J'ai postulé en ligne. Le processus a pris 3 jours. J'ai passé un entretien chez Florida Capital (Orlando, FL) en janv. 2025
Entretien
I was initially contacted via phone for a customer service position and an internal claims position. I only applied for the former.
However, when I came in for my in-person interview, the position I initially applied for mysteriously wasn't mentioned. Instead, it was a management position that I did not apply for.
The lobby was chock-full of new hopefuls and they went in for an interview and out just as quick. My own interview was extremely quick, probably less than 5 minutes. All I was asked was if I had a working vehicle, my current job status and what I previously did. No attempt to get to know me either. The descriptions of the positions read to be very sales-heavy and that was not what I applied for.
Feels very much like a bait-and-switch.
J'ai postulé via une autre source. Le processus a pris 1 jour. J'ai passé un entretien chez Florida Capital
Entretien
Like many others, I don't know how they got my application. They contacted me and described a position similar to an office manager, the lady on the phone lied and said it was a "back-end" position. The first interview was full of red flags and less than 3 minutes. They barely asked any questions about me and gave me a word salad about the responsibilities of the job that was so ambiguous it could've been any job in the world. They did not give me an opportunity to ask any questions before scheduling a second interview the next day. They were looking for an immediate hire, which is extremely offensive e given how I have a real job right now and not some commission-based scam like they present here. To think they would try to trick me into quitting my full-time position to use me as another pawn in the pyramid scheme is baffling and makes me think this company is run by sociopaths. What if I had children who depended on my income? This is not even a real sales job, they prey on the desperate and young, and have apparently been running this little scheme for years. The interviewer couldn't even fake a smile for more than half a second before dropping into a dead-eyed poker face.