Not only does this disincentivize HR from running fake vacancies or stringing multiple candidates on just to keep their options open, but it also solves the problem of unemployed people job-searching effectively working full-time for free. The fact that companies would have to pay to hire workers would mean they try to make the selection as short and effective as possible.

Edit: From the business POV:

  • Businesses would have a limited budget for hiring so would limit process to 10 applicants and would have to pick those randomly. Less time spent on interviewing but also might miss the ideal candidate. Although the difference would fall sharply with larger pools.
  • And 000s of people now stuck wo any appls at all (although better than writing fake, futile appls), and no money. Not enough jobs on the market would translate into not enough paying applications for them to be able to substitute unemployment benefits.

Edit: this post seems to have gained some traction. Do you think I should try writing to my MP and suggesting it? I live in the UK where fake interviews are a real problem right now

    • sunsofold@lemmy.zip
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      2 hours ago

      If companies have to pay for every interview, I doubt they’d do as many so you’d have a hard time getting enough interviews to make that viable.

      • BillCheddar@lemmy.world
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        1 hour ago

        Companies already pay a ton of money to utilize indeed and all those sites. Any cash they’d pay you to interview pales in comparison to what they’re already spending on the unfilled job.

        I don’t think it would cause a declining number of interviews. If anything, it might cause interviews to go up, once employers can see the drop in the bucket of spending the interview represents.

    • Flagstaff@programming.dev
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      4 hours ago

      True, then there could be a charge to accepted candidates who then reject the job to block the emergence of such an “occupation” as well. But then if one legitimately declines because of the salary, hmm… idk… Maybe to avoid this, the money should go to some governing board…

  • CannedYeet@lemmy.world
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    6 hours ago

    I miss hired.com It was a hiring platform that tipped the scales a little in favor of the interviewee. You could take an assessment to prove your basic competence in programming and thereby cut out a round of interviews.

  • Dion Starfire@lemmy.world
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    10 hours ago

    This concept is why I have a deep respect for DuckDuckGo as a company. When interviewing there for a SRE position, the round 2 and 3 interviews included coding challenges. They paid (IIRC) $75/hr based on the maximum time they wanted candidates to spend on each assignment. I ended up not getting the position, but they’re the only company I made it to the final decision step with that I didn’t feel was wasting my time.

  • picnic@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    3 hours ago

    So start a company and pay for candidates. What’s stopping you? If it’s the best business model you’ll make millions or billions

    • sunsofold@lemmy.zip
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      2 hours ago

      A great many things that would be good for society are not feasible to be the first/only one to do. The world would be vastly safer if there were no nuclear weapons, but in a world where other nations have them it becomes self-negating to not have them. The only way to get the social benefit of all companies doing something is to legally mandate it so there is no disadvantage.

  • Phoenixz@lemmy.ca
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    10 hours ago

    Agreed

    Looking for a job now and a single company so far has has taken 6 hours of my time.

    Two for the initial requirements for applying, the reading their 5 page information, writing a cover letter, etc.

    Then two hours on a screening interview, and the initial interview, though that second one went from 1 hour to 1 hour 45 minutes so it was actually 6 hours 45 minutes

    Then two more hours on a technical interview

    This is where I’m at now, and i still am looking at two more one hour interviews with higher up, then the CEO herself.

    That’ll make over 8 and a half hours IF I get the job.

    If I don’t get the job, man, this was a fucking waste…

    In principle, jobs should be a mutually beneficial relationship. I give them resources, they pay for that but in reality, the balance 100% tipped to their side

    I have to apply for jobs, they dont have to apply for employees

    I have to write cover letters and separate letters to tell them how much i love their company and how badly i really want to work there and how much I’ll sacrifice for them

    They interview me on their turf, their rules. We don’t get to interview the company. Some companies allow us to ask a few questions, but that’s it.

    Shits fucked up

  • moakley@lemmy.world
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    11 hours ago

    So then a person could make his living by interviewing for jobs he’s not qualified for and could never get? I guess that probably wouldn’t happen.

    I didn’t used to hate the long interview process until I applied for a job that had me fill out like a hundred questions for background information. It was like, “Have you ever been convicted of embezzlement for an amount greater than $500?” No. “Have you ever been convicted of embezzlement for an amount less than $500?” No… “Have you ever been convicted of embezzlement for exactly $500?”

    Did you know that if they can guess your crime with enough specificity, legally you have to admit to it? At least that’s what I assume, based on the questionnaire. Like, “Have you ever been convicted of violating the endangered species act while crossing state lines in a class C vehicle on a Sunday?” And I’m like, “No, but you’re so close!”

    Anyway, I got the offer, but then they rescinded it when I asked for more money.

    • sunsofold@lemmy.zip
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      2 hours ago

      If you aren’t qualified and they have to pay for every interview, either you are being honest on your application and they aren’t interviewing you or you’re lying and you open yourself up to charges of fraud because you took money under false pretenses.

    • MangoCats@feddit.it
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      6 hours ago

      After about 10 years experience in the field, my interviews tended toward the whole day kind of thing. Different companies do it differently, but basically if you’re going to the effort of bringing a candidate to the company, might as well grill 'em for most of a workday. Some group interviews - those are pretty intimidating: a room full of people who know what they want and you guessing what it is they actually do. Mostly a series of one-on-ones, the most hostile one-on-one interviewer I ever had turned out to be the guy whose desk I was about to take over, shuffling him from a window seat back to an interior cube - he really really didn’t like me in the interview, I gently mentioned it to my boss-to-be he just blew him off “don’t worry about him, he’s always like that…”

    • HCSOThrowaway@lemmy.world
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      8 hours ago

      So then a person could make his living by interviewing for jobs he’s not qualified for and could never get?

      That’s already a flaw of the current system, so no change means no new downside. People receiving unemployment usually have to prove they’re looking for work, but there’s not usually a requirement that you’re applying to things you’re likely to get.

      • MangoCats@feddit.it
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        6 hours ago

        If you call unemployment “pay” - it’s such a small amount compared to a real job it’s ridiculous, but on the other hand: you’ve got no other sources of income so: jumping their hoops is the best way to get some money coming in.

    • SippyCup@lemmy.world
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      11 hours ago

      It’s weird. I was applying for an engineering tech job and they asked if I’ve ever knowingly violated the second law of thermodynamics, but wouldn’t tell me if it was a deal breaker if I had. Anyway that place burned to the ground before I heard back on my interview anyway.

      • MangoCats@feddit.it
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        6 hours ago

        I was considering “cabin toilets” for a place off grid. It came down to composting and incineration models. While I was deciding, the incineration toilet factory burned down. Apparently that was Incinolet in 1994?

  • thevoidzero@lemmy.world
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    13 hours ago

    Interviews actually cost the company. They have to pay those people interviewing you, and not working for clients at that time. That’s why I don’t see many applications going to interview phase at all. Most applications are just filtered by AI, or some HR and it never goes to the actual hiring manager. And they don’t interview unless they are pretty sure about wanting to hire the candidate. At least the companies without ghost jobs do that.

    But HR only interviews are probably different, they might do interviews to justify their job.

    • zbyte64@awful.systems
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      10 hours ago

      OK, but who does it cost more? The person being interviewed is also burning opportunity and time but we assume it’s free because no one is paying them?

      • HCSOThrowaway@lemmy.world
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        8 hours ago

        Sounds like it wastes both sides’ time and money, but measuring up to determine who is wasting the most time and money doesn’t really help anything other than furthering Whataboutisms.

        Ideally, we change to a system that doesn’t do that (nearly as much).

        • SubArcticTundra@lemmy.mlOP
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          5 hours ago

          It makes me wonder why companies chose to waste to many people’s time then if it costs them money too. Perhaps that cost hurts them less than the interviewees?

          • sunsofold@lemmy.zip
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            2 hours ago

            The world of business is FILLED with people more interested in their own leisure than the company’s benefit at every level. Everyone knows about the slackers making minimum wage but every time you hear a company has hired a contractor, that’s a manager looking at the choice between A) putting in the time and effort to hire an employee, train them, integrate them into the team, and manage and support them as they do necessary work, or B) just writing a check from company funds to the contracting company and taking off early to get a few beers with their buddies, and wouldn’t you know it, somehow it seems like the answer is always to spend the company’s money.

            • SubArcticTundra@lemmy.mlOP
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              1 hour ago

              Dang, hiring feels like the last thing I’d want to outsource. Don’t they literally need to know what the job entails to be able to hire correctly? Maybe I’m overestimating the effectivity of corpos

  • melsaskca@lemmy.ca
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    14 hours ago

    The hiring process has moved further and further from the company and is controlled by a bunch of middle-man companies who found a niche and made an industry out of it. No wonder hiring has become more expensive and riskier for a corp.

  • jtrek@startrek.website
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    13 hours ago

    They should also be forced to pay a year’s salary to everyone who applied to a ghost job. (That’s a job that’s not real and they have no intention of filling)

  • Waterpumpee@lemmus.org
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    19 hours ago

    Had an interview at a company. They asked me to do a coding challenge. Solve it without AI. The task was written in AI and requirements all over the place. Took me 6hrs+. I sent it and they wanted to see me in person. Took half a day off to make to the interview. Meeting went well. They call me and tell me my assignment was not what they expected.

    There should be a hefty fine for this behavoiur.

    • SabinStargem@lemmy.today
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      11 hours ago

      Kinda reminds me of a course that I took from Google, regarding IT. To earn my certification, I had to complete assorted challenges…but the assignments had broken links, or not compatible with my browser (Firefox). Sure, I am supposedly certified, but I was doing weird workarounds to earn it, which sometimes allowed me to skip parts of the online testing.

      It is stupid, and I refuse to believe that I am actually qualified to be “Google IT Support”.

      • sp3ctr4l@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        7 hours ago

        I would say that solving the problem in the way you did makes you well or over qualified, lol.

        ‘Wait, all of this is stupid!’

        That guy/gal. You want them, that one, the one with the capacity to think outside of the box, within the specific technical realm of the job.

        But, we live in a world run by MBA’s with extremely fragile egos, so, we get insane nonsense instead, where every business process is basically built around making incompetent idiots feel smart.

    • maturelemontree@lemmy.zip
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      16 hours ago

      What did they mean by not what they expected? Like they didn’t expect you to solve it, or didn’t expect the AI to give you an assignment?

      • sp3ctr4l@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        13 hours ago

        They mean they are lying to the applicant’s face, gaslighting them.

        What they did was the equivalent of contracting out a coder to engineer some software for them, without paying them for it.

        The job market itself is a fraud, a scam.

        Saying ‘its not what we expected’ is simply what they are legally required to do in order to be able to frame the entire thing such that they can’t be sued for getting useful labor while giving no compensation.

        Its a framing device, frame it as a job interview. Its ‘oh your test performance was not satisfactory’, written on some kind of document somewhere. The actual point is to get free software engineering services.

        Its a scam.

        Think about if you tried to do this with physical, mechanical engineering or architecture: here, draw up some plans for this device or this part of a building… oh, we’re sorry, that’s not satisfactory… but anything you submitted during the job interview, thats the intellectual property of the company now.


        You can also scam the job market itself by simply coordinating with a market research firm, have a set of companies issue an array of ‘job openings’ that are not real job openings, what they actually are is a way to do a survey of the job market itself.

        Its all a complete fucking joke at this point.

        Also, a metric companies report on, and then those reports get amalgamated into broad economic data… is just literally ‘how many job openings did we post’.

        So, if you wanna look like you are a growing company, for extremely little cost… just post fake job openings, that you’ll never hire for.

        Have 1/3 or so of all job openings by all companies look like this, idiot ‘economists’ who can’t figure out what is actually going on, look at the aggregate numbers and conclude the economy is growing 1/3 faster than it is.

        And there’s also the classic ‘we want to do an internal promotion, but for legal reasons we need to pretend its a competetive search through the whole job market, so here’s a bunch of fake job openings where everyone other than our internal person will be unsatisfactory’.


        Recruiters and HR know all this shit, they do it regularly, and they’re usually not very keen to tell you about it.

        They’re all scum, as low and contemptible as a scammy car loan/lease salesman, or a ‘date the rate marry the home’ used house salesman.

  • topperharlie@lemmy.world
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    15 hours ago

    I guess there is a selection bias on internet comments, but as someone that has been on the interviewer side several times now, I have to say: the interview process is not even remotely cheap for companies. At least the companies I worked for take them seriously and the time investment of senior professionals is huge, which is not cheap at all.

    On top of that, there is always pressure for hiring quick, so I don’t know which companies you guys are interviewing, but I don’t know any company that just likes “fooling around”.

    Maybe you are not choosing the correct companies on your applications? or maybe you are applying to meat grinder companies such as Meta or Amazon?

    As interviewer you would be surprised how many people apply to “senior embedded C developer” without much idea of how to even program, even with theoretical experience on the CV.

    This is a 2 sided problem, and I understand it might look one sided sometimes, but it is a very complex problem to solve. Believe me, no one wants to be “hiring manager”, but also, no one wants to deal with a bad team member.

    Paying interviewes directly would not help at all, as it would create a new level of mistrust for people trying to gamify the process. And this will end up being paid by honest job seekers and interviewers.

    Just a side note: I live in EU, not the corporate American dystopia, so my argument might not apply to the USA. For example, an error on hiring here becomes a huge problem lasting months, in USA I believe you can just fire people at will without prior notice, so you can be more reckless with the interviews.

    • MajorasMaskForever@lemmy.world
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      11 hours ago

      Senior embedded C developer here in the US. I can speak first hand experience at people applying to be on my team that have reasonable sounding experience and then collapse under interview questions.

      Everything else you said applies here too, legally we don’t have repercussions for firing someone quickly (once had a team member for two months), but a healthy org will try very hard to get hiring right because it can cause pretty bad morale to see a revolving door and there is a massive brain and resource drain having to constantly be training new people.