Candidatei-me por meio de recrutador(a). O processo levou 1 semana. Fui entrevistado pela CTL Corp em dez. de 2025
Entrevista
I interviewed with CTL for a regional sales role, and the experience revealed far more about the company’s culture than they probably intended.
The hiring manager expressed no concerns about my qualifications. None. My background aligned perfectly with the role, and the recruiter emphasized that my experience was strong and relevant. The issue wasn’t skill, experience, or capability. Instead, the feedback centered on two things:
My communication being “too casual,” and
My recent job changes.
The first point is a stylistic preference. Reasonable people can disagree on conversational tone. The second point, however, was far more revealing.
Despite acknowledging that my experience was a match, the hiring manager chose to critique the fact that I, like thousands of others in this industry, have been impacted by layoffs and startup instability over the past few years. These were not performance issues. These were not choices. These were market conditions no individual candidate could have prevented.
Holding that against someone is not just tone-deaf; it’s ethically questionable.
In an environment where mass layoffs have reshaped the workforce, any hiring process that penalizes candidates for surviving volatile conditions says a lot about the empathy and awareness of the people making hiring decisions. It suggests a culture where context doesn’t matter, where resilience goes unrecognized, and where employees may be evaluated based on circumstances beyond their control rather than the quality of their work.
It also raises serious concerns about how CTL might treat employees during tough cycles. If life happening to you is considered a “problem” in the interview phase, it’s hard to imagine support being offered once you're inside the organization.
What makes this more disappointing is that they liked my actual experience. They had nothing negative to say about my track record, skills, or achievements. The only criticism was of things no candidate could ever control—job market turbulence and communication style preferences that could have been clarified with a single request.
Instead, the feedback conveyed something simple but important: empathy is not a core value in their hiring culture.
Perguntas de entrevista [1]
Pergunta 1
• What stood out to you about this role?
• What drives you to work in education sales?
• What made you leave the classroom?
• What would you lean on in your first 30–60 days?
• What would you need to learn to ramp quickly?
• Tell me about a time you created processes in an unstructured environment.