seremify007
Junior Member
Isn't there now CA Achiever stuff open?
That's the impression a lot of people have- but I'm under the school of thought whereby once you get to the interview stage, you've proven you've got sufficient qualifications/experience/etc... to have the job, all that's left is to see how well you interact with people and your overall suitability for the job. With regards to your ability to do the actual job- how can you really gauge that without having them on the job itself? The stuff you learn in uni, whilst relevant, will be very different to what you actually do at work. I mean, I sucked at uni, but I like to think I'm quite competent at my job. If you are found to be incompetent, most contracts nowadays have a probation period whereby the contract will come into full force after say a month (some places have it set at 3 months)- and prior to this, either party (ie. employee or employer) can break the contract with no penalty.Anonymou5 said:This seems to be the most active forum and my question is probably applicable to other fields so I'll post it here. From what people have heard and their experience, do the interviewers even care about your competence once you are given an interview? Is it just about your communication skills, personality and other things which aren't directly related to your ability to do the actual job?
I ask this because one of my lecturers said one of his former students called him to get help on an engineering problem that he encountered at work and it turned out that he only needed to apply fundamental fluid mechanics theory to solve it. From what I've been reading and hearing, competence just doesn't seem important anymore.
Yes I've noticed this a lot too.This seems to be the most active forum and my question is probably applicable to other fields so I'll post it here. From what people have heard and their experience, do the interviewers even care about your competence once you are given an interview? Is it just about your communication skills, personality and other things which aren't directly related to your ability to do the actual job?
I ask this because one of my lecturers said one of his former students called him to get help on an engineering problem that he encountered at work and it turned out that he only needed to apply fundamental fluid mechanics theory to solve it. From what I've been reading and hearing, competence just doesn't seem important anymore.
x 2brogan77 said:Yep.
I'd say it's pretty obvious why that wouldn't work.turtleface said:I recall reading a somewhere that the Accounting firms used to recruit all the people with the highest marks, but then found out that didn't work so well for some reason. And I think thats why they now go for the multi-facet approach.