4   
1   
  • Focusing on the mistakes starts on the wrong page. "Youngest successful tech entrepreneur" sounds like an ego adventure rather than an innovative... idea. Your idea must attempt to solve a problem, improve something, or meet a need. Otherwise, find a job and climb the ladder.  more

    2
  • I do not know the tech industry but what I can say generally speaking which I could have benefitted from when I started my cleaning services is....1.... do your research and know the industry you are entering 2. look up competition 3. Get a mentor  more

1   
  • Congratulations on your new position. Since you’re the manager, it’s important to establish professional boundaries early, but you can still do it... respectfully.
    You could say something like:
    ‘Mr. ___, I truly appreciate how supportive you are of your son, and it’s clear you care about him succeeding here. However, our company policy requires employees to handle their responsibilities independently, and for workflow and confidentiality reasons, we need to limit non-staff involvement in daily operations. I’m confident your son will settle in well, and we’ll make sure he receives all the guidance he needs from the team. This keeps the conversation calm, professional, and focused on workplace policy rather than making it personal. If the behavior continues, then you may need to speak directly with the employee himself and reinforce expectations professionally.
     more

    1
  • The son is your employee. You should tell him that you have hired him, not his father and the father is not welcome to come in your building and cause... disruption. If it does not stop right away, you may have to consider letting him go. more

2   
  • My boss once implored me to tow his 2001 Mitsubishi Galant with eyelashes on the headlights from Proxima Centauri to the Oort Cloud where his mechanic... was exiled to after emitting radio signals about the imperial commander’s PED use when participating in a bicentenarian pickleball league in 2380 AD. more

  • In our country it’s it’s against the law to contact an employee outside of hours

    2

I happily pay 40% tax in Sweden and after 7 years here's why I don't want to return to India


In 2018, Chandrika moved from a small town near Tirupati to Stockholm as a dependent spouse, barely knowing anything about Sweden. Seven years later, she is a Solution Architect at Scania, a mother of two, and an NRI who has quietly done the math, and chosen to make Sweden home.

In a conversation with financialexpress.com, Chandrika opened up about the realities behind the "dream European life,"... from language barriers and isolation to parental leave benefits, high taxes, and eventually building a stable professional identity in Stockholm.

From dependent spouse to job seeker

Before Sweden, Chandrika had already built a foundation in India, working at Cognizant and later transitioning into SAP Materials Management. In 2018, when her husband received an offer from Scania, the family took the plunge.

As a dependent spouse, the biggest challenge was not just professional; it was personal. The early days were brutally isolating. "Everything was new. I stayed at home with my son, no TV, nothing," she recalled. Job hunting on a dependent visa felt overwhelming, with no local experience, limited Swedish language skills, and almost no network.

But Chandrika was quick to adapt. She enrolled in free Swedish language classes, reworked her CV to local standards, and started applying aggressively. Within a year, she landed her first role through a Telugu consulting firm, moved to Electrolux, and eventually returned to Scania as a Solution Architect in the AP domain.

The realities of Sweden's family support system

However, despite all the early struggles, the generous parental leave system proved to be a game-changer. In Sweden parents can share 480 days of leave per child, with the flexibility to use them until the child turns 12. Daycare (förskola) is reliable, subsidised, and widely available. "You don't feel guilty taking time off for your child. "Society actually supports working parents," Chandrika said.

According to Sweden's Social Insurance Agency, Försäkringskassan, each parent is entitled to 240 days of parental leave, with 90 days reserved specifically for each parent. The remaining days can be shared between parents in a way that suits the family. In most cases, parents receive around 80% of their salary for up to 390 days, while the remaining 90 days are paid at a lower flat rate.

But that support comes with a clear financial trade-off. With taxes ranging around 30-40% and a high cost of living in cities like Stockholm, she said the reality is far more balanced than the "ideal Europe" perception. "You get stability, but not necessarily high savings," she explained. "Most of the income goes into running the household."

Despite these challenges, Chandrika believes the Swedish model wins for working mothers. The stress-free work culture (rarely any after-hours calls), safe environment, and quality education for children made the trade-off worthwhile.

Work-life balance that ends at 5 PM

For Chandrika, one of the most striking differences in Sweden is the workplace culture. Work begins early, but it also ends on time. After office hours, communication stops. Emails and messages do not follow employees into evenings or weekends. "There is no stress after working hours," she says. "Once you log off, you are done for the day."

As a mother of two, she says this structure has been central to maintaining balance between career and family life.

Building a life, and deciding to stay

The family's immigration journey moved from a two-year employer-sponsored work visa to Permanent Residency after four years, and they are now exploring the path to citizenship. However, proposed rule changes from 2026, including longer residency requirements, mandatory language tests, and higher income thresholds, have created a sense of uncertainty within sections of the Indian community in Sweden.

Even so, whenever the couple weighed the option of returning to India, the decision consistently tilted the same way. The defining factor was quality of life, a strong work-life balance, personal safety, clean surroundings, and a more structured long-term environment for raising their children, now aged 10 and 3.

"Emotionally, India will always be home," Chandrika says. "But practically, Sweden offers a more balanced and stable environment for raising a family."

Over time, the family has also built a close-knit Telugu-Indian community around Stockholm, which has helped ease long winters and reduce feelings of isolation.
 
more

Reading Log #7 -- Aoashi Guns, Germs, and Steel Distinction


Strength may be not talent, but a product of environment and accumulation.

In the later arc of Aoashi, the stage moves to Spain. What's thrust at Ashito there isn't a gap in technique. It's the fact that the very environment that raised them is utterly different.

Players who, from a young age, bathed in success and failure at a youth setup like Barcelona's. While the Japanese player is... desperately "thinking, thinking," the European top player is already beyond that. Is this a gap in cleverness? Or --

The answer isn't racial superiority. It's environment and geography. Plants fit for cultivation, animals fit for domestication, a continent long on its east-west axis -- people who happened to be in a blessed environment generated surplus through farming, grew their population, and accumulated technology, immunity, and the state. The difference was born not from ability, but from the conditions you were placed in at the starting line.

Soccer is similar. Spanish players are strong not because they were born fast. It's because they happened to be born into an environment where football is rooted as culture. "Before you blame the person, look at the structure" -- this book's reach lands straight on the pitch too.

From the first division down to the seventh. Even small towns have clubs, and soccer is dissolved into daily life. This thickness of layers isn't made overnight. It's many generations of time, fallen and piled up.

And this thickness isn't only a matter of "long history." It's an accumulation of how much heat a whole society has poured into football. In Spain there's an air that permits prioritizing the local club's coaching over your job. On a weekday evening, adults and children gather on a small town pitch as a matter of course. That daily heat, piled over generations, became that thick pyramid. The Japan/Spain gap isn't a gap in talent. It's a gap in the amount of heat society has bet on the game. Diamond's "accumulation born of environment" takes, in soccer, the shape of this heat and this pyramid.

The frightening thing about environment is that it changes not only "what you think," but "what your body does before you think."

Picture Barcelona's soccer. That beautiful passing combination, the ball circulating among the players without stagnation. Even someone who doesn't follow football has surely seen that scene once. It's become, before anyone noticed, a shared "normal" the whole world knows.

This is what Bourdieu calls habitus -- the unconscious "normal" the environment carves into the body. Spanish players aren't, each time, "choosing" that passing. From a young age, the environment has raised bodies that circulate the ball that way. What the Japanese player tries to catch up to by thinking "I should move like this," they already know in the body, before thought.

Environment soaks in below consciousness. That's why it's the hardest to catch up to. You can learn the form, but the "normal" of a body that moves before thinking -- that, you can only grow inside the environment.

Here, Distinction from #5, once more.

Aesthetic sense, the discerning eye -- made by class and history. That story works directly on a player's "résumé" too. The Spanish player holds, from the start, the cultural capital of the environment they were born into. The Japanese player can only build it up later, consciously.

And as we saw in #5, the evaluating side's gaze isn't neutral either. A résumé that says "from Europe" backs a certain trust all by itself. The accumulated environment backs the résumé, and the résumé clouds the eye. The power of structure, before ability.

So Ashito's fight is doubly heavy. While closing the environment gap, he must also force open the gaze that the gap itself has clouded. #5's "if you aren't seen, make them see" works here too.

But -- don't read Diamond's book as fatalism. That environment sets the conditions is true. Yet a person can re-choose their environment.

Fukuda crossed the sea to see football's ceiling. A view he couldn't have seen in Japan. To see it, he moved his own environment. You can't choose the environment you were born into, but the environment you stand in next, you can choose.

And there, in the re-chosen place, someone says it flat.

"Japanese can do it too." The environment gap they were told was absolutely impossible, pinned down by results. Environment is strong. But environment isn't everything. Having taken on the conditions, the individual who still goes to surpass opens a hole in the environment's story.

And the hole one person forces open becomes, in time, a path. The footprints of the one who first proved "Japanese can do it" -- the next generation can walk them as a road. The individual who went where no one had gone becomes, before anyone notices, the successors' very environment. A path isn't given. The first person carves it with their own feet. And that path becomes the next person's "normal."

The most hopeful implication of Diamond's book is, I think, here. If strength is a product of environment, then the environment is what you can design.

If Spain's pyramid took many generations, then an environment that grows players can also be made on purpose. What Aoashi's Esperion tries to draw is, probably, exactly that -- not waiting for chance talent, but designing the very environment in which talent grows.

The "heat to cultivate" I read in #6 was an individual act. What I'm reading in #7 is the story of that heat piling up and, in time, becoming an environment. One coach's heat becomes one rung of the pyramid. That's how an accumulation of time gets built.

Finally, to OrbitLens.

The most dangerous thing about observation is attributing strength to the individual alone. A score of "this person is excellent / low" usually ignores the environment they were placed in. Accumulation built in a blessed environment, and grit endured alone in a barren one, both get rounded into the same "individual score."

This is continuous with #5's unconscious discrimination. Measure the individual without seeing the environment gap, and you misread an environment gap as a talent gap. High just for being from Spain, low just for being from Japan -- observation like that preserves the structure as is.

So EIS observes by separating domains. It doesn't mix them. It keeps the relative-within-the-same-environment and the absolute-across-organizations apart. And it tries to observe the accumulation of time (surviving code) together with that person's context. Before pushing strength onto the individual, it asks what environment made it possible. Observation, the moment it overlooks environment, becomes an apparatus of discrimination.

Strength is a product of environment and accumulation. So before measuring the individual, see the environment. And design the better environment.

You can't choose the environment you were born into. But the environment you stand in next, and the environment you build for someone else -- those, you can choose.

In #8, Aoashi again. A storied Spanish club -- when does its tradition and pride tilt into "a kingdom that lost its essence"? When winning becomes the end, a culture that was an infinite game gets swallowed by a finite one. Read alongside James P. Carse's Finite and Infinite Games and Benedict Anderson's Imagined Communities.
 
more

5 Features To Look for in Top Recruitment Marketing Platforms


Which recruitment marketing tools provide a mobile-friendly experience?

The best recruitment marketing platforms in the market come with features such as integration with candidate relationship management systems, employer branding, multi-channel recruitment campaigns and digital strategies, a mobile-friendly experience, and robust reporting and analytics.

I went through G2 Spring 2026 Grid... Reports and user feedback to shortlist these key recruitment marketing platform features. I also mention the recruitment marketing tools that score the highest for each feature.

According to G2 Spring 2026 Grid Reports, RecruitBPM, Staffing Referrals, and 100Hires rank the highest when it comes to employer branding.

Here's why users like recruitment marketing tools like RecruitBPM, Staffing Referrals, and 100Hires for employer branding.

RecruitBPM, 100Hires, Staffing Referrals, and CareerBuilder Talent Network rank highest in their integration capabilities with candidate relationship management systems, according to G2 Data.

Mentioned below are the reasons why users trust these recruitment marketing platforms for integration with candidate relationship management software.

Recruitment marketing tools like RecruitBPM, 100Hires, and TurboHire rank the highest for their reporting feature, as per G2 Grid Reports.

Here's why users prefer the reporting of these recruitment marketing platforms.

According to G2 Data, the best recruitment marketing platform that helps with multi-channel digital strategy are RecruitBPM, 100Hires, and Staffing Referrals.

Read the pointers below to understand why users like these recruitment marketing tools for their multi-channel digital strategy and campaigns.

Staffing Referrals, 100Hires, CareerBuilder, and Jobylon rank the highest for their mobile access experience, according to G2 Data.

Here's why recruiters like Staffing Referrals, 100Hires, CareerBuilder, and Jobylon for their mobile experience.

The best recruitment marketing platform depends on how your team attracts, engages, and nurtures candidates across the hiring journey. Some organizations may prioritize employer branding and candidate engagement, while others may need stronger CRM integrations, reporting capabilities, or multi-channel campaign management.

For companies hiring at scale, features like automated outreach, candidate pipeline management, analytics, and integrations with existing HR systems can make a significant difference in recruiter productivity and candidate experience. Organizations focused on talent attraction and employer visibility may benefit more from tools that strengthen career site branding, employee referrals, and social recruiting campaigns. Mobile accessibility also matters for distributed recruiting teams that need to stay connected with candidates on the go.

Rather than choosing a platform solely based on feature breadth, evaluate which tools align best with your recruitment workflows, hiring volume, and communication strategy. Shortlisting a few platforms, exploring product demos, and reviewing feedback from verified users in similar industries can help narrow down the right fit.

Save time on repetitive hiring tasks. Explore the best recruiting automation tools to streamline outreach, scheduling, candidate screening, and workflow management.
 
more

Career Referral Partners Needed -- 2


I run AryaCareers, a platform that helps international students and working professionals in the United States land roles through fully tailored applications, interview prep, and ongoing career support. Our services are already packaged, priced, and converting well; what I need now is a network of trusted partners who can introduce us to more job seekers and share in the revenue. Here's how the... collaboration works: you receive a unique tracking link or coupon code, send it to your audience in whatever channel suits you best -- social media, newsletters, webinars, direct messages, campus groups, even one-to-one introductions -- and collect a 10 % commission on every paid signup that comes through. Commissions are recorded in real time inside a lightweight partner dashboard and paid out once a month, with no earnings cap and no expiry on referrals. If your client buys additional coaching or résumé services later, you keep earning the same percentage on those follow-on purchases. Because you already mentor, coach, write résumés, recruit, or manage student communities, this can fold naturally into your current workflow: simply mention AryaCareers as a trusted resource, drop your link, and let us do the heavy lifting. We handle onboarding, service delivery, customer support, and retention; you focus on the warm introduction. Deliverables * Sign our one-page partner agreement (e-sign, under five minutes). * Distribute your referral link or code to your audience in the manner you choose. * Share high-level feedback on what resonates so we can refine joint campaigns. Acceptance Criteria * First paid signup tracked to your link triggers commission eligibility. * Ongoing payouts match the total gross revenue your referrals generate, at the agreed 10 %. If you're ready to add a simple, recurring income stream while giving your clients a proven career resource, let's connect and get your partner credentials issued today. more

What's behind the rise in firings linked to disability discrimination in Hong Kong?


Complaints to Hong Kong's equality watchdog about firings linked to suspected disability discrimination have more than doubled over the past five years, with concern groups attributing the rise to corporate restructuring and widespread lay-offs amid the economic downturn.

The South China Morning Post obtained figures from the Equal Opportunities Commission (EOC) showing that the watchdog received... 490 complaints of alleged disability discrimination in the employment field last year, up 72 per cent from 285 in 2021.

Of these, complaints involving dismissal more than doubled over the same period, increasing from 132 in 2021 to 282 in 2025.

An EOC spokesman said the increase in complaints was due to various factors, including greater public awareness and the reporting of discrimination incidents on social and mainstream media, encouraging more victims to come forward.

He said the proportion of disability-related complaints had remained steady over the years.

But, in terms of employment-related complaints, the figures showed that the EOC received 640 overall in 2021, with disability-related reports accounting for around 45 per cent. In 2025, such complaints made up about 55 per cent of the 896 filed last year.

Among the complainants was Tonny Wong Ka-shing, who has a hearing impairment. He was fired by an NGO last September after working as a driver for just one day.

The 34-year-old said the organisation gave inconsistent explanations about his termination, first saying it no longer needed a driver and later claiming that he was inexperienced and underperformed during the job interview.

"I was shocked and disappointed to be dismissed after only a day on the job," Wong said, questioning why he was hired if he performed poorly in the interview. "The reasons given were contradictory, inconsistent and lacked any objective basis."

Wong brought the case to the EOC, but was told that it lacked sufficient evidence to pursue the complaint and initiate mediation.

"The EOC said I needed more direct evidence, for example, that my employer explicitly said the termination of my employment was due to my hearing impairment," Wong said.

"But how could an NGO be so foolish [as to say that]? And no one will bring a voice recorder every day and record 24 hours a day."

After Wong complained to the Social Welfare Department, the NGO later said that the lay-off was triggered by his use of a photo of the official vehicle as his WhatsApp profile picture, an act deemed inappropriate.

Wong countered that he was never informed of the relevant requirement, but he had learned that the NGO had improved and better informed his successor about employee guidelines following his case.

He called on the EOC to handle complaints more proactively, to investigate cases and initiate mediation even without direct evidence. He also urged the government to step up supervision of NGOs' recruitment and firing practices.

The EOC spokesman said complainants were responsible for providing sufficient information and evidence to substantiate the allegation, but it was aware of the difficulty of obtaining direct proof and would take into account the totality of circumstances.

He added that the EOC would conduct a preliminary assessment to determine whether a complaint supported the allegation and would take appropriate follow-up actions, such as early conciliation and investigation.

The complaints received by the EOC appeared to represent only the tip of the iceberg, as some people were reluctant to speak out even when facing a potentially unfair dismissal.

Raymond Lau Pak-hei, a 25-year-old with cerebral palsy, was employed as an administrative assistant at a fitness centre last year.

Despite completing his probation and believing his performance was satisfactory, even with the occasional mistake, he was suddenly laid off after nine months.

Lau questioned the company's claim that he underperformed, saying that if his work had been unsatisfactory, his firing would have come earlier or during the probation period.

He suspected the real reason was the expiry of a nine-month government subsidy under the "Work Orientation and Placement Scheme", which was offered to employers who hired people with disabilities.

But Lau chose not to file a complaint with the EOC or the government. "You do not burn your bridges behind you," he said. "And I did make some mistakes at work."

Tsan Siu Yat-chan, founder of Silence, a local charity that helps hearing-impaired people, attributed the rise in complaints to the economic downturn.

He said that people with disabilities, who might struggle to handle multiple tasks at once, often bore the brunt of cost-cutting measures.

He mentioned cases of hearing-impaired people responsible for accounting and design duties being asked to take on work requiring communication with external parties, which would be challenging for them without suitable support.

"Many companies have cut staff numbers and made their workforce multifunctional," Siu said. "For people with disabilities, this could imply being assigned additional tasks that fall beyond their capabilities."

Siu said that, therefore, employers often cited business restructuring or budget cuts as reasons for dismissal, which frequently led to conflicts.

Billy Wong Chun-hang, president of the Hong Kong Blind Union, described it as a perennial challenge for people with disabilities to secure jobs, and the current economic situation made their circumstances worse.

"Challenges and misunderstandings may arise [that prevent people with disabilities] from getting along with the work team," he said, attributing such situations to a lack of understanding between the public and people with disabilities.

"When companies need to downsize and lay off staff, people with disabilities who incur extra costs of assistance and are considered more troublesome could become the targets for redundancy."

Wong added that the high unemployment rate gave employers more choices during recruitment, reducing the opportunities for people with disabilities to be selected.

To improve the situation, Siu called on the government to increase subsidies that encouraged employers to retain staff with disabilities, while also supporting people with disabilities in starting their own businesses, such as washing cars, electrical work, renovation and transport.

"If they are given the opportunity to start their own businesses, they could hire other people with disabilities and better understand themselves," Siu said. "This would alleviate the problem."

Union president Wong proposed that the business sector should learn from other regions by introducing job coaching schemes for employees with disabilities to help them better understand their roles and integrate into the workplace. -- SOUTH CHINA MORNING POST
 
more

Navigating Your Path to Success: Tips for Securing a Talent Agent


Breaking into the world of entertainment can be a daunting task, but one of the most pivotal steps in this journey is knowing how to get a talent agent. A talent agent can connect you with auditions and opportunities that you might not find on your own, guiding you through the industry with expertise and experience. This article will serve as a comprehensive guide to help you understand the... process of securing a talent agent, offering practical advice to increase your chances of success.

Understanding How to Get a Talent Agent

Before diving into the process, it's essential to understand what a talent agent does. A talent agent represents actors, models, musicians, and other entertainment professionals, promoting their skills to potential clients and negotiating contracts. They are the bridge between you and casting directors or recruiters. Now, let's explore the steps to secure an agent.

Building Your Portfolio

Creating a solid portfolio is crucial. Whether you're an actor, model, or musician, you need to showcase your best work. For actors, this means compiling a headshot and résumé, along with clips of your performances. Models should have a portfolio with a variety of looks, while musicians need demos or recordings of their music.

The importance of training cannot be overstated. Enroll in acting classes or workshops, work with a vocal coach, or enhance your modeling techniques. This formal training not only hones your skills but also shows potential agents that you are committed to your craft.

Researching Potential Agents

Research is a crucial step in understanding how to get a talent agent. Look for agencies that specialize in your area of expertise, whether it is acting, modeling, or music. Focus on reputable agencies with a history of representing successful clients. Online databases and industry publications can be valuable resources for finding agencies that match your needs.

It's essential to ensure the agency is legitimate and licensed. Resources such as the Wikipedia education page offer insights into structured paths, which include finding accredited representations in entertainment. Avoid any agency asking for upfront fees, as this is generally a red flag.

Approaching Talent Agents

Making the right first impression is key. When you reach out to talent agents, personalize your communication. Write a concise, professional cover letter that expresses your passion and dedication. Include your portfolio and any relevant links to your work. Remember, this is your chance to stand out, so demonstrate what makes you unique.

Networking can also open doors to talent agents. Attend industry events, showcase your work and connect with professionals who may lead you to a reputable agent. Sometimes, a recommendation from a mutual contact can significantly influence an agent's decision to represent you.

Auditioning and Interviews

If a talent agent expresses interest, they might invite you for an audition or interview. This is your opportunity to demonstrate your skills and convince them of your potential. Prepare thoroughly and present yourself professionally. Remember to be punctual, as the entertainment industry values time management and reliability.

Nurturing the Relationship

Once you secure a talent agent, nurturing the relationship is crucial. Maintain open communication and be receptive to feedback. Just like any professional relationship, trust and mutual respect are foundational.

Keep honing your skills and work hard to meet the expectations set. The journey doesn't end once you secure representation; it marks the beginning of your professional career. Check out our article on studying abroad in Europe's best art schools. It might inspire additional training opportunities to further your career.

Conclusion

Embarking on a quest for representation can seem overwhelming, but understanding how to get a talent agent is the first step in building a successful career in the entertainment industry. Remember that persistence, professionalism, and passion are your best tools. Stay informed, be adaptable, and continue to develop your craft to ensure you make the most of the opportunities that come your way.

* Build a comprehensive and professional portfolio showcasing your talent.

* Research thoroughly to find reputable talent agencies in your niche.

* Personalize your approach and network within the industry.

* Prepare for auditions and interviews with agents diligently.

* Foster a strong, respectful relationship with your talent agent.

What should be in my acting portfolio?

Your acting portfolio should include a professional headshot, an updated résumé, and clips of your performances. Enhancing these with any formal training or workshops attended is also beneficial.

How can I verify if a talent agent is legitimate?

Ensure the agent is licensed and check their reputation through industry publications or online databases. Be cautious of agents who demand upfront fees, as this is often a sign of a scam.

What is the typical process of auditioning with a talent agent?

A talent agent may ask for a meeting or an audition to assess your skills. They will evaluate your performance and fit for the agency's clientele. It's essential to prepare thoroughly for such meetings.

How do I maintain a good relationship with my agent?

Maintain regular communication and be open to constructive feedback. Show appreciation for their efforts and continue to refine your skills, demonstrating your commitment and professionalism.

Can a talent agent help me internationally?

Yes, many agencies have international connections and can facilitate auditions abroad. However, securing local representation in target markets can often enhance your opportunities further.
 
more
3   
  • Go for professional studies, this would enabled you pursue your further studies specially with e-learning/distance learning programmes.

    In case you... are required to do your in-house
    exams, you can request for the examination leaves or do it through microwave.
     more

  • Try evening classes 8pm to 10pm

'We're almost done, but are you planning to get married?' Candidate walks out of job interview after HR asks about 'family planning situation'


'We're almost done, but are you planning to get married?' Candidate walks out of job interview after HR asks about 'family planning situation' The conversation begins like a typical hiring conversation. The HR representative appears satisfied with the candidate's performance and says, "Everything looks great. Your technical assessment was strong, the team loved you, and I think we're almost done... here."

An online job interview has sparked a debate about workplace boundaries after a candidate declined a job offer over personal questions about marriage and family. The conversation, posted by a career advisor, shows the chat turning from positive to uncomfortable, and ends with the candidate calmly walking away.

The conversation begins like a typical hiring conversation. The HR representative appears satisfied with the candidate's performance and says, "Everything looks great. Your technical assessment was strong, the team loved you, and I think we're almost done here."

The candidate responds positively, saying they enjoyed the process and seemed ready for the next step.

But just before closing, the HR introduces what they call a "final question", "Just one last question before we wrap up... Are you married?"

When the candidate questions the relevance, the HR continues probing: "And if not, are you planning to get married soon?" The explanation offered is that it is "for planning purposes," suggesting that life events like marriage or children "can affect work."

The candidate then directly asks whether the question is about plans to have children. The HR responds by saying they need to understand the "family planning situation for team planning purposes" and describes it as a "standard question for all our hires."

They further justify it by referring to "long-term stability" and "important clients and projects that demand long-term stability."

The tone shifts as the candidate pushes back. They respond, "I'm not comfortable answering this question as it's not legally appropriate for hiring decisions."

The candidate adds that hiring should be based on professional ability, not personal life choices. The moment becomes decisive when they say the question has changed how they see the company's culture and decline to continue with the process.

HR : Everything looks great. Your technical assessment was strong, the team loved you, and I think we're almost done here.

Candidate: Glad to hear that. I've enjoyed the process.

HR : Just one last question before we wrap up.

Candidate: Sure.

HR : Are you married?

Candidate: Sorry?

HR : And if not, are you planning to get married soon?

Candidate: I'm not sure I understand why that's relevant to the role.

HR : We just like to understand these things for planning purposes.

Candidate: Planning for what exactly?

HR : Well, marriage, children, family changes... those things can affect work.

Candidate: So this is really about whether I'm planning to have children?

HR : We just want to know your family planning situation for team planning purposes.

Candidate: I'm not comfortable answering this question as it's not legally appropriate for hiring decisions

HR : This is a standard question for all our hires

Candidate: This still doesn't change the fact that it crosses a line.

HR : We're just trying to understand long-term stability.

Candidate: My ability to do the job should be measured by my skills and experience, not my marriage plans or whether I want children.

HR: We've important clients and projects that demand long-term stability

Candidate: Honestly, that question changes how I view this company completely.

HR : Let me know if we moving forward .

Candidate: No, Thank you. I have concerns about a company culture where such questions were considered acceptable.

The post presents the exchange as a scenario, but its impact lies in how familiar the situation feels to many job seekers. Questions around marriage and family, though often unofficial, continue to surface in hiring conversations. It puts a spotlight on where professional evaluation ends and personal intrusion begins.

The conversation has drawn strong reactions online, with many users siding with the candidate's response.

One commenter wrote, "There are questions that are not necessary, and this is one. If I were him, that's the way I'd answer."

Another said, "Any company asking about marriage and kids in 2024 is basically admitting they have zero respect for boundaries or basic labor laws."

A third added, "Well in this kind of situation every candidate should leave quietly... and in actual they are already married mostly ."

Another bluntly remarked, "HR is always selfish."

As the clip continues to circulate, it has sparked a broader discussion about what employers can and cannot ask during interviews. Many users pointed out that such questions, even if framed as planning needs, risk crossing into personal territory that should remain off-limits.

At the same time, others highlighted the candidate's calm and composed response as an example of how to handle uncomfortable situations without confrontation.

The reactions suggest it reflects a real and ongoing issue in hiring practices. For many professionals, the chat has become less about one interview and more about a larger question, how much of one's personal life should matter at the workplace door.

For now, the clip continues to travel across timelines and places, serving as a reminder that sometimes, saying no can be as important as landing the job.
 
more
2   
  • Sometimes it depends to the organisations interests, so high level of maturity and thinking is needed to answer such a question.

  • i find no problem in positively respond to the question if i were the candidate,because so contracts come with benefits ,for instance medical... insurance,housing,transport etc .So the company would be in a better position to catch biodata of the employee right from the start. I submit. more

I was rejected for a job 6 minutes after I applied. I told the company that AI was screening out strong candidates.


Tellez said he told the company's HR chief that AI was filtering out qualified candidates.

This as-told-to essay is based on a conversation with Tony Tellez, a 49-year-old IT professional based in Indianapolis. This story has been edited for length and clarity.

I started my career at the entry level and worked my way up to essentially running IT companies in the managed-services space,... overseeing IT operations for multiple clients. Recently, I found myself on the job market for the first time in 10 years. It's changed a lot.

I got some interviews right away, but I also got a lot of rejections. Nobody likes to be rejected. I've got children, rent, and animals to take care of, and those responsibilities start to weigh on you.

One Sunday night, my frustrations reached a breaking point. I had applied for a senior position at a managed-services firm that I was more than qualified for around 11:15 p.m. About six minutes later, I received an email that simply said, "We have declined your application." The company didn't even provide a reason like, "we're pursuing other candidates."

It didn't make any sense. I applied at a time when no one was likely to be manually reviewing résumés and rejecting them. I reread the job listing, and it clearly said that a bachelor's degree -- something I don't have -- was preferred but not required.

Also, my best friend is an HR consultant, and she made sure my résumé included all the necessary keywords. I even ran it through an open-source applicant-tracking system to check that it was well-optimized.

So, after I saw that rejection email come in, I went to the company's LinkedIn page, found their HR director, and sent him this message.

I sent it partly because it's already frustrating for someone to lose a job and have to search for a new one. It's even worse when you have to deal with rejection from a robot.

Another reason is that I've developed and deployed applicant tracking systems, so I understand what it takes to configure them properly. There's a problem here, and the company's leadership may not know that they're potentially missing out on quality candidates.

I haven't heard anything back, and I probably won't. The job listing is no longer up, so I don't know if it was filled. I just know that I'm not ready to retire anytime soon. I love working. I love fixing things.

I've since used AI to make my résumé more AI-friendly. You've got to fight fire with fire. However, I've also started targeting companies that say in their job listings that every résumé submitted is reviewed by a human. In some of my past jobs, I was responsible for hiring people, and I prided myself on reading every résumé that came in. It's crazy how much the job market has changed.
 
more
7   
  • Your resume might be the problem

  • It could be a different scenario. It's possible that they already found their candidate and forgot to take the link for the job down.So when this guy... applied, they already had their candidate making his application, neil and void.And once they got his application and message, they soon realized that the job link was still available and deleted it soon after.  more

I Sent 12,500 AI-Generated Job Applications.


I Sent 12,500 AI-Generated Job Applications. Here's What Worked, What Didn't, and What I'd Do Differently.

After 6 months of running a local-first AI job-hunting agent on my laptop, here are the data, the screenshots, and the lessons -- no fluff.

Six months ago -- while still very much in the thick of my full-time Product Manager role in Dubai -- I started quietly looking for what's next.

By... month two of the search, I had sent 200 manual cold emails to recruiters. I did it on evenings, weekends, and around stand-ups and OKRs. I received exactly six replies.

The math made me physically nauseous. So, I did what any engineer-turned-PM would do: I built JobyBots https://www.jobybots.com/

What started as a weekend Python script is now an AI agent running locally on the laptops of 47 paying customers across the UAE, Saudi Arabia, India, the UK, and a few other markets. Collectively, they send around 6,000 personalized job applications per day. As of last Tuesday, JobyBots itself has shipped 12,547 applications across all users.

This article is everything I learned along the way. No gatekeeping, no corporate speak -- just raw data.

The Brutal Modern Math of Job Applications

In 2026, a typical tech job posting on LinkedIn receives 1,200 applications within 24 hours. To put that in perspective, that number hovered around 30-50 back in 2018. Three distinct forces collapsed the old funnel:

- The Post-COVID Hiring Slowdown: Fewer open roles means a massively inflated pool of candidates competing for the same spot.

- The AI Autocomplete Surge: Generative AI has lowered the cost of applying to near-zero. Whether it's ChatGPT autocomplete or aggressive spam-bot networks, people are flooding the gates.

- AI-Driven ATS Triaging: Applicant Tracking Systems are now advanced AI bots themselves. They triage 1,200 résumés in seconds before a human recruiter ever sees the top 20.

- The implication for an individual job seeker is depressing:

Even a brilliant résumé has roughly a 3% chance of being read by a human if it goes through the standard "Easy Apply" funnel.

The only winning strategy today is out-of-band -- you have to bypass the broken funnel entirely and reach the human directly. That is exactly what JobyBots automates.

The 4-Stage Agent Loop

Every 30 minutes, the local bot wakes up and executes a tight four-stage cycle on the user's machine:

[Search] âž” [Score] âž” [Find Recruiter] âž” [Personalized Send]

Stage 1: Search

The bot fans out 80 HTTP requests across LinkedIn, Indeed, Naukrigulf, Bayt, GulfTalent, RemoteOK, AngelList, and a half-dozen company ATS endpoints (Greenhouse, Lever, Workable, Ashby). It de-duplicates the results, yielding roughly 150 candidate roles per cycle.

Stage 2: Score

Each role's description is compared against your résumé embedding (which Gemini builds locally upon first install). It returns a 0-100 match score along with a one-line explanation.

- Below 50: Automatically dropped.

- 50-69: Gets a clean, generic template letter.

- 70+: Triggered for a fully tailored, context-aware cover letter.

Stage 3: Find the Recruiter's Email

This is where the real engineering happens. JobyBots runs a strict 5-tier waterfall to find the exact human behind the post:

- Cache: Did we already resolve this company in a prior cycle?

- Scrape: Scan the company's careers/contact page for direct mailto links.

- Session Cookie: Use the user's local LinkedIn session cookie to identify the specific job poster and pull their published contact info.

- Pattern Guessing: Country-aware pattern guessing (e.g.,

careers@company.ae

) used strictly as a last resort. - SMTP Probe: Run an

SMTP RCPT

probe to drop obvious 5xx dead addresses before any email is actually sent.

Stage 4: Send

The agent drafts a punchy, 4-6 sentence cover letter. It quotes exactly one job description requirement and pairs it with one concrete outcome from your résumé. It sends directly via the user's personal Gmail with a strict cap of 200/day, randomized 20-60 second delays, and 12 rotating subject templates to protect sender reputation.

How this compares to the "Easy Apply" baseline:

We ran a rigorous 90-day A/B test in March using the exact same résumés for the exact same roles via standard application portals. The results weren't even close:

- Reply Rate: 11× higher using the agent.

- Interview Rate: 10× higher using the agent.

- Offer Rate: ∞× higher (The "Easy Apply" cohort produced exactly zero offers).

What Worked (The Wins)

- Quoting ONE specific requirement: The single biggest lift in reply rates came from instructing Gemini to quote exactly one highly specific requirement from the job description, rather than starting with a generic intro. When we made this prompt change, our reply rate jumped from 8% to 14%.

- Using the recruiter's first name: When the LinkedIn finder successfully identified the poster's name, opening with "Hi [First_Name]," instead of a generic greeting completely doubled the reply rate on those specific emails.

- Daily caps and "jitter": Limiting sends to 200 emails/day with a 20-60s randomized delay kept our Gmail sender reputation pristine. The moment we tested pushing the limit to 300/day, reply rates collapsed within a week because Gmail began silently throttling and delaying delivery.

- Rotating subject lines: Utilizing 12 distinct templates chosen deterministically per company meant no two emails per cycle shared a subject line. This simple change lifted overall deliverability by roughly 25%.

- Building an IMAP bounce tracker: Reading the user's Gmail inbox via IMAP specifically for delivery-failure notifications allowed us to instantly quarantine bad addresses. Fixing this helped us backfill and clear out 230 historical bounces that had been silently degrading our sender scores.

What Didn't Work (The Failures)

- Long, multi-paragraph cover letters: Crafting a beautifully written, 12-sentence "personal essay" dropped reply rates by a staggering 60% compared to the short 4-6 sentence version. Recruiters scan emails in less than 5 seconds; respect their time.

- Including the same résumé link everywhere: Including an identical Google Drive or Notion link in every single email immediately triggered Gmail's "marketing email" classifier. We pivoted to attaching the PDF directly, which fixed the issue.

- Sending on Sundays: Sunday sends yielded a miserable 4% reply rate, while Tuesday sends pulled a massive 19%. The scheduler now automatically defers weekend-generated emails to Monday morning.

- Generic openers: Clichés like "Hope you are well," or "I am writing to express my interest..." were our lowest-performing patterns. We permanently deleted them from the codebase.

- Trying to be clever with subject lines: Subject lines like "Quick question that might change your week" bombed hard with a 1-2% reply rate. Meanwhile, boring titles like "Application: Product Manager (Talabat)" won the day with a 16-19% reply rate. Boring wins.

What I'd Do Differently If I Started Over

If I could go back to day one with the knowledge I have now, my roadmap would look entirely different:

- Build the bounce tracker on day one: Deliverability hygiene compounds over time. Don't leave it for later.

- Start with ONE market: I stretched myself thin trying to support 13 markets simultaneously at launch. Dominating the UAE alone would have been more than enough to validate the first 100 customers.

- Charge $99 USD instead of $49: The sheer volume of hours, API optimization, and real-world value this provides means the product is heavily underpriced.

- Ship the Mac installer in week 2, not week 11: I easily lost around 10 premium customers early on due to Mac-installer friction.

- Double down on long-form content over web design: I spent way too long tweaking CSS on the landing page. I should have written this deep-dive article in week 3 instead of week 13.

The Power of the "Local-First" Principle

JobyBots runs entirely on the customer's laptop. We don't own a centralized server where you upload your résumé, and we don't keep a database tracking your job-search activity. The website at jobybots.com

is simply a secure payment page that fires over your desktop installer.

This was a highly deliberate design choice, and it comes with real trade-offs. It means our pricing model is a one-time purchase instead of recurring SaaS MRR, and it limits our ability to aggregate data to "optimize" top-down metrics.

But it elegantly solves a massive problem that most HR-tech startups quietly dodge: liability for someone else's deeply personal career data.

If you are building in the AI agent space right now, I highly encourage you to consider the local-first architecture. The venture scale economics might be trickier to pitch to VCs, but the user trust and relationship health are dramatically better.

Final Thoughts

If you are out on the market hunting for a role, understand that the baseline math has fundamentally broken. Manual cold emailing is exhausting, and standard ATS submissions are largely a black hole of noise. The only remaining path to victory is executing high-volume, hyper-personalized outreach directed straight to the human stakeholder.

You can absolutely build this bot yourself -- it will probably take you about 360 hours of tweaking prompts, managing selectors, and handling API exceptions.

Or, you can pay a one-time fee of ₹2,999 at jobybots.com

and run the one I've already spent half a year perfecting.

There's a 7-day refund policy if it's not a fit for your workflow. Built proudly in Dubai. Lifetime license.

Darapu Tharakeswara Reddy is the founder of JobyBots and a working Senior Product Manager in Dubai. He has spent the last eight years leading data products and AI agents across MENA retail. An alumnus of IIT Patna, you can connect with him directly at tharakesh.iitp@gmail.com.
 
more

Biggest Résumé Mistakes and How You Can Avoid Them


Going into my first year of college, I had no clue what a résumé even was. I had experience, but none of my previous jobs required me to submit a résumé when I applied. So, when my on-campus job asked for one, I scrambled to throw it together. I asked everyone I could for their help. With a horrible résumé (and a ton of grace given by my boss), I was hired.

Now, as a student assistant in the... Journalism Dean's Office, I review résumés daily. This is a list of the biggest mistakes I see in the office and how you can fix them to improve your résumé and chances of getting hired.

Contact information

Contact information is located beneath your name at the top of your résumé. This section includes your phone number, email address, LinkedIn, city and state and portfolio (if you have one).

More than one email address

The first mistake I see in the contact information section is including more than one email address. A lot of college students think it's best to list both their student email and personal email address to give the employer more options to choose from. While this is a good idea in theory, it can be confusing for employers to figure out the best way to contact you. Instead, list the email address that you check most frequently, whether that's personal or school. If you're a graduating student, you should list your personal email and make a habit of checking it regularly.

Not including LinkedIn

If you do not have a LinkedIn profile in college, you're doing it wrong. LinkedIn is an extremely important form of social media used for networking with people in your industry. Although it is understandable not to have a LinkedIn profile your first year of college, it is highly recommended that you create one before the beginning of your sophomore year.

The next step is putting the hyperlink to your profile in your contact section. Don't just link it to the word "LinkedIn;" copy and paste the full URL to ensure your profile can still be accessed easily if your resume were to be printed.

Including a picture

In the United States, federal law prohibits discrimination based on race, gender, ethnicity, age, etc. Including a picture on your résumé may trigger unconscious bias from your employer and prevent you from even making it to the interview stage. Some employers will even immediately reject résumés with photos to avoid potential discrimination accusations.

Education

This section is the most important information on your résumé as a college student. It includes your college, major, degree, GPA (if a 3.0 or above), expected graduation and minors or certificates, if applicable.

Getting your degree and major name wrong

This might be surprising to some, but in fact, many students get their degree and major wrong! All colleges have different degrees and major names, so it's important to check your school website for the official name of your degree.

High school information after your first year

As unfortunate as it is, employers don't care what you did in high school if you're a college student. It is much more important what you are doing in college, so high school should be completely omitted.

The exception to this rule is first-year college students. This is because until the end of the first semester of college, first-years do not have a GPA or much experience in their degree. That being said, it is generally recommended to remove your high school information from your education section after the first semester of freshman year, and definitely before the beginning of your sophomore year.

Experience

Your experience is the second most important information on your résumé. This section includes your past and present work experience with two to four detailed bullet points describing the work you did in each position, as well as the location and time frame you worked.

Missing detail

An important thing to remember when writing the bullet points for your experiences is to add detail! Employers don't just want to know what you did; they want to know how you did it. Instead of saying, "Wrote articles for Her Campus." You should say, "Wrote 6+ articles for Her Campus over topics of self-love, entertainment, culture, etc." This way of writing gives your employer a better understanding of your capabilities while quantifying your work and adding credibility.

Not including unpaid experiences

Unpaid experiences make up a large portion of a college student's experience. From internships to organizations, college students gain lots of unpaid experience. And many students think that because they did not earn a paycheck for these experiences, they cannot include them on their resume. That is not true. Employers care much more about the knowledge you have gained and experience you have in the position, rather than the amount of paid work you have.

Skills

Your skills section should always be the last section of your résumé. This section is a simple list of skills that you haven't expressed in your experience sections.

Soft skills

Your skills section should be solely hard skills. Things like teamwork, leadership and other soft skills are good to have, but they can easily be demonstrated in the bullet points of your experience section or in an interview.

Instead, include hard skills relevant to the job you are applying for. If you're a journalism major, your skills section should include things like AP style writing, video editing and photojournalism. You can also include programs that you are familiar with. Think Microsoft 360, Canva or Adobe. These kinds of skills will give your employer more information about the skills you possess.

Formatting

Although not a section, formatting your résumé the correct way is extremely important to the hiring process.

Using templates

As tempting as a super cute Canva or Word template is, do not give in! Most templates are formatted in a two-column style that doesn't scan well with applicant tracking systems (ATS). This means that your résumé could be thrown out before an actual human even takes a look at it. Instead, make your own one-column template that you can use over and over again.

Typos

This might sound like an obvious one, but it is so important to triple-check your résumé for spelling and grammar errors. Even one typo can get your résumé thrown in the trash. Employers tend to see typos as a liability later down the line. If you're not checking your résumé for misspellings, it signals to your employer that you'll make that mistake with important work as well.

More than one page

Résumés are recommended to be only one page in order to not overload your employer with unnecessary information. The average amount of time an employer spends reviewing a résumé is six to seven seconds. A résumé that is short and easy to read will allow your employer to focus less on trying to decipher your résumé and more on the skills you could bring to their team.

The most important thing to remember is that your résumé is a living document. This means that you can (and should) constantly be updating it. You should change your résumé for every application you submit.

Résumés are a hard skill to master, but once you understand the reasoning behind all the factors, it will all click and you'll have no trouble creating and editing your résumé.
 
more
7   
  • My resume expert is the best, I've been using his service for over a year now and a lot of my clients does the same..
    His service is... unique......

    Anyone need help let me know
     more

  • Describing WHAT you did is meaningless to me unless there are specific details of what those WHATs translated to RESULTS. What did you propose and... implement to improve the tasks you performed? What did they result in? Higher revenues? Quicker process times? Tasks are meaningless unless results of you performing them are improved. more

5   
  • Absolutely, I'm a career coach as well and have a lot of recruiters in my network.
    I don't know if you might want to reach out to them if you have any... one that is looking for a job.🙂 more

  • Unfortunately this is the trend in many organizations now..

Simple Techniques for Overcoming Interview Nerves


While your CV, experience, abilities, and education are all crucial in getting a job, the interview is often the company's first true impression of you. In a job interview, it's critical to present oneself effectively, but interview jitters may make this difficult. In this post, we'll show you how to overcome interview anxiety.

What does it mean to be nervous during an interview?

Nerves are the... body's natural reaction to being in an unfamiliar environment. Interview nerves occur when your body's stress reaction is triggered, and your body prepares to fight or escape in response to the perceived threat of a job interview. Physical responses such as fast heartbeat, quick breathing, pale or flushed skin, dilated pupils, or shaking may occur throughout this procedure.

These are automatic responses, and while they might be useful in a threatening situation, it's better to keep your cool before heading to an interview. Fortunately, you may attempt a variety of activities and strategies to help you overcome your interview anxiety.

There are numerous things you may do during a job interview to help you relax. Try these strategies the next time you're worried before an interview:

Keeping your hands busy might aid in the channeling of anxious energy. If you're sat in front of a computer and can't see your hands, try twiddling your thumbs to relax. Keep a tiny object in your hands, such as a pencil, but be mindful that toying with it may draw attention to your hands. You will be less likely to fidget throughout the interview if your hands are engaged.

The S.T.O.P. approach is a mental strategy for dealing with stressful situations. This technique's steps are as follows:

The S.T.O.P. technique encourages you to slow down and be aware of what you're doing and feeling at any given time. It helps you recall that your actions and ideas are under your control.

Focus on your breathing while you're not answering questions. You'll be less worried if you don't let your mind wander. Pause for a moment and take a deep breath before speaking. It's easier to stay cool if you pay attention to your breathing, and stopping before speaking gives you more time to think of the ideal answer.

While anxiousness is normal, changing your perspective on an interview might help you relax. Remind yourself that a job interview is nothing more than a dialogue between you and another person about yourself. All you have to do is respond to the interviewer's questions and be true to yourself. In an interview, you are not obligated to do anything else.

Sit or stand confidently during your interview. Your physical posture can have a soothing impact on your thoughts. Smiling can also fool your mind into thinking you're pleased, allowing you to unwind a bit more.

Here are a few more suggestions to help you relax before a job interview:

Exercise releases happy neurochemicals, and being outside is excellent for your mental health. To help clear your mind, go for a 15-minute stroll before your job interview or take five minutes to wander about before entering the building.

Anxiety can be reduced by feeling prepared. Prepare for the interview by researching the firm, practicing with a buddy, and having your resume and notes available. There are several resources available on the internet to help you prepare.Especially, if you're being interviewed for a developer job, you may want to check out react js interview questions.

If you know the name of the person who will be interviewing you, find out all you can about them. Make a list of any questions you have, as well as any details about yourself that you'd like the firm to know, and any other notes that will help you stay focused. Knowing what to expect will make you feel more relaxed and at ease.

If you keep to your schedule and whatever plans you may have, your day will be more productive. If at all feasible, schedule your job interview during the morning to avoid being anxious and waiting all day. Make sure you get enough sleep the night before so you can function and be attentive. Make a plan to do something enjoyable or interesting following the interview, and you'll have something to look forward to.

Talking to a positive friend or family member may considerably increase your self-assurance. It's simpler to listen to someone else's good words than it is to speak your own, and receiving praise from a loved one may help you relax.

Before your interview, have a healthy breakfast to ensure you have the energy you require. Worry and stress can be exacerbated by hunger. To improve your mood, choose one of your favorite dishes.
 
more

How to Improve Communication Skills for Job Interviews (2026 Guide)


Communication is one of the most important parts of any job interview. Your skills matter, but how you explain and demonstrate them matters even more.

Interviewers pay attention to how clearly and confident you speak and how you structure your answers. This often decides the outcome and creates the right impression more than technical skills alone.

The good news is that communication is not... something you are born with. It is a skill you can build with practice.

This guide will show you simple and practical ways to improve your interview communication.

Why communication skills matter in interviews

Interviewers are not only looking at your experience. They are also watching how you express it.

Good communication helps you:

* Make a strong first impression

* Show confidence in your answers

* Explain your experience clearly

* Build trust with the interviewer

Many candidates lose opportunities not because they lack skills, but because they cannot explain them well.

What strong communication looks like

Strong communication in interviews has a few simple parts.

Clarity

You should speak in a way that is easy to understand. Avoid long or confusing sentences. Stay focused on the main point.

Confidence

Speak at a steady pace. Do not rush. Do not speak too softly. A calm voice creates a strong impression.

Active listening

Listen carefully to the question. Do not jump into an answer too quickly. If something is unclear, ask for clarification.

How to structure your answers

One of the biggest improvements you can make is to structure your answers.

A simple way to do this is the STAR method.

STAR=Situation+Task+Action+ResultSTAR = Situation + Task + Action + ResultSTAR=Situation+Task+Action+Result

This helps you stay organized when you speak.

Here is how it works in simple terms:

* Situation means what happened

* Task means your responsibility

* Action means what you did

* Result means the outcome

This structure keeps your answers clear and easy to follow.

Body language matters too

Communication is not only about words. It is also about how you act.

Good body language includes:

* Sitting straight

* Making natural eye contact

* Keeping your hands relaxed

* Smiling when appropriate

Avoid crossing your arms. Avoid looking away too often. Avoid nervous movements like fidgeting.

These small things change how confident you look.

How to practice communication skills

You do not improve communication by reading. You improve it by speaking.

Try these simple methods:

* Practice answering common interview questions out loud

* Record yourself and listen back

* Do mock interviews with friends or tools

* Repeat answers until they sound natural

The goal is not to memorize answers. The goal is to speak naturally and clearly.

Using tools to improve faster

Modern tools can help you practice interviews in a realistic way.

Some platforms simulate real interview questions and give feedback on your answers. This helps you understand how you sound to others.

One example is LockedIn AI. It works as a practice assistant that helps you improve your answers and confidence.

You can also use the interview copilot AI assistant. It lets you practice interview questions, gives follow up questions, and helps you improve how clearly you speak.

How to reduce nervousness

Feeling nervous is normal. Most people feel it.

You can manage it in simple ways:

* Take a slow breath before answering

* Pause for a second before you speak

* Focus on structure, not perfection

* Practice more so you feel prepared

Confidence comes from repetition. Not from thinking.

Common mistakes to avoid

Many candidates make the same mistakes in interviews.

Try to avoid:

* Speaking too fast

* Giving long and unclear answers

* Using too many filler words

* Not listening carefully

* Forgetting the main point

Small improvements here make a big difference.

Example of weak and strong communication

Weak answer

"I worked on some projects and helped improve things in my team."

Strong answer

"In my previous role, I improved the reporting process. I automated a manual task and reduced reporting time by 40 percent. This helped the team save time every week."

The second answer is clear. It has structure. It shows impact.

Simple 7 to 14 day improvement plan

First week

Practice speaking every day.

Answer common interview questions out loud.

Record yourself and review your answers.

Second week

Do mock interviews.

Focus on structure.

Work on speaking clearly and slowly.

Small daily practice leads to fast improvement.

Conclusion

Communication skills can change your interview results quickly. You do not need perfect English or complex vocabulary. You need clarity, structure, and confidence.

The more you practice, the more natural it becomes.

Good communication helps you stand out even when other candidates have similar experience.

FAQ

How can I improve communication skills for job interviews?

Practice speaking every day. Use structured answers. Do mock interviews. Record yourself and improve step by step.

What are the most important communication skills in interviews?

Clarity, confidence, listening, structure, and simple body language.

How do I stop being nervous in interviews?

Practice more. Prepare your answers. Take slow breaths before speaking. Focus on structure instead of perfection.

Why is communication important in interviews?

Because it shows how clearly you think. It also shows confidence and helps interviewers understand your experience better.

What is the STAR method?

It is a simple structure for answering questions. It stands for Situation, Task, Action, and Result.
 
more

The Hardest Person to Stay Loyal To Is Yourself


Member-only story

The Hardest Person to Stay Loyal To Is Yourself

Why real confidence begins when external systems disappoint you -- and you do not abandon yourself with them

There are moments in life when the external world does not simply disappoint you. It destabilizes you.

A job interview does not go the way you hoped. A workplace decision feels unfair. A manager questions your performance... without giving you the feedback you would have needed to improve. You prepare, you document, you try to control every possible risk -- and still, the outcome slips out of your hands.

That is the brutal part. Not only that something painful happens, but that it happens despite all your effort.

You did what ambitious people are told to do. You prepared. You worked hard. You tried to be strategic. You kept records. You thought ahead. You tried to protect yourself from chaos through discipline. And then the world still did what it wanted.

That is when the mind starts asking dangerous questions.

What was the point of trying so hard?

Why did this happen to me?

What else could I possibly have done?

How much more preparation would have been enough?

And underneath all of that, there is usually an even deeper fear:

If the outcome was bad, does that mean I am not good enough?

The Trap of Outsourcing Your Self-Worth

External validation is seductive because it gives us something measurable. A job offer. A promotion. A title. A manager's approval. A successful interview round. A place in the room.

These things feel concrete. They seem to prove that we are capable, desirable, intelligent, valuable. The problem is not that we want them. The problem begins when we start needing them to feel stable inside ourselves.

When self-worth is outsourced, every external event becomes emotionally oversized. A rejection is no longer only a rejection. It becomes a verdict. A professional setback is no longer only information. It becomes identity damage. Someone else's decision starts to regulate your...
 
more