The 7 Biggest Red Flags During Job Interviews According To North Carolinians
I’ve heard numerous horror stories about the job market these days. Everywhere says they are hiring, but in reality, people are applying to 100s of jobs and barely getting interviews. For positions they are qualified for. Even getting an interview is rare and should be celebrated. So you landed that interview and maybe this is it. Your way out of a toxic situation, your dream role, or that salary increase you so desperately want/need. Not so fast. If it seems like it may be too good to be true, then it probably is. Anytime you are looking to start a new career you need to be on the lookout for red flags in the job interviews you go on.
Red Flags
I saw that meme yesterday and it resonated with me enough to reshare it on Instagram. But when I sat down to write this, it seemed to sum up this study as well. The data comes to us from our friends at VoiceNation. They recently conducted a survey that revealed the red flags that job hunters report being interviewed for a role. Through that research, they also determined that 46% of North Carolina residents believe they have experienced a negative job interview. I’m shocked that number isn’t higher. Directly out of college, I interviewed for a couple of “marketing” roles that seemed to be from reputable companies. One was essentially a call center and the other- door-to-door sales for AT&T U-Verse under the guise of a different company. Thankfully I recognized the red flags in these companies immediately and declined the second round of job interviews both asked for.
Red Flags In Job Interviews Reported By North Carolina Residents
What would you consider to be a ‘red flag’ when in a job Interview? |
% of votes from North Carolina residents |
Not disclosing salary |
41% |
Interviewer disrespecting co-workers |
25% |
Too many personal and/or irrelevant questions |
25% |
The job role sounds different to what was initially advertised |
24% |
Constantly rescheduling the interview |
22% |
Interviewer seeming unprepared |
19% |
Not answering your questions correctly (inconsistent answers, brushing around the subject) |
19% |
Good job North Carolina.
Your biggest red flag is not disclosing the salary and I couldn’t agree more. A few years ago I interviewed for a position that I was approached about. It took me two interviews and multiple email conversations to get an answer to what the job would pay. This was certainly a red flag as I was pressured to commit before even knowing the salary range.
I ultimately declined as it was a lateral salary move and I suspect the lowball number is why they were so hesitant to tell me. Not to mention I’d already proved and could back up the value I would have brought to that role. And it could be monetized for 10-20x what they wanted to compensate me. If a company is at the stage of interviewing for a position they should at least have a concise salary range they can give you at the time of the interview. Or if not within 24 hours. Anything else? Major red flag.
Other things like the interviewer sounding unprepared, disrespecting coworkers, and not answering your questions. These are also big red flags that provide you with an insight into the office culture. And that culture doesn’t seem positive to me. If you don’t want to tell me something there has to be a why. And if you’re openly disrespecting co-workers I can safely assume I would not garner your respect either. Hard pass.
Another one that is important to focus on- the job role sounds different from what was initially advertised. If the role is already changing in the interview process you have zero reason to believe it won’t once you’re hired. I know it’s tough out there between the job market and the economy. But make sure you’re on the lookout for red flags in your job interviews. Your worth waiting for the right role with the right company. Thanks to our friends at VoiceNation for sharing their research with us. You can read the full nationwide study here.