Some of you may remember my post last week about me interviewing for a new job. That interview was with the corporate office, today I was called to schedule a second interview with the manager of the office where I would be working. I would appreciate any advice as to how to correct the issue with me saying that I wouldn't need any time off. I would like to let them know in this interview that I am in fact pregnant, and would need time off, but I don't know if that is the best thing either. I dont typically tell lies, which is why the situation has stressed me out so much. Thanks in advance, any help is appreciated.
Re: Follow up to recent post about job hunting
The PP is totally correct. You do not have to disclose and they cannot ask. However, I was at my doc's office last week and re-read an article in Parents Magazine (it might have been Parenting) in which someone suggested to be honest about it and tell them 'your plan'. The author's opinion is that the applicant could start off on the wrong foot and be seen as untrustworthy. I am not in HR, I am not currently looking for a job and I think I am one of the only people that feels you should be upfront, however, as I just stated, what do I know about anything?
Best of luck to you!
I DO take my honesty and integrity very serious. I don't want to start out being looked at as untrustworthy, especially considering the field i'm going into.
In the original post, most ppl actually suggested that being honest was the best choice. But I'm just wondering that since I already said I wouldnt need any time off, what the best way to correct that is.
I don't believe in lying either ... but there's absolutely no point in volunteering that information, if you want to land the job. They won't be asking, so don't bring it up. Just stick to the fact that you're eager to start working and willing to begin immediately. Especially in a large corporate setting, I can assure you that volunteering your pregnancy will hurt you more than help you. Even if they are theoretically prohibited from discriminating against you during the hiring process, they will just find another reason why you weren't a good fit. No busy corporate office wants to hire someone, train them, have them go through their 3 months learning curve, only to have to find an immediate replacement. That's just the hard reality of the business world.