Blind Box Ads: Bad-Ass or just Bad?
July 10, 2008 By: almostgotit Category: Career Transitioning, Uncategorized, bad bosses, career change, employment, exploitation, jobs, networkingMany thanks to ALL the folks who responded to my post yesterday! I appreciated every comment you posted. Additionally, Deb replied to me on her blog, 8 hours & a lunch, as did Ann over at Compensation Force, . Ann made the good point that it’s a buyer’s market out there, so (of course) job seekers like me have to hustle.
I agree: yes we do. But.
Recruiters may feel justified in abusing potential employees, given the current job market. If they do, they are making a mistake, and their organizations will suffer for it as much as any individual employee ever will. Which is my whole point.
Also, I am not making this up: employers really are employing more bad hiring tricks than I’ve ever seen before. At the very least, they give me pause, and in some cases have kept me from applying altogether. Nor am I the only one.
And who knows? One of us might have been the player who turned your company into Microsoft.
“Employee needed. No Calls Please! Send application to P.O. Box ###.”
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One last gripe: blind box ads like these that proliferate in the paper. No employer or company name is listed, no contact information (other than a post office box) is provided. And I’m supposed to respond with full personal detail in return? No f-ing way.
Now I have to confess something. I interviewed last week with an organization that had posted a blind box advertisement. I’d seen the ad and had already ruled it out, when a person in my network called me about the same job. I submitted my resume and got an interview, but it wasn’t a good fit, and I think both sides figured this out in short order.
But I still have no idea why this particular organization, looking for a PR person no less, was afraid to list its own name in public. Two reasons employers may choose blind ads are (a) to covertly oust a current employee or (b) to hide their hiring activities from competing employers. Do you want to work for a company that may fire and hire this way? Do you want to work for an organization that may be trying to underbid its competitor for your paycheck? The listed job may even be your own!
I still have no intention of responding blindly to blind box ads in future. There remain some intriguing work-arounds, however, which I may try next time a blind box ad catches my eye. I do like learning how to play a player! And if this is a new game, I am going to have to learn how to play it, albeit on terms I can also live with.
I’ll keep trying to be fabulous.
It’s just that I haven’t seen a whole lot of “fabulous” coming from employers these days, and damitol, can’t it be someone else’s turn to be fabulous for a change?
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Related Posts:
Employers: it’s Your Turn to be Fabulous (part 1 of this series)
Un-Fabulour Employers Asking for Too Much Upfront (part 2 of this series)




July 10th, 2008 at 12:00 pm
I am really enjoying this series of posts and learning A LOT about how miserable job hunting has become. There’s such a climate of arrogance surrounding those with any power these days; could the climate in Washington have a trickle-down effect?
July 10th, 2008 at 12:09 pm
Oh, how lovely, it’s you. Thanks for clicking on my “comment” section and weighing in!
July 11th, 2008 at 7:42 am
Hey, see my post today for yet another angle.
http://compforce.typepad.com/compensation_force/2008/07/heads-up-high-p.html
Maybe employers COULD use being a little more fabulous, particularly in the eyes of their best performers….
Happy Friday!
July 11th, 2008 at 2:23 pm
Wow, blind box ads. They’ve been around forever, actually. And I’ve always wondered about them.
It always seemed like a dumb way to advertise for employees. Also, yes, a little creepy. As if they had something to be ashamed of.
Help wanted ads in general are not a super way to get jobs, imho. Of all my 59 jobs, only one was through an ad in the newspaper. And it was a Horrible Job! The boss was psycho! He refused to learn the names of any of his employees (we were addressed as “hey you” and worse). Plus he despised women, and all the employees were women. I wonder whatever happened to him…..
I lasted two weeks (until I found another job).
But if you want to try playing the player, why not? Knowing what you know, of course….
July 12th, 2008 at 6:09 pm
Ann: thanks so much for the comment, and your post today was fantastically interesting, and, in more than one way! I’ve left a longer comment, there. Much food for thought, indeed.
WG, you are absolutely right. You get jobs through connections. I just keep trying to find the sort of jobs that don’t fit any of those normal, sane sorts of job-finding rules…
July 21st, 2008 at 12:08 pm
[...] been beating this point half to death lately, but I need to make it one more time. Ann Bares at Compensation Force has made it even [...]