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A man revealed the 'immature' and 'unprofessional' response he received from a recruiter after a job interview where he noticed several glaring red flags.
The American applied for a position at a small public relations firm in Los Angeles but quickly realised the company was not for him.
He sent an email thanking the interviewer (who would've been his boss) for her time but said he'd be moving on with other work opportunities - only for her to respond with a scathing email ridiculing his skills and personality.
'Hey LOL - I offered it to someone else this afternoon after you left,' the recruiter said. 'I ended the interview with you early as you were not qualified and did not want to lead you on. So sorry!
'So you know, what I did is interview protocol to talk through a job with someone and ask them to go back and see if that is what they want to do.'
A man revealed the 'immature' and 'unprofessional' response he received from a recruiter
The woman went on: 'While interviewing others, it was obvious you were not right. I was just being nice. Wish you the best of luck finding your right fit in careers!'
The original email was professional and to the point.
'It was lovely meeting you this afternoon!' the applicant's email said. 'I appreciate you taking the time to talk with me. For the sake of not wasting your time, I'm just going to follow up now and let you know I don't think I'll be pursuing the position.
'I wish you the best of luck in a finding a new candidate, and hope you have a great weekend!'
He revealed on Reddit that the bizarre email wasn't the first red flag.
'She was so crazy, the entire interview she was constantly checking her phone and generally being incredibly unprofessional and rude towards me,' he said.
'I knew almost immediately it was not a good fit but she instructed me 'go home and think about the job and let me know if you're interested or not' which I wasn't.
'But I thought it's nice to be nice, so even if I don't want the job I'll send this follow up email, LIKE SHE SUGGESTED I DO - imagine my surprise when I received this reply.'
Many pointed out that the email sounded like an immature person who'd been rejected.
'It gave me 'you can't break up with me, I'm breaking up with you first!' vibes,' one said.
'Why is she treating you like you rejected her after a first date?' another asked.
'This is insanely unprofessional and someone that reacts like this shouldn't be in a higher end position with any company,' a man wrote.
'This is definitely someone who struggles with fear of rejection. That hiring manager couldn't handle being rejected and had to pretend that they rejected the candidate first in order to protect their fragile ego,' a woman pointed out.
One shared a similar experience with a recruiter.
'I had a phone interview a few weeks ago. The tone of the interview was pretty positive up until they asked me if I was interviewing elsewhere, I was honest and said I had a few interviews coming up and I'm waiting to hear back from some.
'Their tone suddenly switches and they go, 'Okay well I have a lot of interviews with potential candidates too this week, so you'll hear back from us next week' and then it was abruptly ended.'