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JG's avatar
Dec 23Edited

This piece resonated so hard with me.

When I was in college, I was one of many students who accepted a somewhat prestigious federal scholarship to learn a “critical language” (a language not many others Americans learn). In return, I pledged to work for the federal government for at least a year. I was assured that this was not a downside but an opportunity - there were lots of great jobs in the State Department, DoD, USAID, etc, that would love to hire someone with my credentials. In fact, they even gave us a form of preference eligibility to make the process easier for us.

Ha! I spent over 6 months applying before I got a position. It took around 3 months for me to figure out that I had to essentially copy and paste the job description into my resume, and another 3 to figure out that I had to rate myself as highly as possible on the self-assessment. To this day, I’m still not sure what the key to cracking HR-led preliminary interviews was.

The job I finally got was not one that used the language skills the government had paid for me to acquire - in fact, it didn’t even require a college degree. So I worked for the government for my required year, then left for law school.

This all took place in 2020. Just a few weeks ago - in November, 2024 - I got an email from one of the many of positions I had applied to. They were sorry to inform me that they were not moving forward with my application.

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Transformative Visions's avatar

Having worked in the FAANGs and now coaching government and seeing the stark difference in HR practices; it leads me to believe that HR practices in government are useless, disconnected, convoluted and need a complete overhaul; there needs to be deep involvement of the hiring manager in the process; much like corporate. Frankly government practices such as these are deeply ineffective.

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