Top Stories

Why You Should Heed These Job Interview Red Flags

CR Staff - April 18, 2023

Why You Should Heed These Job Interview Red Flags
Credit: freepik

25. No, Thank You!

I scheduled an interview at a nursing home for a night nurse position. I arrived 15 minutes early, told the front desk who I was, and then sat and waited. Then waited some more. 35 minutes later, they still didn’t know who was going to interview me. They were talking about it right in the lobby I was sitting in. After 45 minutes, I stood up and said “I’ll just make it easier on you, I’m not interested.”

On my way to my car, I passed some professionally dressed women loudly discussing how they were “going to go in and write everybody up”. I turned to look at them and made eye contact, then left.

No thank you!

ThisIsMockingjay2020

Why You Should Heed These Job Interview Red Flags
Credit: freepik

26. He Had No Respect

I tried to get a part-time job at the university but the interviewer out of the gate said he didn’t think a woman could do the job. I showed up to the interview to find he’d “forgotten” to tell me I had to prove I could lift a 30lb rock core, and obviously I couldn’t do that in my interview dress and heels. He wasn’t happy when I disproved him.

If the sexism wasn’t enough, he then said the job was 30 hours a week during the day – exactly during the time of 90% of the college classes. When I pointed this out, he said to switch to night classes (mid-semester)or drop out.

I left and reported him to student employment services.

Why You Should Heed These Job Interview Red Flags
Credit: freepik

27. They Control You

“Company image is a priority, we expect our employees to conduct themselves appropriately during off hours.”

Basically, “WE F*CKING OWN YOU. YOU DRESS HOW WE WANT, LOOK HOW WE WANT, AND ACT HOW WE WANT FROM NOW ON.”

Why You Should Heed These Job Interview Red Flags
Credit: freepik

28. In a Desperate Situation

I’m a nurse, and I interviewed for two positions at the same company (two different units). At the end when they asked if I had any questions, I asked both managers, “What are some changes or transitions your unit is currently working through?” Both of them mentioned they were leaving by the end of the month. I felt like if management was leaving and if they were both desperate to hire nurses, something bigger must be going on behind the scenes.

reddituser

Why You Should Heed These Job Interview Red Flags
Credit: freepik

29. So yeah, The Red Flags

I had a weird interview years ago. I was applying to be a trade sales assistant as the job details and duties seemed to match what I was already doing at my temp job at the time.

The office didn’t feel like an office, it looked like only interviewers were there and a receptionist was extremely quiet and never looked at anyone. You didn’t see other workers or things going on which I thought was strange.

-Red Flag number one (It didn’t feel like an office, especially since I’ve worked in a few they have a certain way they are set up to be appealing to clients but also people running about busy and talking, I saw none of that) It didn’t feel professional. I’ve worked in start-ups but even then they had this feeling of people working and being productive.

I was in an interview with a woman and she asked me one or two questions then suddenly went into this huge pitch and I couldn’t understand anything she said because she was talking super fast. I picked up words like “soon you’ll be a manager before you know it” and stuff like that. In my eyes when you talk so fast about something like this (a pitch or important details) they are hoping to miss something.

My mental alarm bells went off after that. I didn’t hear a single thing about my role as a trade assistant, you know the person they apparently needed for their company. Red Flag.

I knew that since my job description never came up once, they were not actually looking for what they claimed online. I said thank you and left. Within two hours I got an email that I’m good for the job somehow and I needed to come in again on Friday that week. I sent them an email saying I must decline as I was no longer interested in the position. Never heard back from them again.

When I checked glass door and a few other sites, I realized this company has a habit of bringing people in with these job positions on LinkedIn but in reality, according to the claims, they were taking prospective employees on the street to do commission-only based sales. Like wearing a uniform and standing outside to hand out flyers, no matter what you applied for. Even if you applied as a receptionist you did this.

I reported them on LinkedIn right away as they were lying about these positions.

So yeah the red flags were how they seemed to be holding back info when I was there and I had a gut feeling something was wrong not to mention the interviewer was giving off warning signs.

reddituser

Why You Should Heed These Job Interview Red Flags
Credit: freepik

30. Super Proud of Himself

Had a job interview at a game studio. Wasn’t a dream job or anything, but my company was having troubles and I was sure I was going to lose my job soon, so I started looking for work.

The whole interview was conducted by their managing director, who was no developer and had no real knowledge of game design, with their lead game designer sitting there as well but not really saying much.

In all my life I had never had a more awkward interview. The guy was actively trying to make me feel insecure and it was clear that he was immensely pleased with himself when he managed to unsettle me.

We proceeded to talk about salary and he told me to name my price, but that I should know that he has a maximum salary and that if I ask for more I wouldn’t get the job, because he doesn’t haggle.

The smug little f*cker then proceeded to beam at me across the desk and you could see that he was super proud of himself.

Didn’t get the job, but some friends of mine ended up working there. Turned out the guy was a supreme *sshole who was also very incompetent.

Who would have thought that someone who thinks the best way to lead a job interview is to bully the applicant would turn out to be a massive *sshole and a really bad boss.

Why You Should Heed These Job Interview Red Flags
Credit: freepik

31. A Clean Record!

I once applied for a job as a laborer at the local shipping company’s warehouse. They asked me to come in for a job interview and bring copies of my resume and criminal record, which I thought was reasonable since everybody else was asking for the same. The interview was conducted by the supervisor of the department, but the manager of the warehouse was also present for the interview. When I handed the documents to the supervisor he was immediately visually surprised and went “Woah! Hey, check it out! A clean record!” to the manager.

And that was it. The next thing I knew the interview was over and the manager went “alright kid, let’s show you around the place.”

I didn’t take the job.

Why You Should Heed These Job Interview Red Flags
Credit: freepik

32. You Will Be Responsible

Your prospective teammates all appear to be fearful.

The HR representative tells you that if you leave before one year you will be responsible for the $10,000 recruiting fee.

If this is a contract, the customer or broker says that the first month’s pay is withheld until the end of the contract period of one year, and also the contract rate is lower because they are “guaranteeing” a year’s engagement… but the contract says they can terminate at will.

Each of these things has actually happened to me.

Why You Should Heed These Job Interview Red Flags
Credit: freepik

33. “Girly Girl”

During the interview process, try to come into contact with as many of the existing employees as possible and see how they act and how they treat you. During one interview process many years ago, the other girls I met came off as kind of b*tchy. Then during the interview, the boss asked me if I’m a “girly girl” – which I’m obviously not and I confirmed it. She said it was a girly girl environment so I might find it hard to fit in. So for me, that was a massive red flag for b*tchiness and toxicity. Got the job, but turned it down.

For later job interview processes I asked to meet a number of employees during the interview process and this was facilitated for me. If there’s nothing to hide and it’s a good environment, they’ll be happy to make this happen for you. I’d say it’s an incredibly useful thing to do to make sure the place matches your work ethic and your values.

Why You Should Heed These Job Interview Red Flags
Credit: freepik

34. Thirty Hours Rule

When the interviewer is actively telling you how much the job sucks.

The manager of the Domino’s who interviewed looked like she was ready to cry during the whole thing. I knew right then and there I wasn’t going to be there long. She informed me during the interview that it’s “just like high school here” aka people were immature d*ckwads and nobody was getting 30 hours because then upper management would have to give them benefits.

I got the job and she quit on my second day I hadn’t even been trained and my only shifts were during the afternoon rush during the height of the pandemic. 4/5 of the people who were there when I first started working there either quit or were let go over the course of about 3 months. My paycheck was late several times. One of our drivers was regularly allowed to sit in the back room folding boxes for an hour during the rush because he had to charge his ankle monitor, essentially he wasn’t doing his job when we needed all the drivers we could get.

And to top it all off I got fired for getting close to 30 hours. They claimed it was because I’d had multiple warnings about my performance even though I’d never heard any complaints or comments or anything about how well I was doing. I was on time every day and was responsible for training everyone who came after me until I got let go.

Again, some guy sat on his *ss all shift and was fine but I got let go because I kept asking for more hours!

2/10 would never work at domino’s again

Why You Should Heed These Job Interview Red Flags
Credit: freepik

35. A Drawback of Youth

The entire department had been fired and replaced 6 months ago. The interviewer (my future boss and department head) spent most of it talking about his divorce and explaining in detail all the other people in other critical departments he didn’t like and refused to work with.

I was then told he’d love to hire me as I was young so they could pay me £10k less than the job was advertised at but that before they’d make me an offer I had to go through another 4 stages on interview.

To top it off the interview was held in a “flexible working space” that was literally a coffee table and chairs in the middle of a very busy corridor.

Why You Should Heed These Job Interview Red Flags
Credit: freepik

36. Math Skills

How do you feel about working six days a week?

You will open and close the restaurant. (this is 15 hours a day, minimum)

You will start at 30,000/year.

My answer: since I already told you I have a business degree, you should realize that I can do the math, and I am not willing to work for less than five dollars an hour.

Why You Should Heed These Job Interview Red Flags
Credit: freepik

37. Yes, In Fact.

When I was having my interview with the hiring manager, who seemed excited about the company and the job, he brought me into the conference room. Where the owner was. Who, I believe, forgot there was an interview at the time/day in that room.

But he stayed for the interview, so he could keep watching his golf game while holding an unlit cigar in his hand. (Can’t remember if the sound was on and low, or if he muted it).

And the only question he asked was when he heard the name of a previous company I’d worked for, was “Oh so did they talk about me? What’d they say? Probably not nice things.”

Yes, in fact, they did. No, I didn’t tell him what they said. They said he makes female engineers cry, kind of pointedly, since I am both an engineer and female… He was asking as my previous company formed out of a group of ppl that left his company, to start a competing company.

Why You Should Heed These Job Interview Red Flags
Credit: freepik

38. Fire Anyone For Any Reason

I moved to a new state. Was looking for employment and happened to be in the same restaurant chain getting food. Asked about a job while waiting at the bar. When I mentioned I worked for one of the busiest and newest ones, the first one in its area (literally an NRO or new restaurant opening, everyone was trained in a corporate-run program) I got an immediate interview with the kitchen manager. He was interested.

The first major red flag is “I have cooks who have been working here for 15 years” so literally zero upward mobility which I kinda figured.

The second was the biggest red flag ever

“why did you quit?” So I told him honestly.

“How did you find you out you were paid less than other cooks?”

“Uhh, I asked them?”

“Well, I would’ve fired them for that. Your pay is between you and your boss”

“You can’t do that… And my pay is between me and anyone I wish to talk about it with”

“I can fire anyone for any reason”

“Not according to the National Labor Relations Act, but o-f*cking-k chief. We’re done here”

Luckily my to-go wings had just been brought to be because the manager became a bit angry after I said that.

TalkoSkeva

Why You Should Heed These Job Interview Red Flags
Credit: freepik

39. Lack of Flexibility

Interviewing for a PR position at a dying symphony. During the interview, they asked for ideas on how I’d get larger audiences. Told them matinees for families that played music the kids would enjoy would be my first strategy.

‘We don’t want kids or teens in the audience’

A complete lack of flexibility isn’t a good sign in arts management.

Why You Should Heed These Job Interview Red Flags
Credit: freepik

40. So Desperate

I recently submitted my resume for a job online. The next day I got an email saying, you have moved on to the next phase of the interviewing process, here is a link to a personality test we would like you to take. I emailed them back and said, you haven’t reached out to me in any meaningful way, called or anything and you want me to submit a psychological profile? No thank you. He emailed me back and practically begged me to take the test. I replied back that I would be happy to take a personality test later in the process if there is mutual interest in my employment there. To not even have a single conversation with me prior to asking me to submit a psych test tells me that you have a culture I don’t want to be a part of. That was the end of it.

Why You Should Heed These Job Interview Red Flags
Credit: freepik

41. Unlikely to Fit Anywhere

Got called for an interview at one school. Got a call an hour later from another school wanting to set up an interview. They asked me “What time is your other interview” as I was honest and said I had a different interview that day. “What would happen if they offered you a job?” they asked. I was flabbergasted.

I had the interview at 9 at the other school. They said to come in at 8.

Get there and the principal didn’t know my name, that I had interned in that school, and just wanted to gossip about the teachers that I taught under when I mentioned my internship. It was maybe 15 minutes long. I hated it and it was clear I wouldn’t fit in.

I left that interview and went to the other one. The other one lasted an hour of just talking about my teaching philosophy and how much I enjoy teaching my students. Basically got the job right then and there.

So far, I’ve enjoyed this school. I’m so happy the other one didn’t work out. It was a sh*t school, to begin with when I was an intern there. No one seemed to like their job. The school I got hired in is just down the street and so welcoming.

0312838

Why You Should Heed These Job Interview Red Flags
Credit: freepik

42. “People Abuse Sick Days”

I just turned down a job because they said they didn’t offer sick days as “the science proves that people abuse sick days”, and that if I couldn’t get my shift covered I’d only be allowed to call in if I was “on a gurney into surgery after a car accident or something”. Direct quote. I have a chronic illness that requires surgery every year or two so I brought that up, and they started asking detailed questions about my medical conditions and then said “everyone has problems”. NOPE.

Oh, they also had me do a “working interview” to see if I was a good fit, then disappeared for over an hour and I was sitting there wanting to leave but couldn’t find anyone to sign off to. They didn’t pay me for that time lol

Why You Should Heed These Job Interview Red Flags
Credit: freepik

43. The Company Owner

I was in a job interview with like 6 people around the table. All white guys. In Canada. It was going really good till the end when one of them say “so what are you?” I was shocked so I looked around and said: “I’m Persian”. He starts laughing at me and says “Persia hasn’t existed since the early 1900s” I was so shocked. So I said “when you asked me what are you I assumed you meant my ethnicity. I was born in Iran. Which is a nationality. What do you prefer me to be?” He started laughing at me. But the other guys looked uncomfortable. Turns out he was the company owner. About a month into the job he accused me of being a thief and a cleptomaniac and fired me even though I was performing amazingly and had not done anything wrong. I think about it almost every day. It’s been about 6 years.

reddituser

Why You Should Heed These Job Interview Red Flags
Credit: freepik

44. A Major Bullet

I walked into a job interview once at an open space office. I realized very fast that I was the only woman in the room. It was a small company, but not small enough that there would be no women present at all. Towards the end of the interview, another woman walked into the space, walked up to the coffeemaker, and kind of announced to the room that it was a mess again, why hasn’t anyone cleaned it up? And with a huff, started organizing it.

I even asked about it in the interview. They said of course there are more women! They even got one to call me up after the interview, to prove there are girls. You shouldn’t have to do that.

There were other red flags there, but don’t work for any company that’s homogenous. If you can’t see any women/people of color in a big room, it speaks volumes about company culture, hiring practices, etc. At my next job, I met a woman who’d worked at that company and told me that I dodged a major bullet – she’d gotten a concussion on the job and they were trying to cheat her out of benefits.

Why You Should Heed These Job Interview Red Flags
Credit: freepik

45. The Only Thing That Accounts

When you ask, “what do you like about working here” and the interviewer talks about the location of the job (“it’s a great place to live!”) instead of the actual job.

Why You Should Heed These Job Interview Red Flags
Credit: freepik

46. Make Promises

They asked me to commit to working there for a minimum of 3 years.

I told them I’d stay forever as long as I was being treated well and compensated appropriately. I asked them why they wanted a 3-year minimum and they explained they’d had people leave after only working there for a few months.

They started back-peddling madly when I asked them why people were leaving who had only worked there for a few months.

Why You Should Heed These Job Interview Red Flags
Credit: freepik

47. Someone Who Can

Mass firing of several employees prior to the job posting because “they weren’t a good fit.”

Hallmark of a toxic work environment where blame is spread readily and management’s conclusion is that they just had the wrong people.

I took a job once where I found out only after I was employed that one of those who was mass fired was tricked to come in on a Sunday just so they could fire him.

I often heard managers say, “Do the job or I’ll find someone who can.”

Why You Should Heed These Job Interview Red Flags
Credit: freepik

48. Can You Handle It?

I was in the final round of an interview for a marketing position at a major Ad Agency. One of the younger associates that would be on the team kept asking/hinting at the general q: “Can you handle challenging/difficult personalities? That’s going to be a major component of the job and managing expectations and such of high-level managers on other teams.”

I’m not sure if she was genuinely trying to warn me that the job involves working with difficult people or if she wanted me to turn down the job because she had a friend/connect that was also in the running.

Ragnarotico

Why You Should Heed These Job Interview Red Flags
Credit: freepik

49. Just Bad Vibes

“We start at 12$ here for everyone no matter the experience then after ur 6-month trial is up we move u up to 13$ an hour. And after every year you go up!”

Me:” but the job listing said 14$ an hr starting pay and I was hoping since I have 5 years working in childcare at 2 different places and with the local school district during Those 5 years and my certifications are up to date, and I have SELMA training and everything. I could do 15$ or 15.25/50$”

Them” everyone starts at 12$”

I said nope after that and ignored all calls/emails, and plus while I was there I watched how a teacher worked with her 13-18-month-olds…..screaming and just bad vibes.

Why You Should Heed These Job Interview Red Flags
Credit: freepik

50. Nope Homie

I had an interview recently and holy sh*t was it a disaster.

I asked an employee (of a global athletic company) in the interview if they had a good work-to-life balance. His response,

“Yeah, I suppose. I’m working about 10 hours a day, 7 days a week. So, it’s been really good.”

Yup. There’s no life balance in there homie.

Advertisement