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'Most job postings aren’t real': HR admits to curious employee that they advertise fake jobs to keep an inventory of candidates “just in case”, leading to heavy criticism

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  • Job candidates preparing for job interview
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  • Most job postings aren’t real. HR admitted it to me.

    I asked HR why my company keeps advertising jobs we have zero intention of filling, and they were way more honest than I expected.
  • They told me the roles are basically fake by design. The company assumes a certain percentage of people will quit every year, so they keep job listings up constantly to build a "bench" of candidates.
  • That way, when someone finally burns out and leaves, they can replace them immediately instead of fixing why people keep quitting.
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  • They also said the jobs stay posted "just in case" a unicorn candidate applies - even if there is no position, no budget, and no plan to hire anyone.
  • So if you've been applying, interviewing, doing take-home assignments, and getting ghosted... there's a good chance the job never existed in the first place.
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  • You weren't rejected. You were inventory. And then companies turn around and say "no one wants to work."
  • Woman Holding Hiring Post
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  • Squidgical It absolutely should be illegal though. All they're doing is wasting time of people looking for work, therefore making it harder to find work, therefore wasting taxpayer money. If you don't hire someone within 30 days of advertising a vacancy, you get a fine. Do so twice in a year, someone goes to jail. We need to put an end to the weak attitude towards companies. The law should be draconian towards companies, in proportion to their gross revenue.
  • blinkbeautiex Original Poster's Reply this is the part that really stuck with me. it creates the illusion that jobs are everywhere while people are burning months applying to positions that were never real.
  • Jump-Rope-City Please name them.
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  • Alternative_Tackle35 This is true. I help companies with IT matters. The appearance of hiring is more important than actually hiring. Give HR more to bitch about - "cant' find people", "no qualitied candidates" etc.
  • Ok_Serve_4099 What they didn't tell you is they file for payroll tax deductions by claiming that they are hiring.
  • VariationDifferent This shit needs to be made illegal. It's anti-worker, harming them by posting illusionary jobs, and even if a company has a position open up and goes to those collected resumes, if a worker is still available, there's a good chance they've become desperate enough to jump on the offered lifeline of employment, even if it's at a reduced salary than they would have otherwise taken. If a company can't hire someone in a reasonable time frame, it's not fault of the labor pool. It's
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  • ItPutsLotionOnltSkin I applied to a company. They were excited to hire me because of all my experience. At the end they didn't hire me. Two months later they called me asking if I wanted to work with them. I told them I went to another company. They acted like their feelings were hurt.
  • Mr_Horsejr This is fraud.
  • rellimeleda This is exactly why I stopped tailoring my resume for every single application. Why bother if the job doesn't even exist.
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  • Able_Signature_85 It feels like there could be a case that this effectively defrauds the unemployment benefits system in states requiring applications to obtain benefits.
  • boorraab This doesn't pass the smell test. If they are collecting a deep bench, why don't they ever dip into it later on? Every time they fill a role, they act like they have to elicit a list of new candidates. I have never heard of a company looking back at old applicants and hiring one of them, unless their first pick ghosted or refused their offer. I have never been contacted months or years after an application, (and to those that have, does it happen with enough frequency that it appears co

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