Pre-recorded video interview questions - respond to your webcam - no human interaction - HR watches your responses later...
recruiter no less...
tduds
Oct 13, 15 6:39 pm
I've never heard of that. I would be wary of participating in such a charade, and even more wary of any firm that would ask me to.
midlander
Oct 13, 15 8:22 pm
weird. make sure to wear a halloween mask to remind them how creepy and dehumanizing it is.
chigurh
Oct 13, 15 9:10 pm
super creepy...welcome to the future...getting hired and fired by a computer...
Volunteer
Oct 13, 15 9:29 pm
That's totally insane. An interview goes both ways: they are seeing if you have the qualifications and experience and interest in their company and you are trying to determine if it is the kind of position and firm you would be interested in working for. In this case HR has just shoved their head a bit farther up their a--.Any corporate management that would put up with this BS is not fit to work for. I would not even dignify this nonsense with an answer.
Carrera
Oct 13, 15 9:30 pm
I honestly can’t figure out how any of you get hired these days…they run you through so many sieves that the only thing that comes out the other end are faceless Eunuch's.
citizen
Oct 13, 15 9:49 pm
Did they ask you to wear a cowboy costume or cop outfit? 'Cause that I've done-- or, heard of. I meant heard of.
empea
Oct 13, 15 11:56 pm
It probably reflects quite well the environment you'd be entering into. Go figure.
bowling_ball
Oct 14, 15 12:50 am
I think my lady did one of these. Learned that it says something about the company, and left 6 months later.
Interviews are two-way, don't forget that.
archiwutm8
Oct 14, 15 3:02 am
These are actually pretty common in financial institutes, never heard of them being used in the AEC field...
curtkram
Oct 14, 15 7:45 am
I'm now looking forward to doing this. And I won't dress like a cowboy.
Probably an anonymous mask. Maybe a mouse mask like the stuff art spiegelman did.
Maybe a chicken suit would be the best way to go
shellarchitect
Oct 14, 15 9:29 am
sounds like no pants time to me
citizen
Oct 14, 15 1:37 pm
A colleague told me she had to do her final dissertation defense via the web, for logistics reasons. Rather than sit at her laptop or desktop, she did it on her phone, where she said that having her august committee members literally in the palm of her hand helped her to relax for the discussion.
Thanks, Internet!
Bloopox
Oct 14, 15 2:20 pm
Well that's strange. But then I've had interview processes where the first step was responding to a list of essay questions, and for some teaching or speaking gigs I've had to send a tape of my past presenter experience, so I guess this isn't that much of a leap.
Do you get to review the pre-recorded questions ahead of time? If so I don't hate this idea, from the candidate's standpoint, because you could prepare answers and rehearse them first. That would take some of the on-the-spot pitfalls out the situation so in some ways you'd have an advantage over a real-time two-sided skype, phone, or in-person interview. The big disadvantage is in not being able to judge how you're doing in the eyes of the interviewer, so you can't tailor your answers to their reactions, or adjust the direction of the interview as it proceeds.
One would hope that this leads to an eventual in-person interview and that no employer would actually hire anyone based on this scenario alone. It wouldn't provide any insight into how the candidate interacts in person, or thinks on his feet, or the dynamic between him and the firm's current team members.
think_again
Mar 13, 17 10:09 pm
certainly a challenge when the medium changes. it's typical in other professions but anything close I've seen in architecture are video resumes. schools are also introducing new mediums particularly video to experiment with architectural communication.
anybody partake in one of these?
Pre-recorded video interview questions - respond to your webcam - no human interaction - HR watches your responses later...
recruiter no less...
I've never heard of that. I would be wary of participating in such a charade, and even more wary of any firm that would ask me to.
weird. make sure to wear a halloween mask to remind them how creepy and dehumanizing it is.
super creepy...welcome to the future...getting hired and fired by a computer...
That's totally insane. An interview goes both ways: they are seeing if you have the qualifications and experience and interest in their company and you are trying to determine if it is the kind of position and firm you would be interested in working for. In this case HR has just shoved their head a bit farther up their a--.Any corporate management that would put up with this BS is not fit to work for. I would not even dignify this nonsense with an answer.
I honestly can’t figure out how any of you get hired these days…they run you through so many sieves that the only thing that comes out the other end are faceless Eunuch's.
Did they ask you to wear a cowboy costume or cop outfit? 'Cause that I've done-- or, heard of. I meant heard of.
It probably reflects quite well the environment you'd be entering into. Go figure.
I think my lady did one of these. Learned that it says something about the company, and left 6 months later. Interviews are two-way, don't forget that.
These are actually pretty common in financial institutes, never heard of them being used in the AEC field...
I'm now looking forward to doing this. And I won't dress like a cowboy.
Probably an anonymous mask. Maybe a mouse mask like the stuff art spiegelman did.
Maybe a chicken suit would be the best way to go
sounds like no pants time to me
A colleague told me she had to do her final dissertation defense via the web, for logistics reasons. Rather than sit at her laptop or desktop, she did it on her phone, where she said that having her august committee members literally in the palm of her hand helped her to relax for the discussion.
Thanks, Internet!
Well that's strange. But then I've had interview processes where the first step was responding to a list of essay questions, and for some teaching or speaking gigs I've had to send a tape of my past presenter experience, so I guess this isn't that much of a leap.
Do you get to review the pre-recorded questions ahead of time? If so I don't hate this idea, from the candidate's standpoint, because you could prepare answers and rehearse them first. That would take some of the on-the-spot pitfalls out the situation so in some ways you'd have an advantage over a real-time two-sided skype, phone, or in-person interview. The big disadvantage is in not being able to judge how you're doing in the eyes of the interviewer, so you can't tailor your answers to their reactions, or adjust the direction of the interview as it proceeds.
One would hope that this leads to an eventual in-person interview and that no employer would actually hire anyone based on this scenario alone. It wouldn't provide any insight into how the candidate interacts in person, or thinks on his feet, or the dynamic between him and the firm's current team members.
certainly a challenge when the medium changes. it's typical in other professions but anything close I've seen in architecture are video resumes. schools are also introducing new mediums particularly video to experiment with architectural communication.