this post was submitted on 19 Dec 2025
255 points (97.8% liked)
LinkedinLunatics
5880 readers
519 users here now
A place to post ridiculous posts from linkedIn.com
(Full transparency.. a mod for this sub happens to work there.. but that doesn't influence his moderation or laughter at a lot of posts.)
founded 2 years ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
collapsed inline media
He had a pretty reasonable response to the backlash, at least.
Less shocking than usual. The rest of his post was pretty on point tbh. If anyone could acknowledge their faults, it's someone that hires the whole person.
Nothing screams "hires the whole person" like dismissing candidates for arbitrary reasons like being too busy to answer the phone.
I've been in so many corporate jobs where they dismiss candidates because they couldnt solve brain teasers or explain what they would put in a ultimate burrito. I shit you not.
Counterpoint. If you give someone your phone number, you shouldn't be shocked if they try to call it.
Nobody mentioned being shocked; your "counterpoint" is countering a point nobody made. You don't have to be shocked to be busy or avoid answering unknown numbers, ( which is the norm now )
It's expected that a caller with a legitimate professional purpose would leave a message. Has been since the answering machine came around. This isn't some sort of novel wholistic approach to someone's personally, it's a specific, arbitrary filter to find people who don't follow normal telephone interaction behaviors.
If you are not going to answer unknown numbers, don't give your number to unknown people.
This is basic logic. Nothing to do with imaginary "normal telephone interaction behaviors".
This is insane. Why wouldn't they leave a voice mail? Why do you expect people to be available at all times?
For example, what if I'm in the middle of a bike ride when this person calls back? Or driving? In the shower? Taking a dump? In a sensitive conversation? On the phone with someone else?
This is the whole point of voice mail. There are plenty of reasons people might not answer the phone, even before the "spam call" issue comes into play.
Your "basic logic" is extremely flawed.
So I understand you've literally never picked up a cellphone. Do you know what they look like?
I take it you often give random people your number then never answer your phone.
I don't. And yet people seem to get it anyway, pretty regularly.
Calm down Adam Landers
So, I shouldn't put my phone number on my resume?
Counter-Counterpoint. If you call someone, you should understand that they may be unable to answer to phone at a that specific time, and you should use the tools at your disposal, such as voicemail, to facilitate further communication.
Oh yes. The boomer is at fault also. But that wasn't my argument.