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Empty Promises. Or: The Hiring Process as a Study in Forgetting

There is a particular kind of advice that never quite says what it means. The guidance written for job applicants tends to arrive in a helpful register: structured, encouraging, careful. Beneath the numbered points and gentle suggestions, a single unspoken message runs through all of it. Make yourself agreeable, and perhaps they will choose you. Gradually, through no single moment of decision, the applicant becomes a petitioner. The waiting does it. The adjusting does it. The learned habit of needing very little and asking for less. What this arrangement forgets is something rather plain. The company has a need of its own. It is searching for someone to solve a problem it cannot solve alone. The person applying is not requesting a favour. They are responding to one.

That much, at least, is worth keeping in mind. On both sides of the table.

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