Hello. I've been out of work since May after my last contract job ended. I've been applying for jobs through indeed for months only to find out that most of my applications weren't even viewed by employers.
After some digging, I know when an application is received, indeed will send an email notification to employer with the subject line "So-and-so has applied for your position". The actual resume is an attachment, and to view it the employer has to click and download it. And that's when the applicant will get notified that their application has been viewed.
In my case though, I seldom get this kind of notifications - in fact about 1 out of 20 applications. This makes me wonder if my ethnic-sounding surname is the reason why employers aren't interested, given that this is the only piece of information out there before the actual resume is being looked at.
Now unfortunately, there is some specific social stigma and stereotypes surrounding the ethnical group I belong to, and I understand that when the candidate pool is huge, employers will be inclined to choose people whose background is more aligned with the company's (i.e., no language and cultural barriers). But I don't think there's much I can do to increase the chances of my resume being looked at. And quite frankly, I think this is a form of discrimination.
I'm posting this to ask if this has ever happened to you, and if so how you went about dealing with it. Thank you.
After some digging, I know when an application is received, indeed will send an email notification to employer with the subject line "So-and-so has applied for your position". The actual resume is an attachment, and to view it the employer has to click and download it. And that's when the applicant will get notified that their application has been viewed.
In my case though, I seldom get this kind of notifications - in fact about 1 out of 20 applications. This makes me wonder if my ethnic-sounding surname is the reason why employers aren't interested, given that this is the only piece of information out there before the actual resume is being looked at.
Now unfortunately, there is some specific social stigma and stereotypes surrounding the ethnical group I belong to, and I understand that when the candidate pool is huge, employers will be inclined to choose people whose background is more aligned with the company's (i.e., no language and cultural barriers). But I don't think there's much I can do to increase the chances of my resume being looked at. And quite frankly, I think this is a form of discrimination.
I'm posting this to ask if this has ever happened to you, and if so how you went about dealing with it. Thank you.