It is ok to hate a company that did not reschedule a interview? [on hold]





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A person look for me on Linkedin asking if I would be interest in a oportunity. She worked at the HR department in a Software Development company. When she send me the salary I get very interested. So I sent to her my CV and she schedule a simple interview with me. I went to that interview and she said to me that a technical challenge would be sent to me. Later in the same day, I started to solve the task, but even before I finished the challenge she sent me a message saying that her manager get very interested in my profile and asked for me if I could do a interview with him. I said yes and kept doing the challenge.



The problem is that I was so focused on the challenge that my tasks on my current company accumulated. Also, my team is in a very bad situation. So I thought that would no be fair with my current company and with my team mates simply not appear on my hour of work and going to the interview. So I sent her a message 4 hours before the interview saying that would not be possible to me to participate of the interview in that day and asked for reschedule. She said that would not be possible. I tried to insist, but she refused and saying that day would be the only one available. She replied me with the classic "We will save your CV with us!". But now I fell so much hate for this company. If they liked me so much why they could no reschedule? I know that I was wrong when I simply accept the interview invitation, but I just asked for a reschedule not to they built a rocket for me.



UPDATE: To make things clear. When I was on the first Interview, the woman said that the company was very comprehensive with hour. Also, they knew that I still on graduation, so I also have other issues to solve other than my professional life. Last, if they liked me so much, why they couldn't reschedule the interview for next day? Why this such a horrible things?










share|improve this question















put on hold as primarily opinion-based by Thomas Owens, David K, Dukeling, IDrinkandIKnowThings, gnat Nov 30 at 21:10


Many good questions generate some degree of opinion based on expert experience, but answers to this question will tend to be almost entirely based on opinions, rather than facts, references, or specific expertise. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.











  • 6




    Whether or not it's "okay" to hate someone isn't really on topic for this site. Are you looking for answers about how to behave in the interviewing process? Or how to handle pushy recruiters? Or anything else concrete?
    – dwizum
    Nov 30 at 20:11






  • 3




    So what question would you like us to answer for you? The only question in your post is the title, and we can't tell you who to hate or not.
    – David K
    Nov 30 at 20:19






  • 3




    Why was an interview task causing your work tasks to accumulate? That means either you're doing the interview task during work hours, or you're working overtime a lot, neither of which are good.
    – Dukeling
    Nov 30 at 20:22








  • 8




    Sounds like you had a chance and you blew it. You should learn from this not to cancel an interview at short notice, unless it is an emergency. A hiring company is not obligated to bend over backwards to accommodate your schedule.
    – Time4Tea
    Nov 30 at 20:37






  • 4




    Keep in mind that hate hurts you, but rarely hurts the person or thing that's hated. I would suggest a different approach, preferably one that involves learning something or at least forgetting and moving on.
    – Edwin Buck
    Nov 30 at 23:25

















up vote
-5
down vote

favorite












A person look for me on Linkedin asking if I would be interest in a oportunity. She worked at the HR department in a Software Development company. When she send me the salary I get very interested. So I sent to her my CV and she schedule a simple interview with me. I went to that interview and she said to me that a technical challenge would be sent to me. Later in the same day, I started to solve the task, but even before I finished the challenge she sent me a message saying that her manager get very interested in my profile and asked for me if I could do a interview with him. I said yes and kept doing the challenge.



The problem is that I was so focused on the challenge that my tasks on my current company accumulated. Also, my team is in a very bad situation. So I thought that would no be fair with my current company and with my team mates simply not appear on my hour of work and going to the interview. So I sent her a message 4 hours before the interview saying that would not be possible to me to participate of the interview in that day and asked for reschedule. She said that would not be possible. I tried to insist, but she refused and saying that day would be the only one available. She replied me with the classic "We will save your CV with us!". But now I fell so much hate for this company. If they liked me so much why they could no reschedule? I know that I was wrong when I simply accept the interview invitation, but I just asked for a reschedule not to they built a rocket for me.



UPDATE: To make things clear. When I was on the first Interview, the woman said that the company was very comprehensive with hour. Also, they knew that I still on graduation, so I also have other issues to solve other than my professional life. Last, if they liked me so much, why they couldn't reschedule the interview for next day? Why this such a horrible things?










share|improve this question















put on hold as primarily opinion-based by Thomas Owens, David K, Dukeling, IDrinkandIKnowThings, gnat Nov 30 at 21:10


Many good questions generate some degree of opinion based on expert experience, but answers to this question will tend to be almost entirely based on opinions, rather than facts, references, or specific expertise. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.











  • 6




    Whether or not it's "okay" to hate someone isn't really on topic for this site. Are you looking for answers about how to behave in the interviewing process? Or how to handle pushy recruiters? Or anything else concrete?
    – dwizum
    Nov 30 at 20:11






  • 3




    So what question would you like us to answer for you? The only question in your post is the title, and we can't tell you who to hate or not.
    – David K
    Nov 30 at 20:19






  • 3




    Why was an interview task causing your work tasks to accumulate? That means either you're doing the interview task during work hours, or you're working overtime a lot, neither of which are good.
    – Dukeling
    Nov 30 at 20:22








  • 8




    Sounds like you had a chance and you blew it. You should learn from this not to cancel an interview at short notice, unless it is an emergency. A hiring company is not obligated to bend over backwards to accommodate your schedule.
    – Time4Tea
    Nov 30 at 20:37






  • 4




    Keep in mind that hate hurts you, but rarely hurts the person or thing that's hated. I would suggest a different approach, preferably one that involves learning something or at least forgetting and moving on.
    – Edwin Buck
    Nov 30 at 23:25













up vote
-5
down vote

favorite









up vote
-5
down vote

favorite











A person look for me on Linkedin asking if I would be interest in a oportunity. She worked at the HR department in a Software Development company. When she send me the salary I get very interested. So I sent to her my CV and she schedule a simple interview with me. I went to that interview and she said to me that a technical challenge would be sent to me. Later in the same day, I started to solve the task, but even before I finished the challenge she sent me a message saying that her manager get very interested in my profile and asked for me if I could do a interview with him. I said yes and kept doing the challenge.



The problem is that I was so focused on the challenge that my tasks on my current company accumulated. Also, my team is in a very bad situation. So I thought that would no be fair with my current company and with my team mates simply not appear on my hour of work and going to the interview. So I sent her a message 4 hours before the interview saying that would not be possible to me to participate of the interview in that day and asked for reschedule. She said that would not be possible. I tried to insist, but she refused and saying that day would be the only one available. She replied me with the classic "We will save your CV with us!". But now I fell so much hate for this company. If they liked me so much why they could no reschedule? I know that I was wrong when I simply accept the interview invitation, but I just asked for a reschedule not to they built a rocket for me.



UPDATE: To make things clear. When I was on the first Interview, the woman said that the company was very comprehensive with hour. Also, they knew that I still on graduation, so I also have other issues to solve other than my professional life. Last, if they liked me so much, why they couldn't reschedule the interview for next day? Why this such a horrible things?










share|improve this question















A person look for me on Linkedin asking if I would be interest in a oportunity. She worked at the HR department in a Software Development company. When she send me the salary I get very interested. So I sent to her my CV and she schedule a simple interview with me. I went to that interview and she said to me that a technical challenge would be sent to me. Later in the same day, I started to solve the task, but even before I finished the challenge she sent me a message saying that her manager get very interested in my profile and asked for me if I could do a interview with him. I said yes and kept doing the challenge.



The problem is that I was so focused on the challenge that my tasks on my current company accumulated. Also, my team is in a very bad situation. So I thought that would no be fair with my current company and with my team mates simply not appear on my hour of work and going to the interview. So I sent her a message 4 hours before the interview saying that would not be possible to me to participate of the interview in that day and asked for reschedule. She said that would not be possible. I tried to insist, but she refused and saying that day would be the only one available. She replied me with the classic "We will save your CV with us!". But now I fell so much hate for this company. If they liked me so much why they could no reschedule? I know that I was wrong when I simply accept the interview invitation, but I just asked for a reschedule not to they built a rocket for me.



UPDATE: To make things clear. When I was on the first Interview, the woman said that the company was very comprehensive with hour. Also, they knew that I still on graduation, so I also have other issues to solve other than my professional life. Last, if they liked me so much, why they couldn't reschedule the interview for next day? Why this such a horrible things?







interviewing software-industry human-resources






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edited Nov 30 at 23:22

























asked Nov 30 at 20:04









Celso Junior

145




145




put on hold as primarily opinion-based by Thomas Owens, David K, Dukeling, IDrinkandIKnowThings, gnat Nov 30 at 21:10


Many good questions generate some degree of opinion based on expert experience, but answers to this question will tend to be almost entirely based on opinions, rather than facts, references, or specific expertise. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.






put on hold as primarily opinion-based by Thomas Owens, David K, Dukeling, IDrinkandIKnowThings, gnat Nov 30 at 21:10


Many good questions generate some degree of opinion based on expert experience, but answers to this question will tend to be almost entirely based on opinions, rather than facts, references, or specific expertise. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.










  • 6




    Whether or not it's "okay" to hate someone isn't really on topic for this site. Are you looking for answers about how to behave in the interviewing process? Or how to handle pushy recruiters? Or anything else concrete?
    – dwizum
    Nov 30 at 20:11






  • 3




    So what question would you like us to answer for you? The only question in your post is the title, and we can't tell you who to hate or not.
    – David K
    Nov 30 at 20:19






  • 3




    Why was an interview task causing your work tasks to accumulate? That means either you're doing the interview task during work hours, or you're working overtime a lot, neither of which are good.
    – Dukeling
    Nov 30 at 20:22








  • 8




    Sounds like you had a chance and you blew it. You should learn from this not to cancel an interview at short notice, unless it is an emergency. A hiring company is not obligated to bend over backwards to accommodate your schedule.
    – Time4Tea
    Nov 30 at 20:37






  • 4




    Keep in mind that hate hurts you, but rarely hurts the person or thing that's hated. I would suggest a different approach, preferably one that involves learning something or at least forgetting and moving on.
    – Edwin Buck
    Nov 30 at 23:25














  • 6




    Whether or not it's "okay" to hate someone isn't really on topic for this site. Are you looking for answers about how to behave in the interviewing process? Or how to handle pushy recruiters? Or anything else concrete?
    – dwizum
    Nov 30 at 20:11






  • 3




    So what question would you like us to answer for you? The only question in your post is the title, and we can't tell you who to hate or not.
    – David K
    Nov 30 at 20:19






  • 3




    Why was an interview task causing your work tasks to accumulate? That means either you're doing the interview task during work hours, or you're working overtime a lot, neither of which are good.
    – Dukeling
    Nov 30 at 20:22








  • 8




    Sounds like you had a chance and you blew it. You should learn from this not to cancel an interview at short notice, unless it is an emergency. A hiring company is not obligated to bend over backwards to accommodate your schedule.
    – Time4Tea
    Nov 30 at 20:37






  • 4




    Keep in mind that hate hurts you, but rarely hurts the person or thing that's hated. I would suggest a different approach, preferably one that involves learning something or at least forgetting and moving on.
    – Edwin Buck
    Nov 30 at 23:25








6




6




Whether or not it's "okay" to hate someone isn't really on topic for this site. Are you looking for answers about how to behave in the interviewing process? Or how to handle pushy recruiters? Or anything else concrete?
– dwizum
Nov 30 at 20:11




Whether or not it's "okay" to hate someone isn't really on topic for this site. Are you looking for answers about how to behave in the interviewing process? Or how to handle pushy recruiters? Or anything else concrete?
– dwizum
Nov 30 at 20:11




3




3




So what question would you like us to answer for you? The only question in your post is the title, and we can't tell you who to hate or not.
– David K
Nov 30 at 20:19




So what question would you like us to answer for you? The only question in your post is the title, and we can't tell you who to hate or not.
– David K
Nov 30 at 20:19




3




3




Why was an interview task causing your work tasks to accumulate? That means either you're doing the interview task during work hours, or you're working overtime a lot, neither of which are good.
– Dukeling
Nov 30 at 20:22






Why was an interview task causing your work tasks to accumulate? That means either you're doing the interview task during work hours, or you're working overtime a lot, neither of which are good.
– Dukeling
Nov 30 at 20:22






8




8




Sounds like you had a chance and you blew it. You should learn from this not to cancel an interview at short notice, unless it is an emergency. A hiring company is not obligated to bend over backwards to accommodate your schedule.
– Time4Tea
Nov 30 at 20:37




Sounds like you had a chance and you blew it. You should learn from this not to cancel an interview at short notice, unless it is an emergency. A hiring company is not obligated to bend over backwards to accommodate your schedule.
– Time4Tea
Nov 30 at 20:37




4




4




Keep in mind that hate hurts you, but rarely hurts the person or thing that's hated. I would suggest a different approach, preferably one that involves learning something or at least forgetting and moving on.
– Edwin Buck
Nov 30 at 23:25




Keep in mind that hate hurts you, but rarely hurts the person or thing that's hated. I would suggest a different approach, preferably one that involves learning something or at least forgetting and moving on.
– Edwin Buck
Nov 30 at 23:25










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
17
down vote













You don't cancel interviews with such a short notice unless you're sick or have had a different very important incident that made your participation impossible.



By scheduling and cancelling because "your tasks at the current job accumulated" you showed them you are bad at planning and foreseeing the effects of your decisions and that you can't be counted on.



You are yourself to blame for the rejection. Of course, we all make mistakes. It's not the end of the world but try to learn from it.






share|improve this answer



















  • 3




    Totally disgree. I currently work as trainee not as a full job worker and I'm on graduation course of Computer Sciente, so I had more tasks than my job.
    – Celso Junior
    Nov 30 at 20:14






  • 10




    The point is, you committed to a scheduled interview knowing all that (or knowing it was possible), and then changed your mind.
    – dwizum
    Nov 30 at 20:15






  • 6




    Their concern for candidates is that they are able to agree to a commitment and then stick with it, barring extreme unforeseeable circumstances.
    – dwizum
    Nov 30 at 20:22






  • 5




    @CelsoJunior You're free to disagree, but this answer is likely how the company sees it, and how many other companies will see it. To add to the answer: they can also see it as a sign that you don't respect them or their time (they may have lost out on that time they booked especially for you, because you decided you had better things to do).
    – Dukeling
    Nov 30 at 20:39








  • 2




    @CelsoJunior 'They could be a little complacent don't you think? ' They could be, but they don't have to be. You may be confused by the transition from school to the workplace. Schools have to give at least lip service to caring about you and your personal development. Schools will generally cut you slack and provide lots of 2nd chances. The primary goal of most private employers is to make money. They offer benefits only insofar as employing you helps them solve their problems. The more problems you cause for them, the less likely they are to be interested in employing you.
    – Charles E. Grant
    Nov 30 at 21:25




















up vote
6
down vote














It is ok to hate a company that did not reschedule a interview?




No it's not. It's unprofessional, immature, and counterproductive.



Sometimes things work out, sometimes they don't. If they don't you should objectively analyze the situation and learn from it. In this case, you made a commitment (for an interview) and try to back out on short notice. That signals to the hiring company that you may be disorganized and not reliable, so they dug in and see what you would do. You still backed out and so they lost interest. Perfectly normal and smart behavior for a hiring manager.



You can certainly chose to "hate" the company, but what would you hope to gain or achieve from this? It would be much smarter to apologize to them "I'm sorry I had to cancel the interview on short notice, but an emergency came up at my current job that I really needed to handle". Maybe they buy it and you can leave the door open for future opportunities. If not, you are no worse off than you currently are



Professionals make decision with their brains and leave emotions out of it as much as possible. Don't get me wrong: it's great that you got excited about this new opportunity, but it seems you also got carried away and did not plan your approach properly.






share|improve this answer

















  • 1




    Well, there are times when you use emotions effectively to get what you want. Of course, this is not one of those situations.
    – gnasher729
    Nov 30 at 21:21










  • I updated the question. Please check' out.
    – Celso Junior
    Nov 30 at 23:23






  • 3




    @CelsoJunior: your update doesn't change anything. The fact is that you failed to deliver on an important commitment. The way they see it is probably: "If the guy isn't capable of managing a really important commitment like an interview, he probably can't manage regular day to day work at all". Of course they could have accomodated you but why should they? They probably liked your technical skills but were turned off by communication/organizational style. You need both for a decent job.
    – Hilmar
    Dec 1 at 1:52


















2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes








2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes








up vote
17
down vote













You don't cancel interviews with such a short notice unless you're sick or have had a different very important incident that made your participation impossible.



By scheduling and cancelling because "your tasks at the current job accumulated" you showed them you are bad at planning and foreseeing the effects of your decisions and that you can't be counted on.



You are yourself to blame for the rejection. Of course, we all make mistakes. It's not the end of the world but try to learn from it.






share|improve this answer



















  • 3




    Totally disgree. I currently work as trainee not as a full job worker and I'm on graduation course of Computer Sciente, so I had more tasks than my job.
    – Celso Junior
    Nov 30 at 20:14






  • 10




    The point is, you committed to a scheduled interview knowing all that (or knowing it was possible), and then changed your mind.
    – dwizum
    Nov 30 at 20:15






  • 6




    Their concern for candidates is that they are able to agree to a commitment and then stick with it, barring extreme unforeseeable circumstances.
    – dwizum
    Nov 30 at 20:22






  • 5




    @CelsoJunior You're free to disagree, but this answer is likely how the company sees it, and how many other companies will see it. To add to the answer: they can also see it as a sign that you don't respect them or their time (they may have lost out on that time they booked especially for you, because you decided you had better things to do).
    – Dukeling
    Nov 30 at 20:39








  • 2




    @CelsoJunior 'They could be a little complacent don't you think? ' They could be, but they don't have to be. You may be confused by the transition from school to the workplace. Schools have to give at least lip service to caring about you and your personal development. Schools will generally cut you slack and provide lots of 2nd chances. The primary goal of most private employers is to make money. They offer benefits only insofar as employing you helps them solve their problems. The more problems you cause for them, the less likely they are to be interested in employing you.
    – Charles E. Grant
    Nov 30 at 21:25

















up vote
17
down vote













You don't cancel interviews with such a short notice unless you're sick or have had a different very important incident that made your participation impossible.



By scheduling and cancelling because "your tasks at the current job accumulated" you showed them you are bad at planning and foreseeing the effects of your decisions and that you can't be counted on.



You are yourself to blame for the rejection. Of course, we all make mistakes. It's not the end of the world but try to learn from it.






share|improve this answer



















  • 3




    Totally disgree. I currently work as trainee not as a full job worker and I'm on graduation course of Computer Sciente, so I had more tasks than my job.
    – Celso Junior
    Nov 30 at 20:14






  • 10




    The point is, you committed to a scheduled interview knowing all that (or knowing it was possible), and then changed your mind.
    – dwizum
    Nov 30 at 20:15






  • 6




    Their concern for candidates is that they are able to agree to a commitment and then stick with it, barring extreme unforeseeable circumstances.
    – dwizum
    Nov 30 at 20:22






  • 5




    @CelsoJunior You're free to disagree, but this answer is likely how the company sees it, and how many other companies will see it. To add to the answer: they can also see it as a sign that you don't respect them or their time (they may have lost out on that time they booked especially for you, because you decided you had better things to do).
    – Dukeling
    Nov 30 at 20:39








  • 2




    @CelsoJunior 'They could be a little complacent don't you think? ' They could be, but they don't have to be. You may be confused by the transition from school to the workplace. Schools have to give at least lip service to caring about you and your personal development. Schools will generally cut you slack and provide lots of 2nd chances. The primary goal of most private employers is to make money. They offer benefits only insofar as employing you helps them solve their problems. The more problems you cause for them, the less likely they are to be interested in employing you.
    – Charles E. Grant
    Nov 30 at 21:25















up vote
17
down vote










up vote
17
down vote









You don't cancel interviews with such a short notice unless you're sick or have had a different very important incident that made your participation impossible.



By scheduling and cancelling because "your tasks at the current job accumulated" you showed them you are bad at planning and foreseeing the effects of your decisions and that you can't be counted on.



You are yourself to blame for the rejection. Of course, we all make mistakes. It's not the end of the world but try to learn from it.






share|improve this answer














You don't cancel interviews with such a short notice unless you're sick or have had a different very important incident that made your participation impossible.



By scheduling and cancelling because "your tasks at the current job accumulated" you showed them you are bad at planning and foreseeing the effects of your decisions and that you can't be counted on.



You are yourself to blame for the rejection. Of course, we all make mistakes. It's not the end of the world but try to learn from it.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Nov 30 at 20:24

























answered Nov 30 at 20:11









385703

9,17361647




9,17361647








  • 3




    Totally disgree. I currently work as trainee not as a full job worker and I'm on graduation course of Computer Sciente, so I had more tasks than my job.
    – Celso Junior
    Nov 30 at 20:14






  • 10




    The point is, you committed to a scheduled interview knowing all that (or knowing it was possible), and then changed your mind.
    – dwizum
    Nov 30 at 20:15






  • 6




    Their concern for candidates is that they are able to agree to a commitment and then stick with it, barring extreme unforeseeable circumstances.
    – dwizum
    Nov 30 at 20:22






  • 5




    @CelsoJunior You're free to disagree, but this answer is likely how the company sees it, and how many other companies will see it. To add to the answer: they can also see it as a sign that you don't respect them or their time (they may have lost out on that time they booked especially for you, because you decided you had better things to do).
    – Dukeling
    Nov 30 at 20:39








  • 2




    @CelsoJunior 'They could be a little complacent don't you think? ' They could be, but they don't have to be. You may be confused by the transition from school to the workplace. Schools have to give at least lip service to caring about you and your personal development. Schools will generally cut you slack and provide lots of 2nd chances. The primary goal of most private employers is to make money. They offer benefits only insofar as employing you helps them solve their problems. The more problems you cause for them, the less likely they are to be interested in employing you.
    – Charles E. Grant
    Nov 30 at 21:25
















  • 3




    Totally disgree. I currently work as trainee not as a full job worker and I'm on graduation course of Computer Sciente, so I had more tasks than my job.
    – Celso Junior
    Nov 30 at 20:14






  • 10




    The point is, you committed to a scheduled interview knowing all that (or knowing it was possible), and then changed your mind.
    – dwizum
    Nov 30 at 20:15






  • 6




    Their concern for candidates is that they are able to agree to a commitment and then stick with it, barring extreme unforeseeable circumstances.
    – dwizum
    Nov 30 at 20:22






  • 5




    @CelsoJunior You're free to disagree, but this answer is likely how the company sees it, and how many other companies will see it. To add to the answer: they can also see it as a sign that you don't respect them or their time (they may have lost out on that time they booked especially for you, because you decided you had better things to do).
    – Dukeling
    Nov 30 at 20:39








  • 2




    @CelsoJunior 'They could be a little complacent don't you think? ' They could be, but they don't have to be. You may be confused by the transition from school to the workplace. Schools have to give at least lip service to caring about you and your personal development. Schools will generally cut you slack and provide lots of 2nd chances. The primary goal of most private employers is to make money. They offer benefits only insofar as employing you helps them solve their problems. The more problems you cause for them, the less likely they are to be interested in employing you.
    – Charles E. Grant
    Nov 30 at 21:25










3




3




Totally disgree. I currently work as trainee not as a full job worker and I'm on graduation course of Computer Sciente, so I had more tasks than my job.
– Celso Junior
Nov 30 at 20:14




Totally disgree. I currently work as trainee not as a full job worker and I'm on graduation course of Computer Sciente, so I had more tasks than my job.
– Celso Junior
Nov 30 at 20:14




10




10




The point is, you committed to a scheduled interview knowing all that (or knowing it was possible), and then changed your mind.
– dwizum
Nov 30 at 20:15




The point is, you committed to a scheduled interview knowing all that (or knowing it was possible), and then changed your mind.
– dwizum
Nov 30 at 20:15




6




6




Their concern for candidates is that they are able to agree to a commitment and then stick with it, barring extreme unforeseeable circumstances.
– dwizum
Nov 30 at 20:22




Their concern for candidates is that they are able to agree to a commitment and then stick with it, barring extreme unforeseeable circumstances.
– dwizum
Nov 30 at 20:22




5




5




@CelsoJunior You're free to disagree, but this answer is likely how the company sees it, and how many other companies will see it. To add to the answer: they can also see it as a sign that you don't respect them or their time (they may have lost out on that time they booked especially for you, because you decided you had better things to do).
– Dukeling
Nov 30 at 20:39






@CelsoJunior You're free to disagree, but this answer is likely how the company sees it, and how many other companies will see it. To add to the answer: they can also see it as a sign that you don't respect them or their time (they may have lost out on that time they booked especially for you, because you decided you had better things to do).
– Dukeling
Nov 30 at 20:39






2




2




@CelsoJunior 'They could be a little complacent don't you think? ' They could be, but they don't have to be. You may be confused by the transition from school to the workplace. Schools have to give at least lip service to caring about you and your personal development. Schools will generally cut you slack and provide lots of 2nd chances. The primary goal of most private employers is to make money. They offer benefits only insofar as employing you helps them solve their problems. The more problems you cause for them, the less likely they are to be interested in employing you.
– Charles E. Grant
Nov 30 at 21:25






@CelsoJunior 'They could be a little complacent don't you think? ' They could be, but they don't have to be. You may be confused by the transition from school to the workplace. Schools have to give at least lip service to caring about you and your personal development. Schools will generally cut you slack and provide lots of 2nd chances. The primary goal of most private employers is to make money. They offer benefits only insofar as employing you helps them solve their problems. The more problems you cause for them, the less likely they are to be interested in employing you.
– Charles E. Grant
Nov 30 at 21:25














up vote
6
down vote














It is ok to hate a company that did not reschedule a interview?




No it's not. It's unprofessional, immature, and counterproductive.



Sometimes things work out, sometimes they don't. If they don't you should objectively analyze the situation and learn from it. In this case, you made a commitment (for an interview) and try to back out on short notice. That signals to the hiring company that you may be disorganized and not reliable, so they dug in and see what you would do. You still backed out and so they lost interest. Perfectly normal and smart behavior for a hiring manager.



You can certainly chose to "hate" the company, but what would you hope to gain or achieve from this? It would be much smarter to apologize to them "I'm sorry I had to cancel the interview on short notice, but an emergency came up at my current job that I really needed to handle". Maybe they buy it and you can leave the door open for future opportunities. If not, you are no worse off than you currently are



Professionals make decision with their brains and leave emotions out of it as much as possible. Don't get me wrong: it's great that you got excited about this new opportunity, but it seems you also got carried away and did not plan your approach properly.






share|improve this answer

















  • 1




    Well, there are times when you use emotions effectively to get what you want. Of course, this is not one of those situations.
    – gnasher729
    Nov 30 at 21:21










  • I updated the question. Please check' out.
    – Celso Junior
    Nov 30 at 23:23






  • 3




    @CelsoJunior: your update doesn't change anything. The fact is that you failed to deliver on an important commitment. The way they see it is probably: "If the guy isn't capable of managing a really important commitment like an interview, he probably can't manage regular day to day work at all". Of course they could have accomodated you but why should they? They probably liked your technical skills but were turned off by communication/organizational style. You need both for a decent job.
    – Hilmar
    Dec 1 at 1:52















up vote
6
down vote














It is ok to hate a company that did not reschedule a interview?




No it's not. It's unprofessional, immature, and counterproductive.



Sometimes things work out, sometimes they don't. If they don't you should objectively analyze the situation and learn from it. In this case, you made a commitment (for an interview) and try to back out on short notice. That signals to the hiring company that you may be disorganized and not reliable, so they dug in and see what you would do. You still backed out and so they lost interest. Perfectly normal and smart behavior for a hiring manager.



You can certainly chose to "hate" the company, but what would you hope to gain or achieve from this? It would be much smarter to apologize to them "I'm sorry I had to cancel the interview on short notice, but an emergency came up at my current job that I really needed to handle". Maybe they buy it and you can leave the door open for future opportunities. If not, you are no worse off than you currently are



Professionals make decision with their brains and leave emotions out of it as much as possible. Don't get me wrong: it's great that you got excited about this new opportunity, but it seems you also got carried away and did not plan your approach properly.






share|improve this answer

















  • 1




    Well, there are times when you use emotions effectively to get what you want. Of course, this is not one of those situations.
    – gnasher729
    Nov 30 at 21:21










  • I updated the question. Please check' out.
    – Celso Junior
    Nov 30 at 23:23






  • 3




    @CelsoJunior: your update doesn't change anything. The fact is that you failed to deliver on an important commitment. The way they see it is probably: "If the guy isn't capable of managing a really important commitment like an interview, he probably can't manage regular day to day work at all". Of course they could have accomodated you but why should they? They probably liked your technical skills but were turned off by communication/organizational style. You need both for a decent job.
    – Hilmar
    Dec 1 at 1:52













up vote
6
down vote










up vote
6
down vote










It is ok to hate a company that did not reschedule a interview?




No it's not. It's unprofessional, immature, and counterproductive.



Sometimes things work out, sometimes they don't. If they don't you should objectively analyze the situation and learn from it. In this case, you made a commitment (for an interview) and try to back out on short notice. That signals to the hiring company that you may be disorganized and not reliable, so they dug in and see what you would do. You still backed out and so they lost interest. Perfectly normal and smart behavior for a hiring manager.



You can certainly chose to "hate" the company, but what would you hope to gain or achieve from this? It would be much smarter to apologize to them "I'm sorry I had to cancel the interview on short notice, but an emergency came up at my current job that I really needed to handle". Maybe they buy it and you can leave the door open for future opportunities. If not, you are no worse off than you currently are



Professionals make decision with their brains and leave emotions out of it as much as possible. Don't get me wrong: it's great that you got excited about this new opportunity, but it seems you also got carried away and did not plan your approach properly.






share|improve this answer













It is ok to hate a company that did not reschedule a interview?




No it's not. It's unprofessional, immature, and counterproductive.



Sometimes things work out, sometimes they don't. If they don't you should objectively analyze the situation and learn from it. In this case, you made a commitment (for an interview) and try to back out on short notice. That signals to the hiring company that you may be disorganized and not reliable, so they dug in and see what you would do. You still backed out and so they lost interest. Perfectly normal and smart behavior for a hiring manager.



You can certainly chose to "hate" the company, but what would you hope to gain or achieve from this? It would be much smarter to apologize to them "I'm sorry I had to cancel the interview on short notice, but an emergency came up at my current job that I really needed to handle". Maybe they buy it and you can leave the door open for future opportunities. If not, you are no worse off than you currently are



Professionals make decision with their brains and leave emotions out of it as much as possible. Don't get me wrong: it's great that you got excited about this new opportunity, but it seems you also got carried away and did not plan your approach properly.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Nov 30 at 21:01









Hilmar

23.9k65872




23.9k65872








  • 1




    Well, there are times when you use emotions effectively to get what you want. Of course, this is not one of those situations.
    – gnasher729
    Nov 30 at 21:21










  • I updated the question. Please check' out.
    – Celso Junior
    Nov 30 at 23:23






  • 3




    @CelsoJunior: your update doesn't change anything. The fact is that you failed to deliver on an important commitment. The way they see it is probably: "If the guy isn't capable of managing a really important commitment like an interview, he probably can't manage regular day to day work at all". Of course they could have accomodated you but why should they? They probably liked your technical skills but were turned off by communication/organizational style. You need both for a decent job.
    – Hilmar
    Dec 1 at 1:52














  • 1




    Well, there are times when you use emotions effectively to get what you want. Of course, this is not one of those situations.
    – gnasher729
    Nov 30 at 21:21










  • I updated the question. Please check' out.
    – Celso Junior
    Nov 30 at 23:23






  • 3




    @CelsoJunior: your update doesn't change anything. The fact is that you failed to deliver on an important commitment. The way they see it is probably: "If the guy isn't capable of managing a really important commitment like an interview, he probably can't manage regular day to day work at all". Of course they could have accomodated you but why should they? They probably liked your technical skills but were turned off by communication/organizational style. You need both for a decent job.
    – Hilmar
    Dec 1 at 1:52








1




1




Well, there are times when you use emotions effectively to get what you want. Of course, this is not one of those situations.
– gnasher729
Nov 30 at 21:21




Well, there are times when you use emotions effectively to get what you want. Of course, this is not one of those situations.
– gnasher729
Nov 30 at 21:21












I updated the question. Please check' out.
– Celso Junior
Nov 30 at 23:23




I updated the question. Please check' out.
– Celso Junior
Nov 30 at 23:23




3




3




@CelsoJunior: your update doesn't change anything. The fact is that you failed to deliver on an important commitment. The way they see it is probably: "If the guy isn't capable of managing a really important commitment like an interview, he probably can't manage regular day to day work at all". Of course they could have accomodated you but why should they? They probably liked your technical skills but were turned off by communication/organizational style. You need both for a decent job.
– Hilmar
Dec 1 at 1:52




@CelsoJunior: your update doesn't change anything. The fact is that you failed to deliver on an important commitment. The way they see it is probably: "If the guy isn't capable of managing a really important commitment like an interview, he probably can't manage regular day to day work at all". Of course they could have accomodated you but why should they? They probably liked your technical skills but were turned off by communication/organizational style. You need both for a decent job.
– Hilmar
Dec 1 at 1:52



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