Do you know of any headhunting firms that would legally pursue an
employer because they did not provide feedback?  What do people
understand the difference is between a firm that operates as
headhunters rather than recruiters?



On Sun, 27 Jul 2025 at 22:22, Tomas Kuchta <tomas.kuchta.li...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> I can think of a few reasons:
> * There is no value in spending any calories on rejected candidates
> * Potential liability
> * Potential for extra arguments, hassle and follow up
> * It is proprietary knowledge, many applications are generated and almost
> all are screened by a LLM - so giving feedback would let the generating
> LLM/human to tune for success.
> * Work load - they maybe rejecting many candidates for a few positions. Not
> necessarily because of a particular reason
> * There is whole industry of asking job candidates to generate resumes for
> training or for sale - essentially for free, just by advertising a job
> opportunity.
>
> Applying/searching for a job is no fun, especially on saturated labor
> market, that is for sure.
>
> -T
>
> On Fri, Jul 25, 2025, 17:59 James Tobin <jamesbto...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> > Why do you think that is?
> >
> > On Fri, 25 Jul 2025 at 21:55, <ken...@tuta.com> wrote:
> > >
> > > Yes, but I also know that employers in the U.S. generally don't want to
> > admit why an applicant was refused or passed on.
> > > Thanks | おおきに / ありがとう | Kiitos | Merci | Gracias | Obrigada | Grazie |
> > 谢谢 | Danke | Wado | спасибо,
> > > 賢進ジェンナ「Kenshin, Jenna」
> > >
> > > "You should be as alive as you can until you're totally dead!" - Dylan
> > Moran
> > >
> > >
> > >
> > > 2025年7月25日 11:57 差出人:  jamesbto...@gmail.com:
> > >
> > > > Hi, if you were represented by a recruiter (headhunter, recruitment
> > > > consultant, agent, or whatever they prefer to call themselves) for a
> > > > potential job with an employer, would you expect them to do everything
> > > > possible to get feedback on your resume, skills, experience, overall
> > > > application, and suitability directly from the employer after you'd
> > > > been presented?
> > > >
> > >
> >

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