Do not work here. What would you say about your employer? Help fellow jobseekers by sharing your unique experience. Questions and answers People have asked 8 questions about working at Smashburger. See the answers, explore pop...
I'm so excited about the possibility of joining [Best Company Ever] in the role of [The Job We've Been Discussing for Weeks], but my current work obligations make it difficult for me to step out of the office for another meeting. If there's any possibility of answering your additional questions over the phone or email, I'd be more than happy to continue the conversation. Best, The Candidate You're on the Fence About One of two things will happen when you tell a potential employer you can't come in again—one, he'll let you know you're not the right fit and you can both move on. Or two, he'll realize he has as much information as he needs and he'll finally make a decision. In either case, you'll be able to move on with your life without having to make the trek into the offices for a fifth time. 2. You've Been Invited in for Lunch, Then Midday Coffee, Then Another Midday Coffee Lunches with the people you'd potentially work with are exciting, and are a great opportunity to get a feel for what it'd be like to join the team.
About ken I am a former Toronto teacher and writer now living in Vancouver. I work with Dr. Rubin 'Hurricane' Carter, with whom I published Eye of the Hurricane: My path from Darkness to Freedom (Chicago review Press, 2011), as Director of Media Relations and as an advocate for wrongly convicted prisoners. Other publication credits include Songs of Aging Children (Arsenal Pulp Press, 1992) a book of short stories about troubled youth, and Taking Steam, a play co-authored with the late Brian Shein, staged at New York's Jewish Repertory Theatre and Toronto in 1983. Life Without (Quattro Books, 2012) is a novella about a New York cab driver wrongly convicted of killing his pregnant wife. Gary Geddes (Lt. Governor's Award for Literary Excellence) described it as "one of the most brilliant and harrowing short novels I've read since I went on a John Hawkes binge. "