al77
Master Don Juan
My situation is a little bit different: I have some experience and I am gonna have advanced engineering degree soon.
Why not? I emailed about 10 people from different career service departments, most replies were: "Uhh well... khmmm.. I have never heard of anyone who did that, so I do not advise you to do so". They provided no reasoning!!! They got stuck with the cliche "no one did it, so well.. it doesnt work. Dont do it".
Somebody though said "you would look desperate by saying that" and suggested to frame it properly, i.e. "I am so confident I can contribute effectively I can prove it by working for one month for free..."
This is exactly the purpose of this idea: to stand out (since no one did it before), in order to get an interview.
Yes, its sole purpose is to be an attention grabber for the interview.
If they hire me to work for free (1 month) it is obvious they a) want to see how I work b) they are somehwat interested in hiring me.
I'll just do my best, and if they like me - they will hire me. If they don't - well, it is all fair. 1 month is not a long time.
look... there are two ways:
a) do nothing and send a regular boring cover letter.
b) offer to work for free, stand out from teh crowd and increase
chances of getting an interview.
The only thing I am really afraid of is the mentality of "We dont know any better way since we have never seen anything else", when HR people would reject anyone who offer anything outside of mainstream.
It is similar to the herd mentality in all other aspects, for example many people in US buy Ford\GM. When asked "Why? For that kind of money you can get a Japanese car that is much better in many aspects" they tend to be vague with reasoning like "uh well.. all my friends buy Ford.. I dont know...we should buy American cars..". I am very scared of this type of reasoning, when an individual stop thinking and borrow his friends\colleages mindset cuz "it is easier"....
I suspect it is much easier for HR people not to deal with somebody who stands out.
Why not? I emailed about 10 people from different career service departments, most replies were: "Uhh well... khmmm.. I have never heard of anyone who did that, so I do not advise you to do so". They provided no reasoning!!! They got stuck with the cliche "no one did it, so well.. it doesnt work. Dont do it".
Somebody though said "you would look desperate by saying that" and suggested to frame it properly, i.e. "I am so confident I can contribute effectively I can prove it by working for one month for free..."
This is exactly the purpose of this idea: to stand out (since no one did it before), in order to get an interview.
Yes, its sole purpose is to be an attention grabber for the interview.
If they hire me to work for free (1 month) it is obvious they a) want to see how I work b) they are somehwat interested in hiring me.
I'll just do my best, and if they like me - they will hire me. If they don't - well, it is all fair. 1 month is not a long time.
look... there are two ways:
a) do nothing and send a regular boring cover letter.
b) offer to work for free, stand out from teh crowd and increase
chances of getting an interview.
The only thing I am really afraid of is the mentality of "We dont know any better way since we have never seen anything else", when HR people would reject anyone who offer anything outside of mainstream.
It is similar to the herd mentality in all other aspects, for example many people in US buy Ford\GM. When asked "Why? For that kind of money you can get a Japanese car that is much better in many aspects" they tend to be vague with reasoning like "uh well.. all my friends buy Ford.. I dont know...we should buy American cars..". I am very scared of this type of reasoning, when an individual stop thinking and borrow his friends\colleages mindset cuz "it is easier"....
I suspect it is much easier for HR people not to deal with somebody who stands out.
Originally posted by h2o
i mean, i don't think you should just write this to stand out.
you really have to have a point, because what if they do hire you to work for free (even if you just stated it as an attention-grabber for the interview), and you end up working for free? and even if not, it could decrease your chances of getting the job like Gio said.