Interview is a formal procedure and
process meant for selecting a few suitable ones for a job or position. One
attending an interview expects some features and qualities in the firm,
company, organization or a workplace, which one wishes to enter for one’s
livelihood or better opportunity than one has now. The employer or the one
offering a source of livelihood or career growth to the one being interviewed
also expects suitable qualifications, multiple skills and considerable
experience from the candidate. It’s mostly a business deal rather than a
personal affair. Both think from the perspective of ‘benefit’. Employer thinks,
“What can he/she give to me as an employer in the short or long run?” Employee
thinks, “What more do I get from this firm, better than similar ones and how
can I build up my career through my short or long term association with this
enterprise?” Both try to impress the other in an interview. The employer should
impress the candidate explaining how he or she can be happy working in their unit.
The employee should promote himself or herself substantially to impress the
interviewer and get selected for the vacancy. Interview is an interesting act
for the one conducting it but a difficult and testing one for those attending
it. Asking any question randomly or specifically is easier than being ready
with an exact answer or explanation for a question asked from the other end.
Generally an interviewer is a skilled and
experienced one in a field of knowledge or work. He/she must be in a state of
mind and body whereby he/she can impress the interviewee with intelligent and
relevant questions, coupled with imposing personality of high degree
of demeanour. Many times an interviewee feels tense and subdued in
a place of interview due to the physical appearance, designation and
status of the interviewer/s, ambience of the venue, nature and volume of
questions posed, unfamiliarity with place and employees working there now and
the need of that job in his or her life right now.
Generally interviews are conducted through
the following ways:
a. Face-to-face interaction
b. Telephonic conversation
c. Web interface
HR staff of a firm or organization selects
candidates for interviews in the following ways:
a. Search through online job portals
b. Print ads in dailies, weeklies or other
periodicals
c. Ads on television channels
d. Public and private consultancies
e. Reference through present or old
employees
f. Going to educational institutions and
training institutes
g. Recommendations through internal and
external agents of power and authority
h. Dependents of victims of mishaps in
their companies or organizations
i. Commands by courts of law; central,
state or local governments
I attended some interviews till now with
different employers. I take the idea and practice of interview to select a
candidate for a vacancy highly unreliable and ridiculous for the following
reasons.
1. The HR folks consider qualifications of a
candidate very important to call him/her for an interview. They should have
suitable qualifications like B.Sc. M.Sc. M.Com and so on. How can we believe
that one with a qualification certainly can handle a set of job
responsibilities? I take my example. I did my M.A. English course in the
University of Hyderabad. This is a famous university in India now for some
reasons. There is no certainty that only highly intelligent and competent
students always enter a university. Often worthless idiots may also get
admission into prestigious educational institutions like IITs and IIMs also. I
am very poor at English literature because I surveyed it nominally during these
two academic years at the University of Hyderabad. I did not pursue those
subjects before this course nor practiced it much after coming out of this
university. Then, they did not teach me English grammar here either. It means I
learnt very little from this university expect formal perusal of some books of
literature and taking some periodical exams for the sake of marks and
certificate. I entered this university out of my interest for English language
but not because I had adequate knowledge of English literature. Because the
certificate issued by such university has worth in the job market, I would have
chosen this university rather than because I liked English language or
literature deeply. My intention was to benefit from the fame of the university
and certificate from this place rather than learning and improving myself
substantially in English language and literature through what I studied and did
there for two years. It means I thought as a customer but not as a passionate
lover of English. If English was my passion and if I had adequate command of
this subject, I would have studied in any university or postgraduate college. I
tried to hide my inabilities through getting a certificate from this noted
university. When my very intention in pursuing this course was false, how can
anybody expect that I learnt a great deal when I was there and that it would
benefit any organization that is going to recruit me depending on my fame as a
student from a prestigious university? There are some more complicated points
of concern as far as certificates are concerned. The richness of marks found on
certificate may not match the abilities of its owner.
a. Student remembers a subject much when he/she is
studying it with the purpose of taking the related exams. Even then he/she is
studying it for scoring marks and getting certificate but not out of passion
for it. Such knowledge, which he/she gains for exams, does not last longer in
him/her. In other words, when he/she leaves the campus, he/she forgets almost
everything he/she practiced or learnt there.
b. Reservations enable many to enter prestigious
educational institutions also without much difficulty. They don’t learn before
joining them or after joining them. How can we assess the worth of a candidate
of this order, scanning his or her certificate? Reservations are thus a
permanent blot on our certificates.
c. In many universities and other educational
institutions, there are biased teaching staff, who give more marks to the
creatures of their gender, community, language, region, religion and race than
others. We can’t identify these loopholes and drawbacks of educational
institutions just looking at their certificates.
d. The concerning student might have been sick or
unable to do the exam well. He would have gotten fewer marks because of such
physical or mental disabilities during that crucial time. He did/could not take
that exam again to improve his/her marks. How can we consider him/her poor at a
subject just because he got less marks than others, due to circumstances as
these.
e. Evaluation of examination papers is generally
carried out by subject experts. When a country, like India, is highly corrupt
and is with many drawbacks and demerits in terms of its educational system and
culture also, how can we believe that a qualified and experienced teacher only
evaluated an answer paper of a student? In this scenario, a dull student gets
more marks and an intelligent student might get low marks. In India, now, many
incompetent teachers are evaluating the answer sheets of students of many
educational courses. Thus, marks shown on a certificate do not actually
represent his/her actual intelligence or competence in that subject. After
leaving that educational institution, he/she might have improved his/her
subject knowledge or he/she might have degraded himself/herself from a good
state of knowledge and skills. As such, a certificate fails to symbolize the
true caliber and skills of a candidate.
f. Certificates can be manipulated in many ways. There
are many fake educational institutions across the world, which sell
certificates of any course, to anybody, collecting an amount of money from
them. How many companies and organizations in India or other countries have
ability to trace the truth behind the certificates they come across. They
blindly value somebody based on the certificates they see.
g. One may lose one’s certificates in an accident,
incident or natural calamity. If he/she is unable to produce his/her original
certificates in an interview, he/she may not get a job. We are not valuing
individuals, standing before us, with a desperate need to find employment for
their survival, but certificates, created somewhere, by somebody. Is it a fair
thing to be followed by our employers?
h. Some study abroad. We don’t know how one studied
there and how they gave marks to one. There may be wide difference between what
we think to be extraordinary in India and what others think in other nations.
Did they focus much on theory or practice? How much importance do they give to
communication skills? What are the standards of educational institutions,
governments and teaching faculty there? Could they get more marks over there bribing
the staff or doing something else?
2. Many HR folks and members of management of
an organization accord more value to the work experience of a candidate than
other parameters. If he/she states on his/her certificates that he/she worked
at so and so companies or organizations for different periods of time, handling
a varieties of job responsibilities, they feel impressed. Experience does play
a key role in a candidate getting a job. There are some drawbacks and demerits
even in valuing a candidate highly or less based on his/her experience.
a. There is no certainty that one with years of
experience with different firms and companies would be excellent as a
professional in his/her field of job responsibilities. We find many without
basic knowledge also about his/her subject or considerable communicative skills
in English despite years of experience. I know many high designation employees,
in different companies, who cannot write a paragraph also without errors in
English/their mother tongue. Their communicative and presentation skills are
pathetic.
b. There are gems, who work wonders, coming out from
educational institutions, recently. They don’t have experience but think
intelligently and work extraordinarily. Most of the companies in India offer
nominal salaries and perks to freshers compared to experienced ones. This is,
indirectly, humiliating the enthusiastic age and challenging intelligence of a
candidate. They don’t feel encouraged to join companies in this bleak scenario.
In many organizations, seniors, who have years of experience, cannot compete
with juniors, in terms of knowledge and work. Intelligent and hard-working
juniors feel insulted and disturbed to work as subordinates with such shallow
and worthless superiors. We cannot consider one great just because one has
years of experience but this is how managements of companies treat employees in
India. We can observe this retrograde culture in public and private firms
everywhere.
3. HR folks of firms recruit many candidates
based on internal or external references also. If I have a good image in a firm
I am working with, if there are some job vacancies, I may encourage my familiar
folks to apply for those jobs. They write my name in their job application in
the column of reference.
a. I cannot vouch for the character of a candidate I am
referring to a company because it may change at any time due to internal or
external factors. A company recruiting a candidate based on my reference and
expecting me to be answerable if he/she does anything wrong in future is
absolutely illogical. I am just a facilitator. I am communicating to him/her
just that there is a job vacancy. HR staff should take every possible measure
to regulate his/her character while in the campus of their company. They can
promote him/her or sack him/her at any time based on his/her merits or demerits
as an employee with them. My role, in this scenario, is just that of a
facilitator. I bring an employer and an employee closer.
b. Influential local and national politicians,
businessmen, members of managements of organizations and some other kinds of
folks may also recommend a candidate for a job with a company they know or on
which they have a kind of authority directly or indirectly. Often HR staff feel
disturbed to recruit an unworthy candidate to a job based on the recommendations
of those with authority. On one hand, the management instructs them to select
highly qualified and talented candidates only for many key jobs and on the
other hand, they recommend worthless candidates to some jobs in their
organization. It is not fair. Every organization must establish and follow some
standards strictly. Our volatile moods and attitudes should not compel our HR
staff to recruit somebody, against our norms and policies. In India, we find
this bad culture. On stage, they talk a lot about standards and values but they
don’t follow them.
4. The very interview procedure and process
looks disgusting to me many times. Those, interviewing a candidate, should
check whether he/she has the required skills or not. They may conduct a test to
find it out but is it happening simply in many organizations in India now?
Interviews turned lengthy and chaotic.
a. I heard that the folks of Google conduct many rounds
of interview to finalize a candidate for a position with their organization. I
disliked and avoided attending interviews of organizations like this just
because of this factor. I have self-respect. They can test my skills as an
editor or writer but not as an actor. If they are expecting me to be good at
many aspects as an employee, they are actually expecting me to be a hypocrite.
I may not know how to walk into an interview room; how to dress myself; how to
present myself to the folks of interview and many such other qualities, which
recruiting firms expect randomly from many employees. I might not have exposure
to such culture. I would not have been trained in those aspects of job
interviews, for many reasons, which were beyond my control. Does it mean that I
cannot be a good editor or writer in their workplace? I can learn culture fast
from others in a company if there is one at all, which applies to all equally
at all times, irrespective of designations. It is not a big issue. Imitation is
a common human quality. Unfortunately many HR idiots and rogues avoid
recruiting gems into their companies just because some candidates don’t act too
much before them. A gem does not like to meet an interviewer for a number of
days undergoing a series of steps of interview. If organizational and
recruitment culture in a nation is making even gems into helpless beggars, who
have to attend a series of interview stages, to get a job, then it is the
problem with the fundamental culture of that organization or nation. A
competent and sensitive interviewer must be able to conduct interview within a
day, at the most. I liked to join such firms only. Just because I am not
working with Google or Microsoft, you cannot think that I don’t have such
competencies. In fact, I am avoiding such companies because I have self-respect
as an employee and individual. I don’t like to go to the office of any company
even the second day for any stage of interview. One day is all that I can afford.
I did it so far. I follow this self-imposed culture even in future. From this
perspective, I am greater than Google and Microsoft because I am not yielding
to their irrational and illogical norms of interview. I need not get fame being
associated with any company in India. I have fame of my own. This is how some
think about jobs and companies in India. They don’t go to companies, like
shameless beggars, asking for a job. They maintain self-esteem and standards
even on their deathbed. If you think that extraordinary folks are working with
internationally famous companies across the world, you are wrong. Gems do not
act to attract anybody. All those working with prestigious firms
internationally are not gems but professionals. They do anything to get and retain
their favorite job. They sacrifice their self-respect and individuality in the
process of getting a job with a noted company because they have no worth of
their own. They want to promote themselves in the job market and familiar
society, attaching their names with those famous organizations. I know many of
this kind. They show off before ignorant ones. Gems don’t show off. They are
simple and humble creatures. HR folks cannot interview gems because they don’t
have such capabilities.
b. I believe that 80% of HR staff, who expect standards
and values from others, don’t have or follow them at their level in many
companies and organizations in India. Many Indian companies are unable to
attract gems and retain them because idiots and rogues are there in their HR
departments. I saw such worthless blokes in every company I worked with till
now. They don’t have command of their HR policies and procedures. They don’t
have effective communicative skills. They don’t have sensitivity and goodness
as human beings. They don’t have knowledge and skills required to interview a
candidate.
Insights
1. Interview is a kind of gambling. We can
never assess the worth of a candidate through interview.
2. Really talented professional never
expects a candidate to attend multiple rounds of interview.
3. Ninety percent of HR departments in
India are known for dishonesty, corruption and hypocrisy.
4. All Indian companies are functioning
here based on corruption, malpractices and violation of laws.
5. In India, nobody is perfect as a person
or professional. Companies follow the same culture.
6. In India, talented ones with
self-respect cannot get great jobs but idiots with multiple acting skills.
7. Indian recruitment agencies and
companies train candidates how to be immoral and illogical.
8. Indian HR departments don’t have
humanity and virtues but fake professionalism and show culture.
9. Much of attrition rate in India can be
attributed to cruelty and worthlessness of HR departments.
10. Indian companies do not run based on
standards but change/violate them whenever needed.
11. Most of the agreements made between
companies and employees in India are illegal and immoral.
12. No Indian company ever follows labor
laws completely. They violate them. Nobody questions them.
13. Unions are the biggest threat to
Indian economy. They work 30% but expect 100% from employers.
14. People near isolated industrial units
torture those managements. They demand money very often.
15. Indians are experts in preparing and
submitting fake study and experience certificates to others.
16. 95% of employees fear an interview
because they don’t know what acting skills the other expects!
17. The managements of Indian companies
don’t like gems but shameless, loyal and foolish employees.
18. One cannot work in any Indian company
if one wants to follow 100% self-respect as an employee.
19. Indian companies don’t encourage
creativity and innovation in employees but blind imitation.
20. 80% of Indian companies want to
produce products of high ‘margin’ but not high ‘value’.
21. If one dies in a reputed Indian
company, while working, gets lakhs; if outside, almost nothing.
22. Indian companies like fake
certificates more than the talent and individuality of a candidate.
23. Indian companies consider years of
experience valuable than genius of a fresh candidate.
24. In Indian companies, employee
appraisal policies and procedures are volatile and unreliable.
25. Nobody can run a unit of employment in
India without offering bribe to somebody somewhere.
26. 90% Indian employees work wonders if
employers trust them and offer them more freedom.
27. 80% superiors in Indian companies grow
in their careers, presenting worth of others as theirs often.
28. 97% superiors in Indian companies
expect their subordinates to change; they never change first.
29. 80% Indians wish to go abroad for a
better job; they are not happy with governments in India.
30. 90% Indian employees want promotions
and increments every year. They don’t deserve them.
31. 95% of Indian employers don’t have
even basic knowledge about labor laws. They run big companies.
32. In India, to get a great job, fast,
you must know how to cheat others and impress them artificially.
33. Superiors in Indian companies are
scared of those with authority but not those with intelligence.
34. 98% employees in Indian companies are
actors. They cannot survive and excel as individuals here.
35. Indians value the salary and status of
an employee rather than his intelligence, standards and values.
36. In India we can’t start and run a
company if we go by rules on paper. We should know manipulation.
37. 90% of Indian companies like to
recruit a distant idiot slowly than an available gem fast.
38. Many crave government jobs in India.
Expectations are few and rewards are high there. Sinecures.
39. 90% Indian parents wish their sons and
daughters to do jobs for a better image in society.
40. Indian bosses like those, who praise
them more than necessary, but not those, who criticize them.
I have been thoroughly fed up with the HR
policies and procedures of many companies in India, though I worked with very
few of them only till now. I hate reading articles by HR staff or those meant
for them because it is not happening at ground level. I hate HR meetings and
conferences because they discuss nonsense there and come up with mess. When HR
departments learn to treat idiots also kindly, they can contribute to the
growth of their organizations. Every employee is an opportunist. Most of them
might be beasts also. The standards and values, set and followed in a unit of
employment, fairly, towards everybody, must change him/her into a human being
and keep them so until they go out formally. HR staff need high degree of
patience, self-control, sensitivity, empathy, intelligence and vision to
attract the best ones into their firms and retain them for long. Humanity wins
the race here but not tactics and gimmicks. In fact, many good employees also
turn into bad ones after observing biased HR culture there.
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