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RealGuyinChicago

(64 posts)
Wed Jul 20, 2022, 04:26 PM Jul 2022

Any HR people out there?

Are people over 50 just completely toxic to recruiters?

I keep getting phone interviews that seem to go well, but don't lead to further interviews.

Just recently, an HR person told me I was a strong candidate and said she would set me up to meet the hiring team the following week. Then she ghosted me for two weeks, only to eventually tell me the hiring team was "pursuing other candidates."

This is not the first time I've applied a job in which I checked virtually all the boxes, but dropped for consideration or never called.

I'm not blowing all these phone interviews. Like I said, most seem to go very well.

But, with a little Googling, it's not hard to figure out my approximate age. And I'll be 60 on my next birthday. So I'm wondering if that's the problem.

I have a job now. But I really feel I need to leave it. And I have neither the desire nor the money for retirement.

Am I being paranoid, or is age discrimination as widespread as it seems?

6 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight: NoneDon't highlight anything 5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
Any HR people out there? (Original Post) RealGuyinChicago Jul 2022 OP
It exists XanaDUer2 Jul 2022 #1
keep trying. somebody has to be sick of gen x. mopinko Jul 2022 #2
Well... RealGuyinChicago Jul 2022 #6
Not in HR, Bayard Jul 2022 #3
Yeah when you have a great gig like VP, you won't be eyeing that retirement balance as often Shermann Jul 2022 #4
I passed every job applicant test with all A's. usonian Jul 2022 #5

RealGuyinChicago

(64 posts)
6. Well...
Wed Jul 20, 2022, 06:34 PM
Jul 2022

I've been in business journalism most of my career and I've done some PR.

I'm looking at getting back into PR, which I find to be less stressful. It also usually pays better.

Bayard

(21,987 posts)
3. Not in HR,
Wed Jul 20, 2022, 05:11 PM
Jul 2022

But a retired headhunter.

Yes, there's plenty of it. Seems like the only time they'll look at 60 range is if you are interviewing for a VP position, sorry to say. Otherwise, the ideal is the young up & comer, about 5 years out of college with at least a bachelors degree. Management positions, 10-15 years practical experience and degreed.

What they can't seem to understand is that those are the same people everybody else wants, and would pay people like me to go find. And they're always looking for the next step up in their career.

Have you thought about consulting? Experience matters more than age there.

Shermann

(7,398 posts)
4. Yeah when you have a great gig like VP, you won't be eyeing that retirement balance as often
Wed Jul 20, 2022, 05:34 PM
Jul 2022

Employers generally prefer employees to be sort of trapped there.

There's no telling if that 60-something has FU money saved up!

usonian

(9,661 posts)
5. I passed every job applicant test with all A's.
Wed Jul 20, 2022, 05:36 PM
Jul 2022

But failed the age test, repeatedly.
And they weren't all at the fruity computer company.

I interviewed at a company not to be named, let's call them hsifpanS, and totally trounced the exam. They hired two young guys instead. One weekend, they thought it would be cool to party at Lake Tahoe, and the servers crashed spectacularly.

The result? NADA. In the startup world, nobody gives a flying f-ck about anything. Just being bought out, which they were.

IT'S ALL GOOD.

BTW, 30 is the new 50. Age discrimination is the crime of the millennium, and well rewarded, not punished.

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