Entry tags:
Laugh OTD
This morning a recruiter called to ask me if I was available for a contract. I of course said "yes."
"Do you have Oracle database experience?"
"I think so." (I worked at Oracle for three years.)
"Do you know what 'SQL' [pronounced "see-quel") is?"
"Of course! Structured Query Language."
"Are you sure?"
"Yes."
"I ask because we sent two candidates to the client, and neither of them knew what it was. When the interviewer asked what 'SQL' stands for, the candidate asked, 'Can you spell that?'"
"Do you have Oracle database experience?"
"I think so." (I worked at Oracle for three years.)
"Do you know what 'SQL' [pronounced "see-quel") is?"
"Of course! Structured Query Language."
"Are you sure?"
"Yes."
"I ask because we sent two candidates to the client, and neither of them knew what it was. When the interviewer asked what 'SQL' stands for, the candidate asked, 'Can you spell that?'"
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I can has job?
Seriously, way to go. Congratulations and good luck.
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He didn't know how to start the program. Well, I figured it was at least conceivable that he had his own personal machine configured oddly and didn't understand that the Access icon on the desktop, the Start menu, or any of the other ways would get him started. I started it for him and asked him some basic questions about Access.
He hadn't a clue. His whole resume on this area was a bluff. He similarly didn't know much about Excel or any other Office application. I was polite to him and then went to my boss and said, "No. You don't want this person. We'd have to spend a long time training him on rudimentary stuff that he should already know." We did not proceed with that candidate.
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I tend to do the opposite, I state that I don't know much about the subject (if I don't) and then in the interview find that I know more than the interviewer and get the job. (There are some subjects on which I can reasonably claim to be expert, and do, but in many more areas I'm more aware of my lack of knowledge than of any ability.)
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except
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In Kevin's initial example, I would have told my boss "we don't want to hire somebody with lies on their resume".
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I taught myself how to use Excel and Word, BTW, and used them extensively in my prior career doing data analysis and reporting on environmental test data.
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SQL
Nate
Re: SQL
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Sheeesh.
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[Part of my difficulty is that I did some programming work after that, but almost all of it was overseas. I have had employers here telling me they *refuse* to include it as relevant experience, solely because it's too difficult for them to check information and employers located in Europe. SIGH.]
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SQL?
it's a good thing I already have a job teaching astronomy--otherwise I'd be utterly unemplyable!
Re: SQL?
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"If you send me e-mail at scottadams@aol.com, put "Dilbert" at the end of your subject line so my anti-spam filter won't bounce it back to you. My address is widely published so it's been put on every mailing list in the galaxy. I try to read all of my e-mail. I'll respond to as many as time allows."
rotflmao
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