I would ask myself why I believed a word a recruiter said, chalk it up as a lesson learned, and move on.
I would ask myself why I believed a word a recruiter said, chalk it up as a lesson learned, and move on.
Practically perfect in every way....there's a time and (more importantly) a place for malarkey.
+5 Xeno Cool Points
Fingers like lightning
... is this your first bad experience with a recruiter? Consider yourself extremely lucky then.
Just move on. Get over yourself. Don't message the client and complain to them.
Still gathering requirements...
get over it . linkin request to the guy who interviewed you. might offrer you a contract in future ?
Leave it and move on. You're not going to "win" and will waste time and energy.
You had the info pre interview but went ahead. You had the info after the interview but did another.
Should have been very clear in the first interview about your arrangements and they could have said there and then if you were suitable Covid or not.
This is standard behaviour of a recruitment agent. In fact I think they probably have some crash course when they join the agency which teaches them on all these sneaky techniques. From agent point of view, he just wants a win and his fees. If you or company are not aligned with each other it is not his problem. He is banking on you accepting this gig in desperation if there is nothing else. Don’t be surprised if he asks you if it’s possible for you to sell your new born so you can take up this role.
Vote Corbyn ! Save this country !
Fingers like lightning
Reading that, seems only problem was agent not getting back to you?
What is the expectation - recruiter speaks to client, client realises you're so great that they'll change their minds on travel?
There was an opportunity, unfortunately your requirements and client expectations didn't meet. I doubt very much anything the agent said would change that. I'd worry about more things tbh like ghosting,.
More time posting than coding
Thanks all - I did send a message simply thanking the interviewer per some of the advice on here and received a connection request, so now time to move on.
I've been around a bit and played the game with recruiters, but I queried travel requirements immediately on seeing the job spec and what I received, as it turns out, was a blatant lie rather than the usual "sexing up" of a vacancy:
In regards to the travel that’s no longer the case that was their old way of working, things will be remote from now on and I just forgot to remove that from the JD.
As discussed it will only 1/2 days a week on client site (if even that) which is all expensed.
Seems to have resulted in a lot of wasted time all round. I'm not too butthurt now the dust has settled - everything happens for a reason, maybe I'm meant to stay as a contractor.![]()
Fingers like lightning
For perm roles, whether contingent or retained search, it's always wise to remember who the agent is representing. It's really the client as they are paying the agent. Once a role is down to the interview shortlist stage, the agent doesn't particularly care which of their candidates gets the job so long as one of them does.
I've had dealings with one recruiter this year at a boutique search firm who place people all the way up to £1m plus packages and he's still a sneaky s**t.