Society & Culture1 min ago
Shortlisting for interview
36 Answers
hello does anyone out there know if you have any right of appeal against an employer not shortlisting you for interview when you feel you meet the criteria
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by peterbaz. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Is it an internal vacancy? If so, you might have an idea who is being interviewed. If not, it is highly unlikely - jobs aren't so easy to come by nowadays, and if you have no idea of how many applicants there were and their suitability for the job, then you can't say that you were the best qualified. The potential employer has to sift through possibly loads of CVs from people who all think they're best qualified and they have to pick out the applications that look best to them. It's the luck of the draw, really.
Problem is there might be people out there with a first degree and ten years experience. There are so many applications for jobs now it's ridiculous. I had to help my manager shortlist for a medical secretary post and there were well over a hundred applicants. Most didn't actually reach the criterior though.
I've had to sift through mounds of CVs for one job. Unfortunately it is quite possible that suitable people were not interviewed for a number of reasons. Even if some of them were highly suitable in fact, their applications didn't show them to be the best of the bunch. I'm afraid that's the way it is. Harsh, but true.
Perhaps their view of your 7 years PM experience would mean you have firm ideas of how PM should be conducted. The interviewers may want a more inexperienced person who would be open to learning their methods and style, not challenge their techniques and share the wisdom of their seven years experience.
After submitting your CV they may have contacted your references and received bad reports either to your character or work ethic and capability. Thats why it always pays to leave on good terms from your previous employer.
Some reports are deliberately false if you still happen to be employed by a company and don't want to lose you.
Some reports are deliberately false if you still happen to be employed by a company and don't want to lose you.