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Is the first applicant to interview a disadvantage?Rating: (votes: 0) I had an interview with a recruiter before and that went really great. I'm wondering...do nurse recruiters and nurse managers compare notes or is the decision solely made by the nurse manager? Anyone else have experience with this and willing to share how they dealt with it? Of course I plan on sending him a thank you note maybe a week or two later so he can remember me but I'm not sure what else to do at this point. I really wish I had a redo. Hopefully you are reading too much into it and to be honest with you I'm not sure they are expected to be overly focused on a nurse intern interview no matter who it is. Try googling it I bet there are stats on the advantages vs disadvantages of going first. Personally I have interviewed first and got the job but from the start it seemed pretty clear I was a good fit for that position. Definitely send a thank you note and good luck! Comment:
Quote from Jules AHopefully you are reading too much into it and to be honest with you I'm not sure they are expected to be overly focused on a nurse intern interview no matter who it is. Try googling it I bet there are stats on the advantages vs disadvantages of going first. Personally I have interviewed first and got the job but from the start it seemed pretty clear I was a good fit for that position. Definitely send a thank you note and good luck!
Comment:
I think the opposite may be true at times. The applicants interviewed further down the list can have a disadvantage because mgmt might have already chosen their candidate, but choose to interview others as a formality.I went on a job interview years ago (not nursing) and I was flat out told by the manager she had already chosen a candidate, but figured she'd still have me come for the interview. I decided to try to make myself stand out anyways, but the manager kept comparing my experience and education with the "chosen applicant". What a waste of time.
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