When are you PROMISED a fucking lunch prior to the interview?
Whenever I have an interview all I know is I have an interview. Any other plans are up to them (who does it, how many, etc...)
But to answer the question - NO. I wouldn't walk out on a $20 lunch when they are offering me six figures to have a lifetime career (potentially). That is just stupid.
TOTALLY agree with this part. You could be starring down at that person later in life sucking his balls for a different position and he will potentially remember you... All because your pussy self just wanted to talk over food.
Bullshit. If the employer blatantly lies about the job posting, they can certainly go fuck themselves.
This guy's case, I dunno. It could seem whiny. Still, he clearly wasn't all that confident in their reputation as an employer to begin with, and they did nothing to dispel that impression. They fumbled the simplest thing. ...Fuck 'em.
I've followed Liz Ryan's advice a lot on my job search and I've found her advice has helped me. Not sure I agree 100% with her on this one but it does show the company is a bit disorganized.
I agree with Liz 100%.
This is apparently a guy who is not at the bottom, and likely either has a job or got let go during a company buyout or something or whatever, and isn't necessarily in a all-out sprint toward the goal of getting hired.
When you are in that position, YOU are the one making the decisions, not the employer. When we poor sods are lower in the food chain (at least, people like myself), you take what you can get at times. But people forget that interviewing is not only about convincing the employer that you are worthy of being brought on board, but also is the time for the employer to
convince you that they are the place for you to work at, that they offer a better potential and work environment and can provide more satisfaction than any other employer.
It's not so dreary in the U.S. and Canada that such situations do not exist. Plenty of people hold enough experience and clout that they really have the leverage, and are just looking for the next place of stability in their life.
I've got a brother in law that is sort of like that, and even after being fired from one restaurant chain (make that two, actually), in a very large metro area, he still has clout and has a significant network of positive references. Even in a major market region, the circle of GMs is small and word gets around.
And I don't doubt that something like what happened in the OP would not at all actually result in any kind of mark against the employee. Why? Because businesses ran like shit may very well be the cause of poor performance from managers lower down the chain, poor decisions made high in the chain reflect poorly on those lower in the chain. Those who know the chain, know the game so to speak, know this and let the actual referrals and clout speak for itself.
After reading the article, the guy sounds entirely in the right IMHO. This is an interview that is presumed to have been scheduled for over 4 or 5 hours in length. If you offer something and forget and then half-ass it, and you as the one being interviewed already hold a slight negative bias toward the company, are you really going to waste any more of your time when they have clearly demonstrated they do not offer a promising career? If I was actually in that kind of situation, I might have actually made a comment before walking out, but I would have hit a breaking point too. I'm also assuming that I would not be at the deadline for "get a job now or move into a shitty living situation, grow your debt beyond belief, and probably sell off assets." If I'm at that point, I'd probably suffer through the full interview process and see what came of it. If I have any leverage of my own, fuck it, you've proven you are worthless to me and do not value me either, why should I give you any more time, let alone the time of day if you were to ask?