Often overblown.
In 15+ years of recruitment, I’ve placed thousands. Rejected thousands more. The difference isn’t what you think.
Let me explain.
The Pattern Nobody Talks About
Here’s what I see every week. People come frustrated. Applied to 100 jobs. No responses. Five interviews. No offers. Doing everything ‘right’ but nothing works.
Then I dig deeper.
They applied to jobs they’re not qualified for. Sent generic CVs with typos. Walked into interviews without research. Answered questions in rambling paragraphs going nowhere.
They weren’t doing everything right. They were doing the minimum and hoping for maximum.
Hope is not a strategy.
The Details That Matter
Little things add up fast.
Email response time signals interest. Same day good. Next day acceptable. Three days concerning.
CV formatting signals attention to detail. Inconsistent fonts, mixed bullets, typos – character indicators, not minor issues.
Questions signal intelligence. Generic template questions sound generic. Specific questions about challenges sound prepared.
Follow-up signals professionalism. Brief thank you within 24 hours. Reference something specific. Express continued interest. Simple. Most skip it.
Why Nobody Tells You This
Recruiters don’t say this – don’t want to hurt feelings. Hiring managers don’t – no time. Friends don’t – they’re friends.
So here I am.
Your CV probably needs work. Interview skills need polish. Follow-up inadequate. Research superficial. Attitude might be off.
Not definitely. But probably. These are problems in 90% of people not getting results.
The Real-World Application
Let me give you a concrete example from last month. A candidate came to me – great experience, solid CV on paper. Three final-round interviews, no offers. Couldn’t understand why.
I watched them do a mock interview. Within five minutes, I knew. They answered questions that weren’t asked. They gave ten-minute answers to two-minute questions. They never once asked about the team or the challenges.
They were so focused on impressing that they forgot to connect. Interviews aren’t presentations. They’re conversations. Act accordingly.
We worked on it for two weeks. Three specific changes: listen fully before responding, keep answers under two minutes, ask at least three substantive questions. Next interview? Offer.
Small changes. Big results. That’s usually how it works.
The Employer Perspective
I work both sides. Here’s what hiring managers tell me when I ask why they passed on candidates:
‘They didn’t seem interested.’ (Translation: they didn’t ask questions.)
‘They couldn’t explain their experience clearly.’ (Translation: rambling answers with no structure.)
‘Something felt off.’ (Translation: body language or energy was wrong.)
‘They didn’t research us.’ (Translation: asked questions that were answered on the website.)
Notice what’s NOT on this list? ‘They weren’t qualified enough.’ Qualifications get you in the door. Everything else determines whether you stay.
Interview skills are skills. They can be learned, practiced, and improved. Stop treating interviews like personality tests. Start treating them like performances you prepare for.
The Bottom Line
You can ignore this. Most do. Prefer believing the problem is external – market, economy, discrimination, bad luck.
Maybe true in your case. Probably not.
People who get results look honestly at themselves, identify what’s not working, fix it. No excuses. Just changes.
Your choice.
Clear communication. Thorough preparation. Honest self-assessment. Consistent follow-up. That’s the formula. Simple to understand. Hard to do.
Start today. Or don’t. Market keeps moving either way.
Need help with this?
Book a 1-hour session with an Australian recruiter — $132/hr
💬 Have thoughts? Join the conversation on LinkedIn
in Discuss on LinkedIn