I.P. Freley
I like people food
- Joined
- Dec 26, 2001
- Posts
- 2,038
The real gamble was using AEPS for background checks... They just declared bankruptcy.
Hopefully for you, you didn't send them any money. If so, you likely aren't getting it back.
In any case, as NEDude said, perhaps part of it is simply a gauge to see if you really want to be interviewed, or if you really want the job. I know, from my perspective, that I papered the world with resumes after my 9/11-forced vacation began, and several of the companies I sent my stuff to were places I would never want to work unless it was an absolute last resort ( turned down a few interviews from some of the companies that called me). Now... Imagine a few thousand of those sitting on the desk at a small company (like Shuttle America), and you might have an idea of the size of the burden. It's easier to let an outside firm do the sifting, getting rid of the useless resumes from people who don't meet the published mins, for instance, and then just invite in the people that make it through the filter.
Seems possible that the very point of an application fee is to discourage people who don't want the job from wasting everyone's time, their own included. And at least in the case of yourself, metrodriver, it's serving one of the possible purposes... If you aren't really interested, then you won't pay the fee, and the job can be offered to someone who actually wants it. Not a reflection on you or anything, but it might possibly keep out the people who want A job and allow in people who want THIS job.
Just a theory.
Hopefully for you, you didn't send them any money. If so, you likely aren't getting it back.
In any case, as NEDude said, perhaps part of it is simply a gauge to see if you really want to be interviewed, or if you really want the job. I know, from my perspective, that I papered the world with resumes after my 9/11-forced vacation began, and several of the companies I sent my stuff to were places I would never want to work unless it was an absolute last resort ( turned down a few interviews from some of the companies that called me). Now... Imagine a few thousand of those sitting on the desk at a small company (like Shuttle America), and you might have an idea of the size of the burden. It's easier to let an outside firm do the sifting, getting rid of the useless resumes from people who don't meet the published mins, for instance, and then just invite in the people that make it through the filter.
Seems possible that the very point of an application fee is to discourage people who don't want the job from wasting everyone's time, their own included. And at least in the case of yourself, metrodriver, it's serving one of the possible purposes... If you aren't really interested, then you won't pay the fee, and the job can be offered to someone who actually wants it. Not a reflection on you or anything, but it might possibly keep out the people who want A job and allow in people who want THIS job.
Just a theory.