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"The Seniority Illusion"

📅 14 Feb 2026 ⏱ 3 min read

Title doesn’t equal competence.

This is the conversation most people avoid. It’s uncomfortable. It might hurt. But avoiding it hurts more in the long run.

Ready? Let’s go.

What You’re Actually Competing Against

You think you’re competing against other candidates. You’re not. You’re competing against indifference.

The hiring manager is busy. 200 applications to review. Back to back meetings. Their own work on top of hiring.

They’re looking for reasons to reject, not interview. Every typo. Every vague phrase. Every unexplained gap. That’s a reason.

Your job isn’t to be good enough. It’s to give them no reason to say no.

What Actually Works

After thousands of placements, I know what works. It’s not complicated. Just consistently ignored.

First, research like your job depends on it. Because it does. Know the company. Know the role. Know the interviewer. Know the industry. Know competitors. Know challenges.

Second, communicate clearly. Short sentences. Direct answers. Specific examples. No rambling. No corporate speak. No vague platitudes.

Third, follow up. Once is polite. Twice shows interest. Three times is too much. Learn the rhythm.

Fourth, be honest. About experience. About motivations. About what you want. Lies catch up.

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 Communication Deep Dive

Communication is where most job searches fail. Let me be specific about what good communication looks like.

In emails: Short paragraphs. Clear subject lines. One ask per message. Professional closing. Sent at reasonable hours.

In interviews: Answer the question asked, not the question you wish they asked. Use concrete examples. Name specific results. Pause before responding. Ask for clarification if needed.

In follow-ups: Reference something specific from the conversation. Express genuine interest. Keep it brief. Send within 24 hours.

These aren’t personality traits. They’re learnable skills. Practice them until they’re automatic.

Common Objections I Hear

‘But I’m an introvert.’ Introverts can prepare thoroughly, answer concisely, and ask thoughtful questions. Introversion isn’t an excuse.

‘But I’m not good at self-promotion.’ Nobody’s asking you to brag. They’re asking you to clearly explain what you’ve accomplished. Facts aren’t bragging.

‘But the market is terrible right now.’ The market is the same for everyone. Some people still get jobs. Be one of them.

‘But I don’t have enough experience.’ Then get creative about how you frame what you do have. Transferable skills exist.

Objections are comfortable. Results require discomfort. Pick your discomfort.

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

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