Published Aug 20, 2012
whichone'spink, BSN, RN
1,473 Posts
I messed up today on one phone interview. There were questions, simple questions, that completely stumped me, and that awkwardness definitely came across during the phone interview. Should I not bother to go for the face-to-face interview? The deck is completely stacked against me after this.
Has anyone here flubbed a phone interview and ended up having a better face-to-face interview, and got a job?
TheCommuter, BSN, RN
102 Articles; 27,612 Posts
I would attend the face-to-face interview and use it as a chance to impress the interviewer, display your passion and knowledge, come across as the best person for the job, and basically redeem yourself after the supposedly flopped phone interview. Good luck to you!
leinasmom
55 Posts
I agree..let them tell you no before you assume you total out of the game. Brush up and go impress them in person. Best of luck.
cheezed
2 Posts
I would still go. Even if it goes bad again, at least you can look back at the interview and use that as a learning experience. The next time you have an interview, you'd be more prepared. You have nothing to lose.
eleectrosaurus
149 Posts
Do the face to face! You can redeem yourself. I did a skype interview about a month ago, it felt very weird and awkward! They asked if i wanted to do another skype for a second interview. NOPE, i flew over, nailed the interview and got the job!
Good luck!
Thank you for the feedback. I am going to cancel the face-to-face interview. I am traveling from another state, and it would just be a waste of time and money. I am paying a lot for a hotel, and to go to a face-to-face interview with the deck stacked against me is just a waste.
I have no job, I have no money, and I am running out of my savings. How could I screw up so badly?
NurseCard, ADN
2,850 Posts
Do you have the funds to go to this interview? Do you have other
opportunities in your area? Do you want this job? Do you NEED
this job? These are all questions that you need to ask
yourself. =) If you don't have opportunities in your area, and
you have the funds for this interview, or can get them, I
would go.
Double-Helix, BSN, RN
3,377 Posts
They gave you a face-to-face interview, so you can't have messed up the phone interview that badly. We always judge ourselves more harshly than others judge us. Go to the interview and knock the socks off the interviewer. Don't sell yourself short and bow out of the opportunity.
The face-to-face was scheduled at the same time the phone interview was scheduled. Now they have second thoughts about me. I should just forget about the face-to-face because the person who conducted the phone interview will prejudice the next two interviewers.
there are 100's of people on this site who would love to have any kind of interview. while you're having a pity party and are going to throw an opportunity away. grow up and quit feeling sorry for yourself
CherylRNBSN
182 Posts
That is harsh. Like to knock someone when they are down much?
I do not assume he/she is having a "pity party". I think the poster is upset over her performance, and that is understandable.
I offer her/him this: take this as a learning opportunity. You now know how NOT to flub a phone interview.
You will do better next time. We have all made mistakes. All part of growing. (Not to be construed as me telling you to "grow up".)
Thank you for the feedback. I am going to cancel the face-to-face interview. I am traveling from another state, and it would just be a waste of time and money. I am paying a lot for a hotel, and to go to a face-to-face interview with the deck stacked against me is just a waste. I have no job, I have no money, and I am running out of my savings. How could I screw up so badly?
No way to answer this without knowing HOW you screwed up.
But I detect a little panic in your voice, i.e., no money, running out of savings, no job...
I would advise you to attend interview if it would not be an impossible burden, just for the interview experience. And you MAY surprise yourself at how you recover.
If you can't make that happen, stop beating yourself up, and keep applying. Another opportunity will come along, and you will be far better prepared.
Good luck, and Godspeed!