The One Interview Question Steve Jobs Used to Spot Real Talent


Jeff Haden argued specific ambitions beat clichés, shaping future hiring decisions.

At the D8 conference in 2010, Steve Jobs outlined an interview style that sliced through résumé gloss with a single prompt: "Why are you here?" The answers, he suggested, exposed the real fuel behind a candidate's work, the kind of personal ambition that often correlates with shipping hard things. Author and... former manager Jeff Haden echoes that view, arguing that concrete, self-driven goals beat canned lines about boosting company growth. Strip away the platitudes and you get a sharper hiring filter, one that pairs motivation with impact and leaves no patience for lateness.

Steve Jobs' enduring influence on hiring practices

More than a decade after his passing, Steve Jobs' management style continues to spark interest and guide corporate strategies. As the co-founder and former CEO of Apple, Jobs was known for his relentless pursuit of excellence, and his unique approach to identifying top talent. One defining example? A deceptively simple question he deployed in interviews: "Why are you here?"

The question that revealed more than simple qualifications

During the All Things Digital D8 Conference in 2010, Jobs provided a rare glimpse into his hiring philosophy. The question, he explained, was not a trap. It was designed to uncover candidates' core motivations and alignment with the company's mission. For Jobs, the content mattered less than the thought process and passion underneath it.

Job seekers who shared personal ambitions or distinct drives often left stronger impressions. Jobs believed such qualities signaled commitment to growth, the kind that could ultimately benefit Apple, then and now one of the world's most valuable companies.

Why personal drive mattered to Jobs

Asking "Why are you here?" allowed Jobs to home in on candidates whose goals overlapped with the demands of the role. Author and former industrial manager Jeff Haden has noted that vague answers like "I want to contribute to the company's success" rarely distinguish top candidates. Those who explain what the role will do for them tend to reveal a hunger that translates into results.

This approach mirrors Jobs' broader management style. Hire for motivation, empower the capable, and let outcomes speak. It also acknowledges a practical truth in hiring: in a short interview, clarity of motive is a powerful proxy for future performance.

A lasting legacy in corporate management

Jobs' attention to detail extended beyond product design and operations. It shaped how he led teams and chose people. His focus on punctuality, for example, was legendary. If a senior executive was late, Steve Jobs sometimes started without them, signaling respect for time and execution.
 
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Honoring the 2026 NKBA Hall of Fame Inductee Ric Coggins | Kitchen & Bath Business


Induction into the Kitchen & Bath Hall of Fame is one of the highest honors the NKBA bestows on industry luminaries. Since 1989, the Kitchen & Bath Industry Hall of Fame has honored nearly 100 individuals who have contributed to the growth and professionalism of the association and the overall kitchen and bath industry. This year, one person has earned that distinction. Ric Coggins, a true... gentleman and a pillar in the NKBA community, specifically in the Arizona Chapter, is the 2026 K&B Hall of Fame inductee.

Above photo: Ric Coggins is the NKBA's 2026 K&B Hall of Fame inductee. Photo credit: NKBA

Sadly, Coggins died in January 2023 - at KBIS, just before the show opened - while he was setting up for an event, even though he was technically retired. He was a selfless volunteer, a remarkable professional and an even better man. His kitchen and bath résumé spanned five decades and reflected his dedication to the association, his business and the people he worked with.

NKBA Contributions

Coggins was a chapter volunteer and officer and a national leader who held multiple posts, actively serving NKBA since 2004. He is still considered one of the greatest contributors to the Arizona Chapter, where he served as president in 2009 and 2010, among other roles.

At the national level, he served on the Manufacturers Council and, in 2014, was elected to NKBA's Executive Committee as national vice president. These roles require significant time and dedication, and that's on top of the demands of running a thriving business.

After retiring, Coggins remained very active in the NKBA Arizona Chapter, where he served as a consultant and continued to strengthen the members of the chapter by sharing his wisdom and knowledge.

Ric Coggins: Going the Distance

Throughout the course of his nearly 50-year career, Coggins was involved in multiple aspects of the kitchen, bath and home industry, including design, sales and marketing. He owned a high-end kitchen appliance center in Irvine, Calif., and for the last two decades of his career, worked in sales for international appliance manufacturer BSH on regional, national and international assignments. His dedication to Bosch, especially, was evident throughout his career, and he helped build the brand's reputation in the U.S.

A Memorable Anecdote

One of his nominators captured the essence of Coggins with this wonderful story of a moment that came when he was on the NKBA Executive Committee. It speaks to his character, leadership and giving nature.

After a long day of strategic meetings, a group of younger chapter leaders lingered with questions about how to engage members and build stronger programs. Rather than heading off to dinner with his peers, Coggins pulled chairs into a circle and spent hours coaching these emerging leaders one-on-one. He asked about their goals, offered practical advice from his decades of experience and followed up with each of them weeks later to check on their progress.

That was his hallmark: He treated everyone, from new chapter volunteers to national board members, with the same respect and generosity of time. His peers recall that he never sought recognition - he simply wanted others to succeed. This mentoring moment was repeated countless times, whether in hallways at KBIS, on calls with Arizona Chapter leaders or in his own community. Coggins' legacy is not only in his professional achievements but also in the many professionals whose careers and confidence were shaped because he paused to listen, guide and encourage.

HoF inductees are selected by a standing program committee through member nominations. Visit the Kitchen & Bath Hall of Fame at nkba.org/hall-of-fame/ to see all the honorees and watch for 2027 nominations to open in the summer.
 
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30 Unbelievable Interview Questions That Candidates Weren't Ready For


One Reddit user created a thread online asking folks to share the trickiest or hardest questions that they have heard during a job interview, and probably a few of them would confuse almost all of us. Scroll through them and share your opinion!

A friend of mine applied for a job in sales, about which he didn't know anything but he has the gift of gab. Interview went like this: Interviewer points... at a thing on his desk: "Sell me that." My friend: "I don't know what that is." Interviewer: "It's a dictaphone." (This was many years ago.) My friend: "What's that?" Interviewer: "I use it to record letters and memos and then have the secretaries type them up." My friend: "Oh, is that what I saw them doing with the headphones? How do they type and work the machine?" Interviewer: "They use foot pedals for play and rewind and so on." My friend: "Well, that's really clever. How much does a thing like that cost?" Interviewer: "This one's about $500." My friend: "You'd pay $500 for one of those?" Interviewer: "Sure." My friend: "Sold!" Interviewer stops cold. Stares at my friend for a few seconds. Leans back in his chair. "Son of a b***h." My friend got the job. Had a fabulous career in sales, retired a couple years ago.

ManyAreMyNames , DS stories Report

"Why should I hire you over a fresh off the boat immigrant that will do everything you do for a third of the pay ?" I responded because "I believe a company that pays its employees fairly shows integrity of management and reflects well on the company as a whole." I didn't get the job

Iron_73 , Kahyap Pictures Report

Bored Panda got in touch with Margaret Buj, who is an expert interview coach and career strategist. She kindly agreed to share her professional insights regarding this topic!

To begin with, Margaret noted that unusual or unconventional questions in job interviews serve multiple purposes. "Firstly, they can help to gauge a candidate's creativity, adaptability, and ability to think on their feet. These questions often require candidates to approach problems from unique perspectives, showcasing their problem-solving skills beyond the standard behavioral questions.

"Can you tell me about a time where you experienced a lot of stress on the job? And how did you handle it"? I'm an Iraq War veteran who served as a combat medic with the infantry when I was in my early 30s. If you want me to go into more detail I can but you probably wouldn't believe it.

PunchBeard , RDNE Stock project Report

I ask candidates, "You are asked to do something that you are certain will fail. How do you proceed?" Some people say they do it because they were told to do it. Some will say they will do their best not to fail. Some will refuse to do something they know will fail. Some will say that they will escalate/complain about the unreasonable request. There is no single right answer, but the conversation is important. The best candidates ask questions, like "How do I know it will fail?" or "Do I have alternative approaches that would work?" or "Am I being asked to do the thing, or am I being asked not to fail?" Asking questions is important, and getting context is important before answering. The best answer I ever got was, "I'd want to understand what I'm being contracted to do. If it's to do the failing thing, then I'd revisit the request for clarification that what was asked is the intention. If it's to do something, and the approach is the thing that will fail, then I'd suggest an alternative approach. If the customer is insisting on doing the thing that I know will fail, I'd clarify that with the customer, get it in writing, and then I'd highlight the risks of proceeding. I'd then proceed, and you never know...I could have been wrong...but I'd have gone about it the right way to mitigate risks."

ap1msch , LinkedIn Sales Solutions Report

She added that unusual interview questions can reveal a candidate's personality traits and cultural fit within the organization, as their responses offer a glimpse into their thought processes and values.

"Personally, I am not a fan of asking very unconventional questions but I believe the interview should be a conversation where you not only ask some standard general and competency-based questions but you also get to know them as a person," she noted.

"Tell me about yourself". I immediately forget everything about myself

Soul_of_Sorrow556 , Mimi Thian Report

I don't think this was a good question, but it obviously was a question they were trying to trick you with. I guess? I think they were just stupid. The interviewer had an equation in their hand but didn't show me it, that looked like this: 2(5+5)/3+8-3 They said it like: What is 2 times 5? Waited for an answer... Now add 5. Waited for an answer... Now divide by 3. Waited for an answer. Now add 8. Waited for an answer. Now subtract 3. So naturally I went, 10... 15... 5... 13... 10... They say I'm wrong. I go, "Oh? Can I see the question." They show me the equation and I'm like you didn't read that properly. You told me that like a series of steps, not an equation. They said I should have known what they were saying if I knew BEDMAS. Ok... sure, it's me...

User , Antoine Dautry Report

Now, we asked Margaret if there are some interview questions that should be avoided and she pointed out that questions which delve into personal or sensitive topics unrelated to the job can be inappropriate and potentially discriminatory.

"Additionally, questions that are overly abstract or unrelated to the role may not provide meaningful information about the candidate's qualifications or suitability for the position," she emphasized. "It's important to ensure that all interview questions are relevant, fair, and respectful of the candidate's privacy."

I've worked in small towns all my life. Been trying for years to get a job in the city. My last interview for a job in the city hit me with this one: "So why do you think you've never been good enough to get out of the small towns?" He did not like my answer: "Well, your rejection letters always say you're looking for applicants with more experience. So I'm out here getting more experience. Do I have enough yet?"

originalchaosinabox , Tima Miroshnichenko Report

This was the worst interview I ever had. So I was doing a phone interview with two IT managers at a company called Apptio. So I'm doing pretty well on the technical portion. I'm quite good at my job. But then they interrupt and say "what is your favorite feature of our product?" Bear in mind that I'm an IT guy. I'm not a software developer. I was going for a sysadmin role at the company, working on infrastructure projects and end user devices and systems. I had done my research so I just named one of the features I could remember. They wanted me to go into details about why I liked that feature so much and what really draws me to it. When I explained that I don't really have any experience with their product the interview mood did a complete 180. Now all of a sudden I was being interrogated about why I hadn't used their product, and why I was even bothering applying to their company if I've never used it before. And these guys began getting super rude and annoyed with me. I ended up telling them that I didn't think this was going to be a good fit and hung up on them. A few years later I was mass applying after a layoff and applied again. Same two guys, and the same exact conversation happened. I've seen that job rotating onto the job boards off and on for at least 7 years now and I've never applied again and I find it hilarious they can't keep people staffed.

SweetCosmicPope , Christina @ wocintechchat.com Report

I was going for my first job change as I was sick of working in fast food and thought a liquor store would be a good option. In the interview I was asked to tell a story and the interviewer said: "It doesn't have to be related to the job or anything, just tell me a story that you find interesting". That is NOT something I prepared for in the slightest.

PlayfulPrincesXO , Rilla Paris Report

Finally, Margaret pointed out that unusual interview questions play a significant role in assessing a candidate's skills beyond the standard qualifications listed on their resume.

"These questions can assess a candidate's critical thinking abilities, problem-solving skills, creativity, and cultural fit within the organization. By presenting candidates with unexpected challenges, interviewers can observe how they approach unfamiliar situations, communicate their thought processes, and adapt to new scenarios."

"So while unusual interview questions can be valuable tools for assessing candidates, it's essential to use them thoughtfully and in conjunction with more traditional interview techniques to ensure a fair and comprehensive evaluation process," she noted.

And of course, don't forget to check out Margaret's website where you can find a useful information how to get hired, promoted and earn more!

Not in-person, but recently applied for an entry-level zookeepers position. The zoo had a *very* long online application process, which included these three questions: - Do you have experience dealing with intense, persistent, and varied unpleasant odors, in the workplace or while volunteering, and continuing to complete your assigned tasks in spite of them? If so, give examples - On a scale of 1-10, how confident are you in your ability to deal with even the worst animal odors without interruption to your assigned tasks? (**Caution** - those who answer with a high number may be required to demonstrate this ability in their practical interview). __________ Sounded kind of ominous. I'm just a recently college grad but I just talked about my experience volunteering at a farm and a doggy day care, and put "10" for the second answer, but I'm not sure if that's what they wanted or not. I did get called for a practical interview next week, so...hopefully that goes well?

tukk_vuly , Daiga Ellaby Report

Interviewer: Lets swap roles. Take this resume (my resume) and assume you have to interview me. Make sure you ask tough questions. Me: (As I know my weak points, proceeds to ask tough questions) Interviewer: Good, now answer these questions (I was shaking during the interview)

ravikrn , Christina @ wocintechchat.com Report

Additionally, we got in touch with Connie J. Clace, CPC, a professional career coach, and she kindly agreed to share her insights regarding interview questions.

"Interview questions, whether they are unconventional or not, should only be asked if they are providing valuable information to the interview in relation to the right fit of the candidate to do the job," she emphasized.

"The conventional question of 'Tell me a bit about yourself?' doesn't really provide enough of a parameter to help the candidate know what the interviewer is looking for," Connie pointed out.

I was interviewing as a graphic designer for a company that produced ads for cars that would go on Facebook, newspapers, banners at airports and the like. The interviewer went over the regular sort of graphic designer questions, we went over past work that I had done and I thought I done pretty well. Then I was taken to another office and sat with a woman who only asked me: "how would you describe the color orange to a blind person?" I remember stumbling for an answer while thinking of the Voight-kampf test from Blade Runner. I think I finally said something about how it feels when you go outside on a frosty morning and walk into the sunlight and feel its warmth immediately. Ended up not getting the job. Pretty sure I'm not a replicant in any case.

User , Warner Bros. Pictures Report

I recently had an interviewer ask me why manhole covers are round. He framed it as a critical thinking question, but he wasn't prepared for me to know the actual answer, let alone answer nearly immediately. I managed to turn it around and convince him that my random knowledge is earned through the preparation I've done over the years for various projects. Didn't get that role, but he recommended me for a different one!

Tanky50 , DLKR Report

It was a pretty stupid one, but it was when I was interviewing to be a server at a restaurant while I was in college. The proprietor asked me all of the standard questions you'd expect, then said "Sell me a coke". I get that he wanted to see my ability to sell things to the customer, but a coke was a hard one for me. Seemed to me like a non-alcoholic beverage is not normally something you'd have to talk a customer into - it's something they'd already know they wanted or not. I would have had an easier time if he wanted me to upsell him on a side dish or dessert. Bumbled my way through it by talking about how refreshing an ice cold coke would be with his steak. Luckily it got the proprietor laughing and he liked me enough to hire me. Hated that question though and I felt like an idiot trying to do it.

Cheese_Pancakes , James Yarema Report

She added that an unconventional question like "How do you see yourself fitting into the company's long-term goals" is much more valuable. It can show if the candidate has done their research on the company and has thought about their contribution.

Now, speaking about interview questions that are better avoided, she shared that she has never been a fan of generic questions like listing strengths and weaknesses, but there is also not really much of a value in asking questions like "If you could only have dinner with one more person, who would it be?"

I had a pretty rigorous interview for a legal role (I got the job and was promoted - still here). I like to shoot the s**t and ask people about their hobbies and come off as a pretty personable and knowledgeable person.

However, I was asked whether I was an animal person.

I was facing a conundrum - I am a cat person. I like dogs (in theory) but have never had one. I was worried if I said I was a cat person the dog people on the panel wouldn't hire me. If I said "oh yeah I like animals" or "yeah I like dogs" they might think I'm bulls**tting. I ended up telling the truth and now I am the lone cat person in an office full of dog people.

It scares me that this might have been the determining factor in their hiring decision lol.

nikolacarr Report

"what type of music do you think your work style is most like" I was completely taken by surprise, so in a moment of panic I said ska and had to awkwardly try to justify why my work style is like a ska song.

Pumpingions Report

My boss uses "why is a tennis ball fuzzy" to gauge what type of thinker the person is. He sat on an interview panel for a position I was hiring for and the various answers were amazing.

User Report

"There are a number of unusual interview questions that can assess skills," Connie noted. "But keep in mind that skills don't just mean technical. It also means those soft skills that are important for a team to be effective."

She added that a good question to assess one of the soft skills would be "What kind of environment do you enjoy working in, and what would you do to contribute to this?"

"The bottom line, with any interview, the goal is to find out if the candidate is the right fit for the position, and the organization," Connie pointed out.

So, guys, what is the trickiest question that you have heard during a job interview? Share your thoughts below!

Asked me if I would rather wrong a co worker or a client and there was no wrong answer. I thought about for a minute and explained why I would choose client because a co worker I would still need to work with everyday and clients come and go. The younger of the 2 managers she looked at me like [why?]! The older gentleman asked if I could start next week. 10 years later still with the same company and she was demoted 3 months later and then quit. Had no business being there in the first place.

praizeDaSun , Sebastian Herrmann Report

A friend of mine was asked to solve riddles. He's a programmer.

MistakeMysterious347 , JESHOOTS.COM Report

"In the 1980s, AT&T had a set of payphones in Grand Central Terminal train station in New York City. They had a problem where they were getting complaints that the lines for the payphones were getting too long, because people were spending too much time hogging the phones. AT&T came up with a solution to reduce the problem and make the lines shorter; what do you think it was? Note: the answer cannot be to add more phones to the phone bank, and it cannot be something overly expensive." Allegedly, this was based on a real problem AT&T had to solve in the 80s, though I can't find any proof of it off-hand. They explained that the idea was to see if interviewees could problem-solve creatively. They liked the solution I proposed (make the train announcements louder, so that it would be harder for people to have long & unnecessary phone conversations), though according to them, the solution IRL was to >!make the phone handsets weigh more, so people's hands got tired of holding them for long stretches!<. ^(EDIT: Also, just for clarity's sake, this job interview was not with AT&T, so don't take this as an insider scoop on their hiring process.)

blueeyesredlipstick , Sofía Rabassa Report

My friend was being interviewed to get into Med. After a grueling hour of rapid-fire questions from various interviews, his heart is racing, and they tell him this is the last question. The pressure rises. "What's your favorite fruit! Why?" He wanted to say banana because he has one with breakfast all the time, but then felt it was too phallic and freaked. Ended up saying "grapes" because "they're juicy and refreshing." LOL. He was embarrassed. They started mocking him for giving a stupid answer, asking if he was sure that was it. He wanted to cry. He was so fed up, tired from the get-go being a student with a part-time job AND a volunteering position, working like 60-70 hours a week. The adrenaline was crashing. But he kept it together just long enough (tears came later), and he passed! They basically roast people to see how they handle stress and confrontation.

User , Bora C Report

Had a hospitality job question once: I'm the host at a bar/restaurant. In walks, at exactly the same time, a regular and and a well dressed newcomer. Who do I seat first? I totally blanked, because the question is set up to essentially be equal, just what do you value more- showing the regular he's valued, or potentially making a good impression on a (potentially) new customer. Looking back, I'd choose 'new guy' because I could always comp a drink or dessert for regular customer. But at the moment, I blanked.

festertheinvester , Benjamin Zanatta Report

"What role would you be in a circus?"

User , Becky Phan Report

"Teach me something new in less than 120 seconds" *starts timer*

Wind5urfer Report

The trickiest I've been asked: "Do you tend to follow your heart or your brain more?" This was for a children's theatre, and both answers seemed simultaneously to be good and bad responses. I've never been asked this, but I actually kind of like it for the variety of ways a candidate can choose to answer: "Describe step by step how you would make a peanut butter and jelly sandwich."

mattsylvanian , Freddy G Report

"Tell me about your best friend." It seems that this question would gauge a few things: (1) who you are, as you are who you hang out with, and (2) how you talk about other people.

Waltgrace83 , Mapbox Report

Would you still interview with us if I was a worm?

owlman17 , Sippakorn Yamkasikorn Report

If you were a hiring manager and had 2 candidates for the same job. 1 is very young with no experience and the other is older with 20 years experience. Which one do you hire? I answered the older one. Nope! The answer was younger guy because they work for less money and you can train them how you want the company to run.

ATXKLIPHURD , Jeremy Report

Where will you be standing at the office holiday party?

uribelfi , cottonbro studio Report

My most recent boss threw me the curveball of "what do you think of the word 'should'"?

Ligmartian , Magnet.me Report

You Might Also Like: Doctors share 51 ridiculous lies they have heard from their patients
 
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Fox Cities Chamber: Spots still remain for next Fox Cities Chamber Leader Lab session


OX CITIES, Wis. (June 17, 2026) - The Fox Cities Chamber is still accepting registrations for its next Leader Lab session, beginning Thursday, July 9. Classes will be held on Thursdays, July 9 - August 20, from 8:30 - 10 AM at the Fox Cities Chamber.

The Fox Cities Chamber's Leader Lab is a professional development program designed to cultivate leadership and culture-focused skills among... professionals in the Fox Cities region, at any stage in their career development

Through a series of workshops, self-guided study, and networking opportunities, participants engage in activities that enhance their leadership capabilities, strategic thinking, and personal growth. The program aims to empower individuals to take on greater leadership roles within their organizations, the broader community, and their own lives.

This high-impact program consists of seven 90-minute in-person classes, with self-study and reflection in between sessions.

Leader Lab training includes:

* 56 video lessons

* Almost 12 hours of in-person learning

* Study guide

* Facilitator-led workshops & discussions

* Networking opportunities

* Problem-solving frameworks

* Actionable leadership skills & takeaways

* Actionable leadership skills & takeaways

* Post-program access

* Career & personal development to enhance leadership confidence

Why Leader Lab?

* Enhance Company Culture: Participants return with stronger self-awareness, improved collaboration skills, and tools to create more cohesive teams.

* Retain Top Talent: Engaged employees stay longer. Leader Lab demonstrates your commitment to employee growth and reduces costly turnover.

* Strengthen Decision Making: Participants learn how to lead with clarity, communicate more effectively, and solve challenges with greater confidence.

* Develop Internal Leaders: Build your pipeline of future managers and team leads. Leader Lab helps employees grow into leadership roles, reducing the need for costly external hires.

* Cost effective: Leader Lab offers professional growth at a fraction of the cost of other leadership programs -- without sacrificing quality.

"I was skeptical at first, especially with the format being 'watch this video and answer questions'" said a former class participant. "But the subject matter was genuinely interesting, informative and succinct enough that it didn't feel like a chore to watch. The labs were all very well run, and I think 90 minutes was the perfect amount of time...long enough that they could be substantive but short enough to not take up a ton of work time. I'm really glad I participated and would recommend the Leader Lab to anyone."
 
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An Echo Press Editorial: Growing number of workers are rejecting promotions


Advocates for ideas and draws conclusions based on the interpretation of facts and data.

Ever heard of the phrase, "Promotion Pushback?"

You should be aware of it. It's a trend that's impacting employers, workers and their families.

Why? According to a new study, half of Minnesota workers would reject promotions tied to artificial intelligence monitoring.

By surveying 3,017 employees,... Careerminds , a global outplacement and career development firm, identified how many Minnesota workers have turned down a promotion in the past year, and where they are most likely to decide that moving up is simply not worth the added strain.

Many workers spend years chasing the next rung on the career ladder - a better title, a higher salary, more authority and the sense that they are finally "moving up," Careerminds said in a news release.

But a promotion is not always the clear-cut reward it appears to be, according to the release. For many employees, a step up can also mean longer hours, heavier workloads, more pressure, added management responsibilities, and greater scrutiny from senior leaders. The pay raise may look appealing on paper, but once the extra stress is factored in, the trade-off can feel far less attractive.

The study said workers are saying "no thanks" to career advancement because the personal trade-offs no longer feel worth the professional reward.

The research found that among employees who had been offered a promotion over the past year, nearly 1 in 3 (31%) turned it down. This means that, over the past year, 49,194 Minnesota employees have turned down promotions.

The study also points to a newer workplace anxiety: increased monitoring. Nearly half of Minnesota respondents said they would be less likely to accept a promotion if the role came with more AI-driven performance tracking or productivity monitoring. For employers, that could make certain advancement opportunities feel less like recognition and more like surveillance.

Researchers said the findings suggest promotion pushback is not simply about ambition fading. In many cases, employees are making a practical calculation about whether the next role would genuinely improve their life, or just add pressure without enough reward.

When respondents who had turned down a promotion, or said they would seriously consider doing so, were asked for their main reason, work-life balance came out on top. Nearly one in four said they were happy with their current work-life balance and did not want to disrupt it.

Other common concerns included whether the pay increase would justify the extra responsibility, whether the role would create more stress, and whether the promotion would bring longer hours or people management responsibilities.

The pay question also revealed how much more employers may need to offer before employees view a stressful promotion as worthwhile. Only a small minority said they would seriously consider accepting a more stressful role for a pay increase of less than 10%. By contrast, more than half said they would need a raise of at least 20%.

For some employees, the concern is not hypothetical. More than a third of respondents said they had previously accepted a promotion and later regretted it. That finding suggests many workers may be drawing on personal experience when deciding whether the next step up is really worth taking.

Views on promotions were also mixed. While some workers still see promotion as a route to a better life, many now appear to view career advancement as conditional, transactional, or even tilted in the employer's favor.

The appetite for climbing the career ladder also appears divided. Compared with five years ago, 35% of respondents said they are now more interested in moving up, while 33% said they are less interested. A further 32% said their interest is about the same.

But when employees were asked what would make them more likely to accept a promotion, the answers were revealing. The most attractive perk was not a flashy title or office status symbol, but a clear boundary around personal time. One in three said a guaranteed "no weekend work" rule would make them most likely to say yes.

"Promotions have traditionally been viewed as an automatic win for employees, but these findings suggest many workers are taking a much closer look at what that next step actually means for their day-to-day quality of life," says Amanda Augustine, a certified professional career coach and resident career expert for Careerminds .

"When employees turn down advancement opportunities, it doesn't necessarily mean they lack ambition," Augustine said. In many cases, it means the role being offered doesn't feel sustainable, clearly defined, or fairly compensated for the level of responsibility involved."
 
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Commercial recruitment consultant


Job Title: Commercial Recruitment Consultant

Location: Coventry

Salary: £30,000 - £40,000 per annum (dependent on experience)

Bonus: Very competitive, uncapped bonus structure

Job Type: Full-time, Permanent

About Quest Employment

Quest Employment is a well-established and highly respected recruitment agency with a strong national presence. We pride ourselves on delivering high-quality... recruitment solutions across multiple sectors, building long-term partnerships with our clients, and offering excellent career development opportunities for our employees.

The Role

We are seeking an experienced and driven Commercial Recruitment Consultant to join our successful Coventry branch. This role will involve building a commercial desk from scratch, it is ideal for a proven recruiter with a strong sales mindset who thrives in a fast-paced, target-driven environment and has a passion for building relationships and delivering results.

You will be responsible for managing the full recruitment lifecycle, developing new business opportunities, and nurturing existing client relationships while consistently delivering high-quality commercial candidates.

Key Responsibilities

Recruitment & Delivery

* Manage the full 360° recruitment process from business development through to candidate placement

* Source, screen, interview, and assess candidates for a range of commercial roles

* Write and advertise job vacancies across multiple platforms

* Maintain a strong candidate pipeline and ensure excellent candidate care throughout the process

* Conduct reference checks and ensure compliance with recruitment legislation and company policies

Sales & Business Development

* Proactively identify and develop new business opportunities within the commercial sector

* Build and maintain strong, long-lasting client relationships

* Conduct client meetings to understand hiring needs and provide tailored recruitment solutions

* Negotiate terms of business, fees, and offers

* Achieve and exceed individual and team sales targets

Account Management

* Manage and grow existing client accounts through excellent service delivery

* Act as a trusted recruitment partner, offering market insight and advice

* Ensure high levels of client satisfaction and repeat business

Administration & Compliance

* Maintain accurate records on the CRM system

* Ensure all recruitment activity is compliant with employment legislation and internal processes

* Provide regular updates and reports to management

Key Requirements

* Proven experience working as a Recruitment Consultant (commercial sector experience preferred)

* Demonstrable sales experience with a strong track record of meeting or exceeding targets - new business development will be a huge part of this role whilst building your desk

* Excellent communication and negotiation skills

* Strong relationship-building and account management abilities

* Highly organised with strong time-management skills

* Resilient, self-motivated, and results-driven

* Ability to work well under pressure in a fast-paced environment

* Full UK driving licence and own car is essential for this role
 
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Oklahoma woman shows job interview outfit. Now everyone's begging her to change before it's too late: 'Recruiter here: don't do this again'


Dressing to impress is crucial in a job interview. Employers assess your appearance the moment you enter the room; therefore, outfit choices can certainly make or break your chances of landing the position. So, it can be tricky to decipher if you've chosen the best one.

It's why Tulsa-based TikTok creator Tiera May (@tieramay) turned to the internet for answers.

"Hi. I'm running late, but I... wanted to show you my outfit for a job interview," she says, walking a few steps onto her driveway to set her phone down.

Afterward, she unveils the fit in question to more than 761,000 viewers: a short-sleeved yellow striped shirt and a long, tiered, flowy skirt, paired with blue-and-white sneakers.

"What do we think, guys?" the content creator asks, smoothing the material out. "Is it cute?"

"Anyways, wish me luck. Bye!" Tiera May concludes, sliding into her car.

Then, she reiterated in the caption, "Rate my job interview outfit. is it too casual?"

Viewers Respond With Criticism

Indeed, viewers answered her question. As a result, she caught the attention of FashionTok, who ruthlessly scrutinized her job interview outfit of choice.

"This outfit is awful for any occasion," one viewer commented.

"It's giving laundry day and this is all I have available," a second stated.

"Just change the shoes, top, and bottom, other than that, I hate it," a third remarked.

Moreover, those with job management titles also entered the chat and imparted their feedback.

"Recruiter here. Don't do this again please lol," one commenter criticized.

"I've been a hiring manager for years now- dress to impress. It's that simple. And I'm sorry to say - I am not impressed," another said.

In the comments section, Tiera May revealed she was interviewing for a "creative agency/ marketing" position.

As it turned out, the business Tiera May applied for seemed to have approved her outfit since she landed the second interview. She posted the follow-up clip revealing her knee-length black slip dress, accentuated with a green sweater and open-toe heels she wore for it. From there, she uploaded a series of interview attire clips for her audience to rate.

What Outfit To Wear To A Job Interview

All in all, it varies depending on the type of job you're interviewing for. The best first step is to research the company's culture on its website and analyze what current employees wear to get an idea of how to dress appropriately. Since Tiera May was applying for a creative role, she has more flexibility to dress casually but not too comfortably. Interior Talent advises a polished look and a neat, acceptable outfit that enhances your personality.

When in doubt, Forbes recommends opting for business casual, where outfits are still professional but more laid-back. For men, this means a button-up shirt, slacks, a tie, and polished shoes. Women, on the other hand, should wear blouses, dress pants, modest dresses, knee-length skirts, flats, high heels, and light makeup. Maintaining an immaculate appearance is as significant as the apparel, regardless of gender.

The Mary Sue reached out to Tierra May via Instagram direct message and TikTok comment.

Have a tip we should know? [email protected]
 
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My Job Pays for Our Mortgage and Daycare. But I Might Give It All Up for My Spouse's Career.


Pay Dirt is Slate's money advice column. Have a question? Send it to Kristin and Ilyce here. (It's anonymous!)

Dear Pay Dirt,

I managed to bounce back after a DOGE layoff almost a year ago and landed a job with a pension, good insurance, but not the best pay. We pay a mortgage for a house that we bought three years ago. Our family of four are squeaking by just on my salary. I am six months away... from completing Public Service Loan Forgiveness (PSLF). Meanwhile, my spouse has been job hunting for since 2024. They finally got an academic position, but it is several states away, and it's a temporary position for one year with bad pay. But there is a possibility of it becoming tenure track with significant pay bump.

We initially planned to split the family so I could keep my job, get my loans forgiven, and work towards being vested in the pension. But our income won't cover both our mortgage, rent in a second place, and childcare for our two young kids, let alone groceries, etc. There is also the emotional toll of splitting the family, which we already had to do for previous academic job two years ago. We've already expended our savings to get through this past year. So now we are thinking of selling the house and moving everyone. But that means giving up my union job, pension, the house, PSLF with a few months left, and a job I like. I'm in my mid-40s and worried that my job is going to get eaten up by AI, so what if I can't find work again, let alone one that qualifies for PSLF?

My spouse starts in the early fall and it's already summer so we have to make a decision really soon. I really just don't know what to do.

-- Cutting the Parachute Too Early

Dear Cutting the Parachute,

This is a tough one. On one hand, you're six months away from being free of student loans, which is a huge win. On the other, your finances are stretched as thin as can be, and moving would solve that problem. Let's break this down and see what you'd be giving up with either choice.

For many people, Public Student Loan Forgiveness (PSLF) would be worth delaying any major life changes, including a big move. (It's also worth noting that we're on the cusp of some major changes to PSLF, that will give the Department of Education authority to disqualify certain employers from the program based on "substantial illegal purpose" based on their own discretion. It's worth staying on top of the changes.) Your pension and union job are also worth considering because they offer so much stability when your spouse's job is up in the air.

All of which is to say, there's a real risk to moving. But the costs of staying put are real, too. There's the emotional cost of living separately, which shouldn't be minimized, and then the actual cost of trying to afford two separate households. It sounds like staying put isn't even financially possible unless something changes dramatically or, possibly, you go into debt. Ultimately, this is a choice only you (and your family) can make, but it helps to specify the risks. And then, with those risks in mind, ask yourselves a few questions.

For starters, how possible is the "possibility" of your spouse's job becoming tenure track? If it's a genuine path to stability, it might be worth a few more tallies on the "move" side of things. But if it's a long shot, I don't see it being worth giving up your own stability.

Another question: What's the job market like in the new area for someone with your skills? Are there roles that would qualify for PSLF? Are there roles with similar stability? If it seems highly likely that you could land another qualifying job within a few months, the PSLF loss is less catastrophic, but again, there are some changes coming to PSLF in the next month that make it harder to know exactly what the program will look like in the future.

What would selling the house actually net you? If you have equity, it could buy you breathing room during the transition. But if you're barely breaking even, that's a different story. When you think about this option, you should also think about: the opportunity cost of selling (including a low interest rate if you have one), the cost of housing in the new city, and whether you'll want to buy another home down the road.

Finally, what are the options, if any, to stay afloat if you stay? Could your spouse find a roommate and live super cheaply for the next year while you figure things out? Is there a way to bring in extra income for the next six months or so -- a part-time job or some kind of side hustle?

None of these questions are going to have perfect answers, but they can at least help you get a more realistic idea of what to expect. The question isn't whether PSLF, the pension, or the house matter -- they absolutely do. The question is whether you can realistically afford to hold onto them for six more months. If the answer is yes, even barely, I would be inclined to exhaust every option before walking away from benefits you're so close to securing.

-- Kristin

More Money Advice From Slate

I'm getting really frustrated with some of my friend's financial stances on housing. All of them complain about the housing market, which I think is a legitimate concern for many people, but not my friends. Most of my friends make six figures or close to it. We live in a medium size city where the cost of living is less than the national average so six figures is a really good salary. Several years ago, I had a crisis and realized I didn't want to be in my high-paying career, so I made some major changes to my budget, which mostly consisted of living with elderly women who needed a little help around the house. This has helped me save up quite a bit of money. My friends, however, have been less than supportive of my life changes and some of them mock me for being "basically homeless."
 
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  • Hi, it all depends on your company policy. Most companies have policies that guide vacations, leaves among others. My suggestion would be that you... have an intimate discussion with your line manager, provide necessary documentation like wedding invitation cards and /or proof from the artoney for back up. Rules are meant to be bent. Those that are too rigid will surely break and collapse at some point. There must be a way out! more

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Putting the wrong foot forward: 5 tricky interview questions


Even something as simple as "Tell me about yourself" can trip up biopharma professionals during job interviews. Two recruiting experts discuss what candidates should and shouldn't say when answering five specific questions.

In today's biopharma job market, the stakes are high during interviews. A bad answer to an important question may not disqualify candidates, but it could drop them in... applicant rankings, according to Todd Gabianelli, vice president, business development, at life sciences resourcing firm ClinLab Solutions Group.

"It's an employer-driven market, so being slow and selective is just this market that we're in right now," Gabianelli told BioSpace. "So, the bar for 'good enough' has definitely risen."

To identify which questions trip up biopharma professionals the most, BioSpace spoke to Gabianelli and Angie Allen, managing partner for pharma/biotech at executive recruiting firm Kaye/Bassman.

The first question Allen prepares candidates to answer is "Tell me about yourself." She noted that it's not always easy to formulate the right response.

"People get stumped on that question routinely, and the No. 1 challenge for that is people's answers are way too long," she told BioSpace.

Allen recommended that candidates prepare a 90-second-max discussion about who they are and what they do -- an elevator pitch that serves as a professional introduction. It's not the time to share personal details such as how long they've been married, how many children or pets they have or their favorite football team, she noted.

However, Allen said, it is acceptable to state if they have a personal connection to the job they're interviewing for, such as experience with a health condition the company is targeting.

It's difficult for some to answer "Why are you leaving your current role" because they may overexplain the reason or speak negatively about a previous employer, according to Gabianelli. In addition, he said, those who've been laid off sometimes get defensive.

"Hiring managers I feel like in today's environment know that layoffs happen, but candidates still stumble on this, on how to navigate it," Gabianelli said. "It's still such a sensitive thing."

Candidates can address layoffs by briefly explaining what happened. For example, they can state there was a company restructuring or the role was eliminated. If there was a long employment gap, candidates can also share what they've done to stay current in their profession.

For those who are employed, Gabianelli recommended that when discussing why they're job hunting, candidates frame their response less about what they're running away from and more about what they're pivoting to. He also advised aligning their answer with the prospective employer's pipeline or projects.

"Focus on what you want to accomplish in that next phase of the career," Gabianelli said.

The question "What is your experience with this particular skill or therapeutic area?" can challenge candidates who don't have that exact experience, according to Allen. She also noted that some interviewers ask this question even when they know the person falls short in that area.

"They want to see how they're going to handle the question," Allen said. "And so obviously the most wrong answer a person can give is to really overembellish or overpromise what their experience is."

The better approach, Allen said, is to talk about adjacencies and close and transferable skills. For example, if a candidate hasn't done direct-to-patient marketing but has worked on a healthcare practitioner team and partnered closely with the patient marketing team, they can highlight that experience. Allen also recommended referring to the target position as a development opportunity.

Based on client feedback, Gabianelli said that when answering "Tell me about a time that a clinical trial didn't go well?", candidates tend to pick low-stakes examples to avoid an uncomfortable discussion. However, he noted, hiring managers simply want them to explain the problem and their role in helping to solve it.

"It's clinical trials, so things happen," Gabianelli said. "Things happen probably more often than clients and CROs and customers would prefer. But having that transparency around it and focusing on the outcomes and what you could have done differently is really all these teams want to hear, because half of them, or probably all of them, have been in your shoes before. So, showing some real genuineness about that is what we recommend."

Gabianelli advised that candidates use a real, meaningful example of what went wrong, spending 20% of their time on the problem and 80% on their decision making, then discuss the outcome.

Everyone's "favorite" question, Gabianelli noted, is "What are your salary expectations?"

"Oftentimes, candidates will get tripped up by naming a number too early without understanding the total comp package," he said. "So, we always recommend learn about the total comp package first, and then anchor it to a well-researched, market-driven number."

If candidates are working with recruiters or headhunters, those people should provide an idea on compensation and coach them on how to navigate a conversation with the prospective employer, Gabianelli added.

Answers to the salary question can vary depending on what point someone is at in their career, he noted. For example, salary and bonuses can matter more in the early years and deferred compensation or stock can be more important in later years.

"That's why our recommendation is to take a holistic approach to full compensation and treating it as a compensation package rather than just a definite base salary number that you're very strict on," Gabianelli said.

Whether someone can come back from giving the wrong answer to a question depends on what happened in the interview, according to Allen. For example, if a candidate lied or made something up, that's a red flag. But if they didn't unpack their thought process enough, Allen said, they could provide additional information in a thank-you note.

Gabianelli also sees value in thank-you notes, describing them as strategic tools that allow candidates to circle back to questions they answered incorrectly. They could write, for example, that after thinking about the conversation and something they said, they wanted to reframe their response to more accurately reflect their experience. Gabianelli said this approach shows a level of self-awareness that senior leaders respect at an intellectual level.

"It's biotech and pharma, and at the end of this are patients, and everybody's trying to deliver kind of these life-changing therapies, right?" he said. "So, there is a sense of compassion. It's a business, don't get me wrong, but we always find that the candidates that are the most authentic tend to win, and that strategic thank-you note could be a great opportunity to kind of close that loop with the hiring team."
 
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Open Call for Discover Graduate Programme (South Africa) - fundsforNGOs


The Discover Graduate Programme is a career development opportunity designed to prepare emerging professionals for leadership roles through practical work experience, professional training, and global exposure. The programme supports graduates in developing digital skills, business knowledge, leadership capabilities, and workplace readiness.

Successful participants join a two-year development... journey that can lead to long-term career opportunities within the organisation.

Overview of the Discover Graduate Programme

The Discover Graduate Programme is designed for ambitious graduates who want to build their careers through real-world experience and structured development.

The programme focuses on developing future leaders by combining:

* Practical workplace experience

* Professional mentorship

* Leadership development

* Digital skills training

* Business exposure

* Career growth opportunities

Participants work in a dynamic environment while developing skills needed for modern workplaces.

Programme Objectives

The programme aims to develop graduates who can:

* Adapt to changing business environments

* Solve complex problems

* Use digital tools effectively

* Collaborate across teams

* Understand customer needs

* Lead future business initiatives

The programme focuses on building professionals who are prepared for long-term success.

Key Development Areas

Participants develop skills across several important areas.

Leadership Development

The programme strengthens:

* Leadership confidence

* Decision-making ability

* Accountability

* Strategic thinking

Participants learn how to take ownership and contribute effectively.

Digital Readiness

The programme prepares graduates for a digital workplace by developing:

* Digital confidence

* Technology awareness

* Future-focused skills

* Ability to adapt to innovation

Learning Agility

Participants are expected to:

* Learn quickly

* Adapt to new situations

* Apply new knowledge

* Improve continuously

Business Awareness

The programme helps graduates understand:

* Business operations

* Market needs

* Organisational goals

* Customer-focused solutions

Problem-Solving and Critical Thinking

Participants develop the ability to:

* Analyse challenges

* Identify solutions

* Make informed decisions

* Improve processes

Programme Benefits

Successful candidates receive access to several career-building opportunities.

Practical Work Experience

Participants gain experience through:

* Real business projects

* Workplace assignments

* Team collaboration

* Professional responsibilities

This helps graduates apply academic knowledge in practical settings.

Global Exposure

The programme includes:

* Global rotation opportunities

* International work exposure

* Cross-market learning experiences

Participants gain broader perspectives and understand different business environments.

Mentorship and Professional Support

Participants work alongside:

* Experienced professionals

* Industry specialists

* Career mentors

Mentorship helps graduates develop confidence and professional capability.

Long-Term Career Pathway

The programme provides a pathway into future career opportunities.

After successfully completing the:

Two-year programme

participants transition into significant organisational roles.

This creates a strong foundation for continued leadership development.

Who Can Apply?

The programme is open to graduates who demonstrate leadership potential and a willingness to learn.

Ideal applicants are:

* Purpose-driven

* Proactive

* Digitally comfortable

* Customer-focused

* Accountable

* Collaborative

* Business-aware

Applicants should show commitment to professional growth.

Eligibility Requirements

Applicants must meet the following criteria.

Citizenship Requirements

Applicants must be:

* South African citizens by birth or naturalisation, or

* Permanent residents

Applicants from the following countries are also encouraged to apply for opportunities in their respective markets:

* Democratic Republic of the Congo

* Kenya

* Lesotho

* Mozambique

* Ethiopia

* Egypt

* Tanzania

Academic Requirements

Applicants must have achieved:

Minimum 65% aggregate

in their:

* Completed academic qualification, or

* Most recent academic results

Work Experience Requirements

Applicants must have:

* Less than two years of corporate or formal work experience after completing studies

The programme is designed primarily for early-career graduates.

How the Programme Works

Step 1: Application Submission

Applicants submit their details, academic information, and relevant experience.

Step 2: Candidate Assessment

Applicants are assessed based on:

* Academic performance

* Leadership potential

* Problem-solving skills

* Digital ability

* Collaboration skills

Step 3: Graduate Development Journey

Selected participants begin the two-year programme and receive:

* Practical assignments

* Mentorship

* Professional training

* Development opportunities

Step 4: Career Transition

Successful completion leads to placement into a significant organisational role.

Why the Discover Graduate Programme Matters

Graduate programmes help bridge the gap between academic learning and professional careers.

This programme supports participants by providing:

* Industry experience

* Leadership preparation

* Workplace skills

* Career direction

It helps graduates become adaptable professionals ready for future challenges.

Common Application Mistakes to Avoid

Ignoring Academic Requirements

Applicants should confirm they meet the required academic average.

Not Highlighting Leadership Potential

Candidates should demonstrate:

* Initiative

* Responsibility

* Teamwork

* Problem-solving ability

Providing Limited Experience Details

Even limited experience can demonstrate valuable skills through:

* Projects

* Internships

* Volunteer work

* Academic achievements

Weak Career Motivation

Applicants should explain why they want to develop professionally and contribute to the organisation.

Tips for a Strong Application

Applicants should:

* Highlight achievements clearly

* Show willingness to learn

* Demonstrate digital confidence

* Explain problem-solving examples

* Showcase teamwork experience

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)

What is the Discover Graduate Programme?

It is a graduate development programme designed to build future leaders through work experience, training, mentorship, and professional development.

How long does the programme last?

The programme is structured as a two-year development journey.

Who is eligible to apply?

Graduates who meet citizenship, academic, and work experience requirements can apply.

What academic results are required?

Applicants need a minimum aggregate of 65% in completed or most recent academic results.

Does the programme provide international exposure?

Yes. Participants may access global rotation opportunities and international learning experiences.

Is this a permanent employment opportunity?

Yes. The programme is structured as a permanent career opportunity with a pathway into long-term roles.

How much work experience can applicants have?

Applicants must have less than two years of corporate or formal work experience after completing their studies.

Conclusion

The Discover Graduate Programme gives graduates the opportunity to develop into future leaders through practical experience, mentorship, and global exposure.

By combining workplace learning with leadership development and digital skills training, the programme prepares participants for successful long-term careers in a changing professional environment.
 
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Before Heated Rivalry: Every role Hudson Williams played - Film Daily


Hudson Williams logged years of quiet credits before the 2025 breakout role that turned him into a household name. The Canadian actor born in Kelowna and raised in Kamloops finished Langara College's film program in 2020 and spent the next stretch stacking short films and small television parts while still waiting tables. Those early jobs now read like a map of the work that shaped the performance... fans discovered in Heated Rivalry.

Short film foundation

Williams completed roughly twenty-five shorts between graduation and 2024. Projects such as Super Support, Chad GPT, Dogging, And...Release!, Hold Your Back, and Metal... gave him chances to play everything from a depressed young man to a humanoid chatbot. He also wrote and directed four of them, posting the results on his YouTube channel that now sits above fifty-one thousand subscribers.

The volume mattered. Every new short forced him to adjust tone, timing, and physical choices without the safety net of a long shooting schedule. Directors on those sets often worked with the same crew for years, so word of his reliability spread inside Vancouver's tight-knit independent scene.

That grind also kept him visible to casting directors who later needed a fresh face for episodic television. Without the short-film résumé, the jump to series guest spots would have taken longer.

Allegiance guest turn

In 2024 Williams booked the role of Junior on the episode IRL of the Canadian series Allegiance. The part placed him inside a weekly writers' room structure for the first time and required quick reactions to co-stars who had already locked their character arcs. One scene demanded he shift from light banter to sudden tension within a single take.

The credit mattered less for screen time than for the paperwork it generated. Agents could now point to a union-approved television appearance when pitching him for larger roles. Several Vancouver casting offices updated his file the week the episode aired.

Viewers who later searched Hudson Williams for Heated Rivalry context often land on this listing first, surprised to see the name attached to a procedural drama rather than a sports romance.

Nobody Dumps My Daughter assignment

That same year he played Sean in the television movie Nobody Dumps My Daughter. The project called for lighter comedic beats and a quick turnaround, typical of holiday-season cable scheduling. Williams shot his scenes over four days between two short-film commitments.

The role tested his ability to land punchlines without stepping on the leads. Reviewers noted the supporting cast's chemistry, and his name appeared in the end credits crawl that many viewers skip. Still, the credit added another line to the résumé that casting directors scan when assembling ensemble casts.

Streaming availability on Prime Video later gave international fans an easy way to trace his pre-fame work once Heated Rivalry pushed his earlier credits into wider circulation.

Tracker procedural stop

Early 2025 brought the single-episode guest spot on Tracker as Brandon Stokes in The Disciple. The part required him to convey both vulnerability and edge inside a tight procedural frame. Production filmed his scenes on a standing set already used for multiple seasons, so timing had to match an established visual language.

The booking arrived just weeks before Heated Rivalry began principal photography. Williams has said the schedule forced him to juggle table reads for one show while still memorizing lines for the other. The overlap sharpened his on-set focus.

Fans who discovered him through social-media clips of the hockey series sometimes backtrack to this episode for proof that he already understood how to hold focus in an ensemble without dialogue-heavy scenes.

Day job realities

Between auditions and short-film shoots, Williams kept shifts at an Old Spaghetti Factory location in Vancouver. The steady paycheck covered rent while he waited for callbacks that sometimes arrived months apart. Coworkers later told local reporters they recognized the name once Heated Rivalry clips started trending.

The routine also supplied material. Several of the shorts he wrote drew from overheard conversations at the restaurant, turning mundane complaints into scene starters. That observational habit carried into the more naturalistic moments of his later television work.

Industry peers note that many Canadian actors maintain similar side jobs well into their mid-twenties, and the pattern rarely surfaces until after a breakout moment reframes the timeline.

Training and preparation

Langara's Film Arts program emphasized on-set protocol alongside scene study, giving Williams a working knowledge of call sheets and coverage before he ever stepped onto a union production. Instructors encouraged students to rotate through every department, so he logged hours as a production assistant on classmate projects.

Those rotations taught him how lighting and sound decisions affect performance choices. When he later faced a night shoot on Tracker, the earlier experience reduced the learning curve. The same background helped him navigate the compressed prep schedule for Heated Rivalry.

Alumni from the same cohort point out that the program's emphasis on collaboration prepared graduates for the small crews typical of Canadian television, where actors often double as their own stand-ins during lighting tweaks.

Quiet industry notice

By late 2024 a handful of Vancouver casting directors began grouping Williams with a short list of actors who could handle both drama and light comedy on short notice. That reputation led to the Allegiance and Tracker bookings without open calls. Agents circulated a single updated reel that mixed two shorts with the television clips.

Outside the city the name stayed largely unknown. Trade coverage of Canadian series rarely travels south unless a project secures U.S. streaming rights, which none of his early credits managed at the time.

The gap explains why many American viewers first encountered Hudson Williams through Heated Rivalry press rather than earlier projects.

Contrast with breakout moment

Heated Rivalry offered Williams his first leading role in a multi-episode arc with extended emotional beats and physical demands tied to on-ice training. The part arrived after the supporting résumé was already in place, allowing him to bring practiced economy to each scene. Reviewers later credited that preparation for the performance that earned him the 2026 Canadian Screen Award.

The series also introduced him to a fandom that immediately scoured every prior listing. Clips from the short films began circulating on TikTok within days of the premiere, turning private student projects into public footnotes.

The sudden visibility underscored how little mainstream attention those earlier roles had received before the sports romance reframed the conversation.

Current fan interest

Search interest in Hudson Williams continues to climb as Heated Rivalry moves into its second season and awards season conversations pick up. Viewers looking for context now land on the 2024 and 2025 credits first, using them as quick proof of range. Streaming platforms have added the older titles to recommendation carousels tied to his name.

That pattern mirrors earlier Canadian exports whose pre-fame work resurfaced once a single project crossed the border. The difference here is the speed: social media shortened the timeline from obscurity to archive dives.

Williams has yet to comment at length on those early roles in recent interviews, keeping focus on the current production cycle.

Trajectory ahead

The pre-Heated Rivalry credits now function as both résumé and origin story. They show the incremental steps that turned a Langara graduate into a series lead without a single overnight leap. Future projects will likely reference this stretch as evidence of sustained craft rather than sudden arrival.
 
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  • A hair-care specialist is a therapist, like it or not. It is a personal relationship like few others... built over time. If you think your role is... strictly about cutting hair, rethink. Pat yourself on the back for being a great listener, as you collect your tip. :) more

  • If someone talks about his family than it means that he worth you to do this with you. Don't be irritating to someone if they are giving respect. It's... the part of life and you know the human is a social animal , without social activities, there will be no any difference between us and the other animals. 💡😊😁 more

Comparably Announces 2026 Best Career Growth, Best Leadership Teams, and Best Departments Awards


Comparably, a ZoomInfo company and employee review platform for workplace culture and compensation, announced the winners of its 2026 Best Career Growth, Best Leadership Teams and Best Departments awards, recognizing top-rated companies across Sales, Marketing, HR, Product and Design, and Engineering.

The awards highlight organizations that employees rate highest across nearly 20 culture metrics,... including career development, leadership effectiveness, team collaboration and overall workplace experience. Rankings are based on anonymous employee feedback collected on Comparably.com during the past 12 months.

Paycom claimed the No. 1 ranking for Best Career Growth among large companies in 2026, rising from No. 6 the previous year. Adobe earned the top spot for Best Leadership Teams, climbing from No. 15 in 2025. Across the five Best Department awards, companies including Elsevier, RingCentral, ADP, TP and Calix earned recognition in multiple categories, demonstrating a consistent commitment to employee development, leadership excellence and workplace culture.

With more than 20 million ratings across 70,000 companies, Comparably's annual rankings provide insights into workplace satisfaction and employee experience across industries and company sizes. The awards reflect millions of employee ratings collected during the past year and represent one of the largest datasets on workplace culture and leadership available today.

"Candidates are paying closer attention to workplace reputation than ever before," said Jon Bischke, general manager of ZoomInfo Talent Solutions and Comparably. "Employees are evaluating companies through the lens of leadership, career development and culture, and employers are eing measured accordingly. These awards recognize the organizations that are consistently earning high marks from the people who know them best."

"Job seekers have access to more information than any generation before them," said Shannon Pritchett, head of marketing for ZoomInfo Talent Solutions. "The best employers understand that recruiting starts long before someone applies for a job. Employee sentiment, leadership reputation and growth opportunities all influence talent decisions. These rankings provide a transparent view into the workplace experiences candidates are actively seeking."

The Best Career Growth, Best Leadership Teams and Best Departments awards are among Comparably's most recognized workplace rankings, helping job seekers identify employers known for employee development, leadership excellence and strong workplace cultures.

2026 Best Career Growth - Large Companies (Top 10)

2026 Best Leadership Teams - Large Companies (Top 10)

2026 Best Sales Department (Top 5)

2026 Best Marketing Department (Top 5)

2026 Best HR Department (Top 5)

2026 Best Product and Design Department (Top 5)

2026 Best Engineering Department (Top 5)

About Comparably

Comparably, a ZoomInfo company, provides workplace culture insights and compensation data that help employees, job seekers and employers make more informed decisions. With more than 20 million anonymous employee ratings across nearly 20 workplace culture metrics and 70,000 companies, Comparably provides one of the largest datasets on workplace culture, compensation, leadership and employee experience. For more information, visit Comparably.com.

View source version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20260616334830/en/
 
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The Job Interview Is Broken. Here's How AI Could Actually Fix It.


"USA250: The Story of the World's Greatest Economy" is a yearlong WSJ series examining America's first 250 years. Read more about it from Editor in Chief Emma Tucker.

A glimpse of the job interview of the future: virtual-reality headsets that immerse you in the day-to-day of the job you're applying for; an interactive videogame that you win, or lose, on your ability to perform certain tasks; a... virtual exam that tests your problem-solving prowess.

Ask any job applicant or manager about the hiring process today, and he or she will probably say the same thing: It's pretty much a crapshoot. In a survey of 2,200 U.S. hiring managers by staffing firm Robert Half last spring, nearly a third said they'd made a hiring mistake in just the past two years. Failing to accurately size up the candidate's skills or fit with the company's culture were the biggest reasons.

The idea among many hiring managers and technology experts is that if you take humans out of the equation -- and replace the early, flawed generations of technology assistance with more-advanced artificial-intelligence systems -- you'll get a vastly better sense of who's the best person for the role.

That's the hope, anyway.

The algorithm issue

The problems start well before prospective hires get to the interview stage. The online algorithms, or application tracking systems, that companies use to narrow the mass of applicants risk knocking out top talent early in the hiring process. And candidates' growing use of AI to craft applications means employers aren't necessarily shortlisting the best candidates, but those who present better, says Matthew Bidwell, a professor of management at the University of Pennsylvania's Wharton School.

Then there are the unstructured interviews -- often stretched out over several rounds -- and clichéd questions like, "Where do you see yourself in five years?" Gut instinct, rather than a standardized interviewing process, ultimately drives many hiring decisions, which Bidwell calls a "terrible predictor."

Some research, in fact, suggests interviews often aren't just useless -- they can undercut what useful information about job candidates there is. "How would you like to know that the surgeon working on you was selected only because he's a hunter or something like that?" says Jason Dana, who on July 1 will become a professor of practice at the University of Pennsylvania's master's program for behavioral and decision sciences. His research has found unstructured interviews lead to poor predictive accuracy.

More structure -- and games

More companies are moving to structured interviews, which generally feature a set of standardized questions on both hard or soft skills. Greenhouse, a hiring-software company, says that the structured-interview part of its interview business has taken off: Customers conducted 15 million structured interviews last year, up from nearly 500,000 in 2015. Greenhouse provides interview kits that include scorecards where employers can identify specific attributes they want to evaluate candidates on.

"The more we rely on the structure and the skills that we're assessing, the more effective the interview is at finding out who's good at the job," says Greenhouse's chief executive officer, Daniel Chait.

Another potential solution is to use games to assess an applicant's skills. Richard N. Landers, a professor of organizational psychology at the University of Minnesota, offers a hypothetical example of a company's hiring for a software sales role. The company asks applicants to participate in an online simulation, in which they are presented with the main points of contact at a target company -- the manager, chief financial officer and IT director. The applicants are given brief introductions on their backgrounds. The challenge: Two of the executives being pitched have raised some serious concerns about the product.

It then asks the applicant: What do you do?

An AI interface simulates each step the candidate, or player, must make, from booking travel for a client visit to responding to pressure from a sales manager. All the while, the game is measuring an array of hard and soft skills.

"The scenario is constructed to force the player to think critically and respond in such a way that the sale is made within seven days of simulated game time," says Landers.

Landers stresses that the design of the game is crucial to be a fair assessment. For instance, he says, "it turns out boys tend to play those kinds of games a lot more than girls, and that plays out when you're an adult, and men, on average, are going to have more skill in that kind of game than women will," Landers says. "So [the games] have to be engineered to avoid those kinds of problems."

More-exacting AI interviews

Expect AI-powered interviews to also become more routine. Unlike the rudimentary AI tools that screen candidates based on the use of certain words in résumés, the AI interviews offer companies much more data to work with, allowing them to zero in on the skills that actually matter, says Euan Cameron, chief executive officer of Willo, a job-candidate assessment platform.

LinkedIn has been testing AI interviews in an automated hiring agent product it offers to small businesses. Companies can invite top applicants for a short, AI‑powered interview where the agent asks questions about the candidate's skills. These pre-interviews are faster and cheaper than flying potential candidates in, or having a human spend hours or days interviewing potential candidates.

The AI interview also improves companies' ability to identify candidates who are the right match more quickly, says Hari Srinivasan, LinkedIn's chief product officer. He says that is because the interviews can screen for top candidates based on objective questions focused on skills faster than a human spending time trying to determine whether each candidate has the capabilities to perform the job.

Another potential benefit of AI interviews is that they might not be as biased (read: human) as those done by a person. "I do like the idea that AI at least filters out some of the maybe personal biases that a lot of interviewers will bring with them to an interview," says Landers.

Immersive VR interviews

A little further in the future, Landers says, employers could shift to virtual-reality headsets to fully immerse job candidates in the simulations. A hospital hiring triage nurses, for example, could have candidates put on headsets that transport them to a simulated disaster site to see how they figure out who imminently needs attention.

"Do they actually notice what they're supposed to notice? Do they make the first steps they're supposed to take? All those options can be coded into those kinds of simulations," he says.

The cost of the hardware would have to come down to become more mainstream, Landers says. "So the bar is pretty high for VR to be worth it," he says.

But he adds: "Maybe the extra levels of immersion and fidelity can really get something out of understanding what that person would really do, not just what they say they would do."
 
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Comparably Announces 2026 Best Career Growth, Best Leadership Teams, and Best Departments Awards


The awards highlight organizations that employees rate highest across nearly 20 culture metrics, including career development, leadership effectiveness, team collaboration and overall workplace experience. Rankings are based on anonymous employee feedback collected on Comparably.com during the past 12 months.

Paycom claimed the No. 1 ranking for Best Career Growth among large companies in 2026,... rising from No. 6 the previous year. Adobe earned the top spot for Best Leadership Teams, climbing from No. 15 in 2025. Across the five Best Department awards, companies including Elsevier, RingCentral, ADP, TP and Calix earned recognition in multiple categories, demonstrating a consistent commitment to employee development, leadership excellence and workplace culture.

With more than 20 million ratings across 70,000 companies, Comparably's annual rankings provide insights into workplace satisfaction and employee experience across industries and company sizes. The awards reflect millions of employee ratings collected during the past year and represent one of the largest datasets on workplace culture and leadership available today.

"Candidates are paying closer attention to workplace reputation than ever before," said Jon Bischke, general manager of ZoomInfo Talent Solutions and Comparably. "Employees are evaluating companies through the lens of leadership, career development and culture, and employers are being measured accordingly. These awards recognize the organizations that are consistently earning high marks from the people who know them best."

"Job seekers have access to more information than any generation before them," said Shannon Pritchett, head of marketing for ZoomInfo Talent Solutions. "The best employers understand that recruiting starts long before someone applies for a job. Employee sentiment, leadership reputation and growth opportunities all influence talent decisions. These rankings provide a transparent view into the workplace experiences candidates are actively seeking."

The Best Career Growth, Best Leadership Teams and Best Departments awards are among Comparably's most recognized workplace rankings, helping job seekers identify employers known for employee development, leadership excellence and strong workplace cultures.

2026 Best Career Growth -- Large Companies (Top 10)

2026 Best Leadership Teams -- Large Companies (Top 10)

2026 Best Sales Department (Top 5)

2026 Best Marketing Department (Top 5)

2026 Best HR Department (Top 5)

2026 Best Product and Design Department (Top 5)

2026 Best Engineering Department (Top 5)

About Comparably

Comparably, a ZoomInfo company, provides workplace culture insights and compensation data that help employees, job seekers and employers make more informed decisions. With more than 20 million anonymous employee ratings across nearly 20 workplace culture metrics and 70,000 companies, Comparably provides one of the largest datasets on workplace culture, compensation, leadership and employee experience. For more information, visit Comparably.com.

View source version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20260616334830/en/
 
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Early Talent Hiring and Development: Now's the Moment for a Major Reset


How will organizations attract and develop the AI-native workforce they'll need tomorrow when entry-level roles are shrinking today? Here's the future-ready, early talent strategy you need.

Fewer opportunities for early talent

The job marketplace has contracted significantly for those with less than five years of professional experience. Research published by SAP shows that openings in the 10... most common entry-level job titles declined by 35% in just one year, from 2024 to 2025.*

Budget constraints, hiring freezes, and uncertainty around the ROI of early talent as AI increasingly takes on routine and manual tasks are among the reasons cited by HR leaders today.

Applications skyrocket

AI is also having a major impact on the recruitment process. With such limited opportunities available, more than half of early talent candidates use AI to help them land a job -- a process that now takes eight months on average and involves more than 300 job applications.*

HR is feeling the pressure managing the candidate pipeline, with the number of applicants per early talent job opening doubling since 2021. A high volume of candidates are submitting AI-generated résumés and applications, and it's becoming much harder to detect high-fidelity signals around skills, fit, and potential.

It's a painful scenario for everyone involved. Fragile and unsustainable. And the implications will be profound for enterprises that don't act quickly.

HR leaders voice concerns

Playing out the current trajectory to its natural conclusion, what happens when all the fresh talent eventually dries up? Already, HR leaders are alarmed by this risk. "Ultimately, if we stop investing in early talent, we will wind up eliminating our talent pipeline," one global head of early talent programs at a high-tech organization told researchers.*

A senior HR director at a high-tech organization commented: "If we continue down this path and don't provide a way for early talent to get started, it's going to lead to massive skill shortages in the future."

Widespread reductions in early talent hiring will lead to skills gaps that will prove expensive to remedy. Organizations will struggle to build company capabilities, retain knowledge, and develop future leaders.

But by far the most common concern from leaders was around not seeing early talent as AI-native. If the AI capabilities of this cohort are overlooked, companies may miss out on a key opportunity to scale AI innovation and adoption across the business.

What's the answer?

Today, there's an opportunity for HR leaders to be more intentional and strategic, to reimagine their approach to early talent from the ground up. With the right early talent strategy, organizations can gain a competitive advantage.

Here are three steps to consider.

Step 1: Rethink entry-level roles

Traditionally, junior employees have mainly been given routine, repetitive tasks. Combined with frustratingly slow career progression, the result is eroding morale and commitment.

This approach must evolve. The nature of work is changing rapidly, and early talent no longer need to take on those routine tasks. These employees need the opportunity to develop at speed and to be supported in performing work that meaningfully addresses business challenges.

HR has the chance to reshape entry-level positions, to provide support, guidance, and tools to enable junior staff to contribute in more impactful ways. This may involve them working with proper guidance to support more critical projects, interacting with customers, and even owning some tasks end to end.

This approach not only enables early talent to contribute more positively to the business at an earlier stage, but when combined with clear goals, regular feedback loops, and occasional coaching, it also fosters greater engagement and commitment.

Step 2: Support your strategy with technology

Hiring and developing early talent have become more complex -- from deciphering AI-generated applications, to redesigning roles and meeting their aspirations in a fast-changing business context. And with the nature of early talent work shifting, leaders need tools to help understand the new capabilities that will predict long-term success and demonstrate the value of early talent initiatives.

Here's where technology can help. During the hiring process, technology can help employers see beyond the noise of AI applications and rediscover the meaningful signals they need to create candidate shortlists and strengthen hiring decisions. Meanwhile, technology can also help to maintain engagement with other high-potential candidates who applied -- for when the next opportunities arise.

Once early talent begin work, today's technology can help you track their participation in early talent programs and progression towards their goals. It also helps facilitate individualized learning opportunities and demonstrate the ROI of your early talent investments. For research-based recommendations on the role of technology in early talent selection and development, check out this quick guide.

Step 3: Reframe the business case for early talent

As the nature of early talent work is changing alongside the technology used to support them, HR leaders agree that the old business case for early talent investments needs to be reimagined. Many organizations are focused on mitigating critical skill gaps and engaging in large-scale AI transformations. While early talent lack experience, they are eager to engage in continuous learning and understand how to work effectively alongside AI.

Research also reveals that -- as they work alongside modern tools and technologies -- early talent can contribute to high-value, meaningful work much faster than in the past.

A modern early talent business case is one that involves focusing on faster time to meaningful work, reducing critical skill gaps, and leveraging the AI-native capabilities of today's entry-level workers.

Build your early talent strategy

Will HR leaders watch on as a generation of AI-savvy talent remains underused, or act now and build the skills pipelines necessary for a future-ready workforce?

Get further insights on this topic by reading our report, "Early talent in peril: How HR can strategically select and develop the workforce of tomorrow." Visit our research library to stay tuned for when phase two of this research gets published later this year.

Dr. Autumn D. Krauss is chief scientist at SAP SuccessFactors.
 
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Merit Teacher and Chennai DMIT Strengthen Focus on Personalized Career Guidance and Student Development Programs


All information and data in this article is solely for informational purposes. For more information please view the Barchart Disclosure Policy here

As students and parents navigate an increasingly diverse educational landscape, the importance of structured career guidance and assessment-based counseling continues to gain attention. Chennai-based educational institutions Merit Teacher and Chennai... DMIT are expanding their efforts to support learners through personalized counseling, psychometric assessments, communication training, and career development programs.

Founded by educator and psychologist Mrs. Priyanka, the organizations work with students, parents, graduates, and professionals seeking guidance on educational pathways, career planning, skill development, and personal growth.

The institutions offer services that include career counseling, psychometric testing, spoken English training, public speaking programs, DMIT assessments, and individualized development plans designed to help learners better understand their interests, strengths, and learning preferences.

Educational experts note that students today face a wider range of academic and career opportunities than ever before. As a result, many families are increasingly seeking professional guidance to make informed decisions regarding education, skill development, and long-term career planning.

Mrs. Priyanka's academic and professional background combines expertise across psychology, education, teacher training, and counseling. Her qualifications include Cambridge CIDTT certification, MSc in Psychology, M.Ed, Montessori Diploma, Clinical Psychology (A Grade), and BA Triple Honours.

According to the organization, its approach combines assessment tools, counseling frameworks, and personalized mentoring to support learners at different stages of their academic and professional journeys.

Merit Teacher focuses on educational counseling, communication skills development, spoken English training, and public speaking programs, while Chennai DMIT provides DMIT assessments, psychometric evaluations, counseling services, and career development support.

The organizations state that the objective is to provide learners with structured guidance that can help them explore opportunities aligned with their individual interests and capabilities while supporting confidence-building and informed decision-making.

With growing awareness around career readiness, soft skills, and personalized learning pathways, educational guidance services are becoming an increasingly important component of student development across India.

For additional information, interested individuals can visit the official websites of Merit Teacher and Chennai DMIT.

About Merit Teacher

Merit Teacher is an educational guidance and training organization offering career counseling, psychometric assessments, spoken English coaching, public speaking training, and student development programs.

About Chennai DMIT

Chennai DMIT provides DMIT assessments, psychometric testing, counseling services, and career development programs designed to support educational and career planning for students and professionals.

Media Contact

Company Name: Merit Teacher

Contact Person: Mrs. Priyanka Swain

Email: Send Email

Phone: 9363739535

Address:950, 39th Street, Korattur

City: Chennai

State: Tamil Nadu

Country: India

Website: https://www.meritteacher.com/

Press Release Distributed by ABNewswire.com

To view the original version on ABNewswire visit: Merit Teacher and Chennai DMIT Strengthen Focus on Personalized Career Guidance and Student Development Programs
 
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