
u/Dependent_Bit4364

Hello world! I've been a hiring manager in the tech field for a FAANG company for the past 7+ years. I've done countless interviews and hired a lot of people, so I thought I'd share some of what I've seen and how the process works in case it's helpful to some of you out there. I'm not an expert and this is all just my opinion and personal experience. Apologies for the long post!
After seeing so many people here feel upset or angry that they got a rejection letter after X amount of interviews, I just wanted to say that most of the time it's not on you. First of all, getting called for the next step doesn't mean you passed the previous one. The process is usually a recruiter screen, then the hiring manager, then 5 more interviews to test culture fit, collaboration, technical skills, etc. Those 5 sometimes are happening no matter what. Then after everyone's time is wasted (and yes, I do think this is an excess amount of interviews for any company), you go through everyone's feedback and decide whether to interview more people or hire someone. Usually you need a pool of at least 5 people (from the thousands of applications) to interview, so on top of 7 interviews per candidate, you're spending a month or more to get through the full process.
No shade to recruiters out there, but unless they're specialized recruiters for the field you apply, they have no idea what they're asking during an interview or what they're seeing on your resume. Silly example, but I was hiring for a support manager once and they were forwarding me resumes from Technical Directors because those people were already working at "this level"… well, no. Their screening questions come from the hiring manager anyway so they just gather information to filter out candidates. So during the recruiter call, being calm, friendly, and coming across as a team player is what really matters. Read the JD and make sure you have something relevant to say to most of the points they have there. Also, reading about the company beforehand goes a long way. It's one of the big points on the feedback we get from recruiters.
Resume filtering is just broken. You need to pass whatever platform each company uses AND get lucky enough to land on a good recruiter who can filter properly. So before you apply, make sure your wording is correct and matches the wording on the job description. If they're asking for a sysadmin, write that, not "systems administrator," etc.
Sometimes you might be rejected because you're overqualified. I once had to reject someone who worked on tech for cancer detection and for NASA, because I genuinely felt he'd get bored very fast. He had the skills, but I couldn't see him staying for more than a year, and that's an issue.
I know most people will ignore you, but I've always replied on sites like LinkedIn when someone reached out, and I checked their profile every time. So if you have the option, do it.
Keep your resume clean. I honestly couldn't care less about your certifications or where you volunteered. What was your impact at your previous job? Give me results and numbers. 4-5 bullets max. Now, if you need to add more fluff for the AI screening that companies use these days, sure, but leave it at the end of the page when possible. Most of the time I just checked people's LinkedIn instead, because the resume was too much to read or too messy. So make sure your LinkedIn is clean and up to date.
If you apply to global companies, don't lie. You'll most likely just waste both of our time. The reason they do so many interviews is to drill down into the details, so if you say you know or did something, make sure you can back it up during questioning.
Sometimes it's not that your skills don't qualify, it's your gender. There have been times the guidance was that I had to hire a non-male candidate. That voluntary disclosure at some applications helps filter that out.
Other times, it's your location. Unless it's fully remote, there might be a preference for someone closer to the office, to avoid them burning out after months of a 2-hour commute every day.
Most times, its the filtering the hiring portal does. At random times i would go in and people that have been marked low were great candidates but the wording on their resume worked against them.
Don't be afraid to apply or go to an interview if you're not the most qualified person. More often than not, I preferred people who were easy to work with and could collaborate, rather than smart jerks.
Clothes; Personally, I don't care what you wear, just be yourself. Dress for the job, I guess? Like, if you're a field technician, don't come wearing a suit. Wear your t-shirt or your hoodie or whatever you normally wear. It's fine.
Tell stories, don't sound like an AI. This is a tricky one, because there's a fine line between telling a good story and rambling. Dont give yes / no answers, give context. Problem - action - result.
If you're searching right now, avoid postings from companies that ask for AI interviews, or when the company doesn't really seem to exist (no employees, no posts, vague job description). It's either a staffing company or they're just gathering data. Don't bother.
If you can, avoid postings that require work for free. For example: step 1 recruiter, step 2 hiring manager, then do a project that takes a week of your time UNPAID. Run away - if you can.
I could keep typing, but to save you some precious time, if you have any questions I'll try to answer to the best of my ability. Good luck out there, it's crazy. But it's not you. Keep going.
Hi all,
I recently interviewed with Morgan Stanley (India) and cleared all rounds around 20 March. After that, on 9 April, the recruiter sent me a Workday link to apply and complete my profile.
Since then:
- Recruiter told me my application is in the final approval stage
- Mentioned that hiring is slow right now, so it’s taking longer than expected
- Recently, the recruiter even called me proactively and said everything is fine, just delayed
However, on Workday my application status now shows:
“No longer under consideration”
At the same time, I also received emails asking me to review/update my profile for offer/onboarding purposes, which makes it more confusing.
So I’m not sure how to interpret this:
- Is this just a Workday glitch / internal process thing?
- Or does “No longer under consideration” actually mean rejection despite what the recruiter is saying?
Has anyone experienced something similar with Morgan Stanley (or other companies)? Did you still get an offer after this stage?
Would really appreciate any insights. Thanks!