The Jordan Harbinger Show - 74: Feedback Friday | How to Land Your Dream Job in the 21st Century
Episode Date: July 27, 2018Jordan Harbinger (@JordanHarbinger) and Jason DeFillippo (@jpdef) banter every week and take your comments and questions for Feedback Friday! ZipRecruiter co-founder and CEO Ian Siegel (@ZipR...ecruiterCEO) joins us for a brief bonus toward the end of the episode, so stay tuned! If you want us to answer your question, register your feedback, or tell your story on one of our upcoming weekly Feedback Friday episodes, drop us a line at friday@jordanharbinger.com. Now, let's dive in! On This Week's Feedback Friday, We Discuss: Wondering how to get a job in this data-driven society? Make sure to stick around after the end of this Feedback Friday for a bonus interview with ZipRecruiter CEO and co-founder Ian Siegel! Getting caught up? Make sure to check out our episodes from this week with Dr. Drew Pinsky and part two of our negotiation series with Alex Kouts! What's the best way to get to "yes" while negotiating with someone via email? What is the appropriate response when your best friend of 10 years suddenly starts ignoring you? When your well-paying job with incredible benefits becomes unsatisfying, how do you go about finding something more in line with your skills and interests? If your group of friends is too flaky to commit to plans you try to make on a regular basis, is it maybe time to get less boring friends? Is there a delicate way to express concern when someone you love gains 100 pounds in five years? How can you help? Are they really your friends if they didn't back you up in a fight? Do you believe you can still care about and love someone but no longer be compatible with them as a romantic partner? Is Landmark a cult? Should you be concerned for your friend who's getting involved with the organization? Recommendation of the Week: Go see a live, local roller derby match! Shoutouts to Mind Pump and American Dream University! Have any questions, comments, or stories you'd like to share with us? Drop us a line at friday@jordanharbinger.com! Connect with Jordan on Twitter at @JordanHarbinger and Instagram at @jordanharbinger. Connect with Jason on Twitter at @jpdef and Instagram at @JPD, and check out his other show: Grumpy Old Geeks. Connect with Ian on Twitter at See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
This episode is sponsored in part by Conspiruality Podcast.
You know how I'm always talking about critical thinking and spotting manipulation?
Well, there's a podcast that's all about dismantling new age cults, wellness grifters, and
conspiracy med yogis, basically the wild overlap of spirituality and misinformation.
It's called the Conspiruality Podcast.
The hosts, a journalist, cult researcher, and a philosophical skeptic, dive deep into how
this stuff spreads, from Project 2025 and the Heritage Foundation's dystopian vision of the future
to how former leftists get pulled into far-right conspiracies.
An interesting episode to check out is called Speaking Truth to Goop,
where Jen Gunter breaks down the pseudoscience behind the wellness industry
in a way that is super entertaining and eye-opening.
It's sharp, funny, and makes you a lot harder to fool,
which, if you listen to this show, you know I'm all about that.
From exploring cults to analyzing our cultural and political landscape,
the Conspiratuality Podcast will help you stay informed
against misinformation and resist fear tactics.
Find Conspirality on Apple Podcasts, Spotify,
and wherever you get your podcasts.
Well, hello, everybody.
This is Jason here.
I just wanted to let you know
that you should stick around
at the end of Feedback Friday
because we have a special bonus interview
with Ian Siegel,
co-founder and CEO of ZipRecruiter.
Ian has some amazing tips
on how to get a job
in this crazy new data-driven society
that we live in.
So definitely you want to stick around
and check that out.
But for now...
Welcome to Feedback Friday.
I'm your host, Jordan Harbinger,
and I'm here with my producer,
Jason DePhilippo.
Here on the Jordan Harbinger show,
we love having conversations
with our fascinating guests.
And this week, we had Dr. Drew Pinsky talking about how he developed that sixth sense
by which he just dissects people on the phone over the radio.
Just amazing.
And, of course, addiction, behavior, and all kinds of other fascinating topics.
He's my number one radio influence.
So I highly recommend you check that one out.
I really like that one.
And Alex Kutz, Part 2, talking about negotiation.
If you heard Alex Kutz Part 1, his course or our course on negotiation,
Highly recommend it if you haven't.
And part two is also this week, part three coming next week as well, which will wrap up that series.
A lot of good feedback on that.
So if you've ever negotiated anything or you want to know how or you're afraid to
and you have any desire to learn about human behavior and negotiation, highly recommend going to the Alex Kutz negotiation series.
Of course, our primary mission is to pass along our guest's knowledge and our experiences and insights to you.
In other words, the real purpose of the show is to have conversations directly.
with you. And that's what we're going to do today here on Feedback Friday. You can reach us
Friday at Jordan Harbinger.com. Try to keep them concise if you can. It makes things a lot easier for us.
And Jason, what's going on in your world by way of housekeeping? Anything?
Oh, man, I'm just enjoying the summer.
For me, I just got back from podcast movement. Shout out to everybody that I met and spoke with
over there. That was a fun event. And look forward to that kind of thing to seeing all of the
fans of the Jordan Harbender show, colleagues and contemporaries.
and learning a little bit more about podcasting,
because there's always something going on in the space.
All right, what's the first thing out of the mailbag?
Hello, oh, my question is,
what's the best way to get to yes while negotiating with someone via email?
I can't convey body language, tone, or inflection in these types of negotiations.
And getting in front of, aka face-to-face,
with the other side is not an option in the line of work I'm in.
I'm in the legal and personal injury business.
Although I'm not an attorney,
what I do is negotiate and settle outstanding,
health care liens on the attorney's behalf for the injured client after their cases have settled.
Keep up the great work, respectfully, the egotiator.
Ah, nice, the egotiator.
Well, this is a great question because negotiation really isn't just something you have to do face-to-face.
Of course, it helps to do these things face-to-face because you can read tells and all these
other things that Alex Kutz and I had talked about in the negotiation series.
But in this case, I would say it's mostly about clarifying questions.
drill down to their motivations and find out what they actually want.
Remember, negotiation should be a cooperative mindset,
especially in this type of case,
because it sounds like there's not a ton of leverage.
You're just trying to make the other side realize,
hey, you're either going to get paid never
or you're going to get paid a little bit
if you are more reasonable about this.
So remember, anything you communicate via email,
of course is written communication and has to be clear,
especially for legal purposes,
but you can still be very positive,
you can still be very polite. I don't really get why you can't do this on the phone,
but I think that if you're stuck only doing email, you have some other advantages you should
keep in mind. Everything is asynchronous. In other words, it's not, they're not waiting for you
to reply right away. So you have a lot of time to think about and construct your answer, which I think
is beneficial. You're not going to be using a ton of emotion here. You're not going to be stuck
on deer in headlights. Oh my gosh, I don't know the answer to this or what do I say right now.
go grab Alex Kutz part one and part two, both out in the past couple weeks.
Good timing on this question, because those will address this concern for sure.
And all the same principles really apply.
Of course, you can't read the other side's nonverbals, so it becomes even more crucial to communicate clearly,
make sure you understand their motivation, and those clarifying questions that Alex discusses with me on the show are the way to get there.
Again, I highly recommend negotiation part one and two, and part three comes out next week where we talk even more.
more about clarifying questions, among other things. This is a life-changing skill set, so go grab
those episodes. All right, next up. Jordan and Jason, I'm dealing with a ghost. My best friend of 10
years has vanished and I need your help. We were very close, like talking on the phone for hours a week
close. She canceled plans on me last minute a few months ago and said that her mother was sick.
Being concerned but respectful, I gave her space. I called and texted over the course of several
weeks to check in on her mom. And since then, she's texted me one word responses and ignored my phone
calls. She says her mom's fine. And according to social media, my friend continues to be social,
hanging out with other people, but hasn't reached out to me at all. So, do I reach out and ask her
point blank, what's up? She's almost 40, which is older than me. And I wish she had the guts to speak
to me like a grown-ass woman. Or do I just fall back? Maybe our friendship reached its end. Or did I not
do enough to support her when her mom was sick.
Help.
Casper, the unfriendly ghost.
So this is weird, man.
I don't, I looked at this.
I don't, I don't get it.
There's something going on here that we don't know about.
We're missing a puzzle piece here, I think.
Definitely, at least one puzzle piece.
Because look, this is a WTF situation.
People can be weird.
You'll never know what's up unless you ask.
So yes, go ahead and ask your friend what's going on.
You have nothing else to lose.
So definitely ask, right?
Because you already lost your friend.
So maybe if you're going to have any shot at repairing this, you've got to figure it out.
Sounds like she's having a pretty immature reaction to something, but we really don't know what that is.
I'm sorry that you're going through this.
I just can't believe how weird this situation is.
Best friend of 10 years, not of a year.
This isn't a moody person.
We're obviously missing some pieces here.
I'm curious myself, actually.
So yes, Colin ask, or if she's just going to ignore you, try to meet up with her in person.
But it seems like she's not going to be open to any of that.
it seems like she's but what's weird here jason is if someone's blown off your phone calls
but they're still answering your texts they're still wanting to engage they're just being passive
aggressive you know because yeah i ignore people i've got people who you know stolen from me or something
like that or like you know from or people from the old company i just ignore it i don't respond
with passive aggressive stuff i literally just either block and i don't see it or i just don't answer it at
all. I don't try to sit here and be like, I'm going to say one little word and I'm going to say
this other thing. I don't do that. That's ludicrous and immature. And so that's kind of why I think
maybe this person's trying to communicate to you that they're mad at you in a way. But I just don't get
it. If she still won't respond after you tried a bunch of contact and outreach, I'm sorry for your loss,
but it sounds like she's not handling things well and perhaps you should just move on. This is a super
a strange way to end of friendship, though. What the heck? It really is. It's just out of the blue,
it's like, oh, I just don't want to talk to you anymore, but I'll still text you? Yeah.
The hell is up with that. Yeah. So unless she did something really terrible, something that
you would obviously know about if you did it, then I think the friend is way off her rocker.
You know, I think she's just probably being really dramatic and this is all just kind of,
she's taking something else out on you. I don't know. We don't know. And you might never find out.
You kind of have to be cool with that, you know, because your friend might.
your ex friend might just be like, I'm going to give you the cold shoulder because F you,
like who knows and you may never know, which will drive you nuts if you let it.
So yeah, Hail Mary and if not, forget about it and move on.
All right, next up.
Hi guys, I'm 32 and a certified accountant for the family business.
I've been here for 10 years now and it smacked me in the face how unhappy I am in my work
life.
During the first few years at the company, I was very busy learning about the business
whilst simultaneously studying for my accountancy qualifications.
Now that I'm fully qualified, my personal growth within work has come to a halt,
and I've realized how unfulfilling, unchallenging, and lonely my work is.
Although I've realized this a little on the late side,
I've decided that if I want to be happy, then I need to move on from this job
and go after something that's going to fulfill me.
My friends and family are not in favor of this,
as they see that I'm well paid, have no pressure on me at all,
and receive many benefits such as a car, phone,
medical insurance, in 60 days paid annual leave on top of the very generous salary.
60 days, my God.
Yeah, nice.
They think if I move away from the business that I'll regret it immensely and say things like,
no one really enjoys their job that much anyway.
Well, I see it differently.
I want to feel alive as though I'm going after something I truly care about with some fire in
my belly.
I could still stay in the family business within a different role,
but I have a real desire to get out there in the wild and push myself.
Similarly, I could pursue an accounting-based career outside of the family business,
but I feel I know the accountancy path well enough to know it's not something that's going to get me excited.
How would you recommend identifying what your passion is, which you can then turn into a career?
Or maybe I'm going about this the wrong way.
Should I be looking at what my strengths are in trying to tie that in with the skill requirements for occupations that I find interesting?
Thanks for the great show, with best regards, passionately unpassionate.
So I think that passionately unpassionate kind of nailed it with the latter.
First of all, she does, or he does, whoever, has a great gig right now with 10 years in the business, 60 days paid leave, the good pay.
Yes, you have a good deal, but I totally get being restless.
There's no point in suffering, if you will.
And I think it's ridiculous that your family says nobody really enjoys their job that much anyway, project much.
Yeah, really.
I mean, that is completely untrue.
And what they might as well have said is, look, it's going to be just as bad somewhere else, but please don't quit because we need you.
Yeah, we're all miserable and we want you to stay within our little misery circle.
So don't go.
Don't go.
Exactly.
Yeah.
Nobody enjoys their job that much anyway.
Well, no, you're wrong.
And F you also.
But that's completely ridiculous.
That's complete projection.
I believe that you should not follow your passion.
I know I talked about this with Mike Rowe on the show before.
You should bring your passion with you.
And I've talked about this a bunch of times concepts like skill stacking where, look, you're getting a bunch of different discrete skills that are making you the number one X, you know, because you speak Mandarin and you also have 10 years of accounting experience and you are expert fishermen.
Like there's some sort of confluence where the Venn diagram overlaps on each of those things that makes you more rare and valuable.
In this case, I think you've built plenty of bricks, right?
This isn't just skill stacking, but you've built plenty of bricks.
You've got a great skill set, a decade of experience that's legitimately good.
You're 32, which means you're young enough to bring energy into something new, but you've got
enough experience to be useful to pretty much everyone.
So that's huge.
This is a great time to make a leap for yourself right now.
And strengths are developed and created.
They're not usually inborn for most of us.
So if you are really feeling something, you're really keen to go after something, but you don't
feel like you're naturally good at it, cultivate that even if you do so while you're still
in this job and build another brick.
So it's much more exciting to go, all right, well, I don't love this job that I'm doing,
but I got them to get me trained up in learning Russian, and they're paying for that, and I'm
getting a lot of experience, and they transferred me over to their Moscow office for a year.
And my long term, maybe sort of secret goal is to stay here and work in a different field.
but in the meantime I'm getting inches or miles, or thousands of miles in that case, closer to my goal.
So I think you can develop strengths.
I think you can make micro movements or even macro movements towards something you really like
by looking for what you're already good at and looking for what you want to be good at
and developing in that direction as well.
And frankly, I'm a little surprised I'm recommending this, but career counselors are actually
good at this type of thing.
Well, if you get a good career counselor, they're actually good at this type of thing
and they're worth looking into.
Don't take an online test.
Those things are ridiculous.
I remember I took one and I got like, do you enjoy stamping metal?
You should be a machine metal stamper.
It's like, no.
I want this to be based on more than some bulbs I fill in or something in a multiple choice.
But if you see a career counselor, they're going to have a lot of options.
And I've mentioned this kind of concept before.
When we're kids, we only think police, we think about jobs.
I think policemen, fireman, army man, nurse, doctor, right?
We've got maybe teacher in there because we have teachers.
and then we have whatever our parents do,
and that's the whole world for us.
So it's no surprise that you filtered into accounting.
It's your family business,
but figure out what you might want to do
based on career options.
Career counselors will be able to help with that,
and if you don't have the necessary strengths, requirements, et cetera,
then develop those either while doing something you love
or while doing this current job,
which will be a lot more tolerable
if you feel like you're moving forward in a direction,
in a positive direction.
So I'm not one of those like,
go quit your job and do what you love. I don't think that's good advice. I think that's internet
self-help bullshit. It's terrible advice. Exactly. So I'm not going to say, quit now and do only
what you love. I think you can move in that direction in a way that's strategic so that you don't
have to eat ramen for five years and then regret every minute of leaving your other gig.
So hopefully this is helpful and I would love to hear about where you end up.
You're listening to the Jordan Harbinger show and this is Feedback Friday. Stick around and we'll get right
back to the show after these very short but very important messages.
Thanks for listening and supporting the Jordan Harbinger Show.
To learn more about our sponsors, visit Jordan Harbinger.com slash advertisers.
And don't forget to check out our Alexa skill.
Go to Jordan Harbinger.com slash Alexa or search for Jordan Harbinger in the Alexa app.
It's just that simple.
Don't forget at the end of this episode, we do have our special bonus interview with
Ian Siegel, CEO and co-founder of ZipRecruiter.
Now, let's get back to your questions here on Feedback Friday.
All right, next up.
Hi, Jordan and crew.
Thank you so much for continuing to do the great work despite having to rebuild.
I'm about to enter my senior year of college and recently became interested in going out on weekends.
However, for both daytime activities and nighttime ones, I've always run into the problem of getting friends to come along.
There's been an interesting phenomenon I've noticed.
Asking if people are interested in coming along becomes a catch-22 cycle.
Because they want to go in a group, they wait to say yes to an invite, but because because,
they wait to say yes, no one makes definitive plans with me. And so because no one says, yes,
other people are hesitant to join me, hiking or hitting the bars, etc. Often I have to go alone or
decide not to go at all. How do I avoid this issue? Thanks, want to be ringleader. Wow, that
sounds super annoying. Oh, so annoying. Can you imagine that? Oh, my gosh. That must be some sort of
young college thing. I can't imagine adults doing this. That sounds super irritating. I used to have
that issue with people around me and I really just got sick of it much like yourself.
I ended up going out with one or two other people a bunch and I was just social that way.
I just stopped inviting the other people out and I let them sit around and fart around and waste
their life.
And I think you can meet people in a place and you can make friends there in the moment.
You can go to a venue and whoever's there you start chatting with and that's a skill set.
It's one I've been teaching for a really long time.
I just wonder what are these people doing?
You know, they have to go eventually do something.
So my gut here says maybe there's another issue that we're not seeing.
I hate doing this, want to be ringleader, but you've got to investigate a little bit.
Are they avoiding plans or are they avoiding you for some reason?
Right?
Because if you find out that after you go out alone, they all go somewhere else without you,
maybe they just don't want to tell you something.
Or maybe they find you a little overbearing.
I don't get that vibe at all.
I think they're probably just a bunch of lazy, non-commission.
kids that don't want to make a decision and can't bear the thought of going somewhere where
not everyone else is already going. So it's like risk aversion. But you should just make new
friends if these boring kids don't get it together, man. You're going to waste your whole life
waiting for somebody to take charge. And here's the thing, you've already tried to take
charge and they still won't commit. That's just so irritating. There's, there are people that actually
get off their butts. And those people in my opinion, yeah, there are. You know, my opinion is those
people tend to be more interesting anyway, honestly.
You know, your current group
with friends is going to be like, oh, man,
I wish we could travel. Yeah, me too.
Oh, let's plan a trip.
Well, I'll plan a trip if Jenny plans a trip.
Well, okay, well, I'll plan a trip if Monica plans a trip.
Okay, cool.
And then you try to get everyone together,
and then someone's like, well, I don't know.
I mean, I don't know, right?
You're just going to be dealing with their BS,
non-committal loser mindset for the rest of your life.
Just get rid of these people.
There's tons of people around that,
to go out and do stuff. It just makes me, makes my skin crawl a little bit hearing about this.
100% agree. There are so many people out there that you can hang out with that actually do want to go out
and do the things you want to do. So why try and herd cats who were just not into it? They're like,
well, I'll only go if Joey goes. No, I'll only go if Bobby goes. Yeah, screw those people. Do what Jordan
said. Find some new friends. All right. Next up. Jordan and Jason, I'm a 22-year-old man fresh out of
college. Over the last five years, my mother has ballooned in size and weight. She's teetered right around
healthy and slightly overweight most of my life. Once my sister and I left for college, she let herself go.
She seems to not even want to work on herself. She's probably gained a hundred plus pounds in the last
five years. It's getting embarrassing and worrisome. My dad is a super healthy guy, great shape,
ultra marathoner, etc. Her laziness and unwillingness to help herself obviously bothers my dad.
It also bothers me as an athlete and observer of nutrition. I want my mom to be healthy and stop this
self-destructive behavior for herself and her family. Any advice? Thanks, fat mom. Yikes. I mean,
there's a deeper issue here. Oh, yes. You know, this is not about physical health. Anytime
someone ends that much weight, they're eating emotionally. And I suspect there's a little bit of
depression here. And it's interesting that the timing coincided with you and your sister leaving
the house. There's a little emptiness syndrome possibly happening here. I don't really know.
I'm wondering if she's seen a therapist.
And I think that's the first move because you could be dealing with empty nest syndrome.
You could be dealing with all kinds of stuff.
I remember when I was in high school, one of my friend's moms, she was just kind of nuts.
And I remember at one point just point blank saying, hey, you know, what's going on with your mom?
And he's like, yeah, I don't really know.
We don't really know.
She's got something called empty nest syndrome.
And it was really bad because as you heard me correctly, I was at my time.
friend's house with him and that was what she was diagnosed with and his brother had left the
house too but his sister who was highly successful she had left and that was what coincided with her
mom's sort of weird mental issues the brother was not doing so well he also was i think living at home
and of course my friend and i were in high school so imagine how it feels to have somebody
who's suffering from empty nest syndrome and you're not out of the nest so it was
Yeah, it's kind of like, well, what's wrong with us?
And it was like his sister was like a Hollywood graphic designer and dating Kevin Costner and all this stuff.
And he, you know, but the brother was like a waiter, a server.
And I know that that's not a big deal, but he was like 40.
So he kind of had, and again, nothing wrong with that if that's kind of what you choose to do,
but he had had, let's say, sort of a rough start.
And that was why.
It wasn't like he was happy with a simpler life.
It was just that he had made a ton of different mistakes.
And then, you know, my friend is just sort of coming of age.
And it's like, oh, man.
So therapy is where it's at to figure out what's going on here.
Also, what do you think about maybe marriage therapy?
Because now the fat mom is out of the house, maybe the relationship with the husband is not really where it needs to be.
And that's where the emotional eating comes in.
It could be just a relationship with her mother and father that is causing this eating.
because since she's not there to actually like take the place, it comes back to the emptiness,
but I think that there might be a deeper issue with the relationship between the mother and the father
that is actually causing the emotional eating. What do you think about that?
Yeah, I think you're probably right. So it's a little confusing because we say fat mom was out of the house,
but really fat mom was the daughter who wrote in the question. So the mom is still in the house.
The mom actually herself is still in the house. And I think you're probably right. It's probably
something that was, here's what I think. They probably had lingering marriage.
issues that were going on for a long time. But since they had kids in the house, it was like,
well, we can't freaking mess with this stuff right now. We got kids. Then the kids left and they were like,
oh, we're just, just us here alone with our problems that we haven't solved for 10 years,
just hanging out. Where's the Eclare? Right, where's the Eclare? And the dad's like, well, I'm
going to go run an ultramarathon and get obsessed with fitness. And stay out of the house because I don't
want to talk to you anymore. Possibly. I mean, we're kind of jumping in conclusion on that one,
but you never really know.
But large swings in weight, especially 100 pound plus weight gain, that is no joke.
That is a mortal threat.
And your mom knows this.
What does your dad do, though?
Does he talk about this?
Does he ignore it?
I wonder how your parents communicate, going back to your original point there, Jason.
My bet is that they aren't good communicators right now, and they probably weren't in the past about certain things either.
Or there's something else going on.
So here's what I would do.
I would ask your dad and your mom separately what the issues are and how their relationship is.
Separately, privately, it might be weird.
They're your parents.
You might not get a real answer.
You probably won't get a real answer, honestly.
But if you have aunts and uncles on your mom's side that you can ask, that might also be helpful.
Because look, this isn't one of those like, oh, I want to avoid an awkward conversation.
This is a serious, mortal, and threat to your mother's life.
And probably an indicator of a bigger issue.
So the time to fix this is now before diabetes, organ failure, joint pain, further depression, anxiety, marriage issues that are irreconcilable.
Keep us posted.
But I would dive into this if you have the bandwidth to do so.
I think it might be worthwhile.
And I think there's, you're right, Jason, there's something else going on here.
Yeah, I bring this up because that's what exactly happened to my mom.
She had a terrible marriage.
She got morbidly obese, and it was the marriage that did it.
and once they got divorced, she started to lose weight and was much happier.
But it was the exact same issue.
That's why, you know, from my side, that's why I brought that up because that could be the issue, that they just don't get along anymore.
And he's, he's retreating to marathoning.
She's retreating to the refrigerator.
And she's probably doing that just to piss him off because he's so fit.
Oh, there might be something there too, like some sort of subconscious thing going on.
Exactly.
Totally.
All right.
Next up.
Hey, Jordan, Jason, and Jen.
I'm a senior in college and I have a question about friendship.
I live in an apartment with two of my friends, one who I've known since my freshman year
in college, and the other I've known since high school.
We live with another guy and his girlfriend.
Ever since I moved into the apartment, this other guy and I have had tension.
He was super aggressive when he thought that I insulted his girlfriend the first week I moved in.
It's important to note that my two other friends were aware of this tension, and they've
warned me before of his aggressive behavior.
This guy actually punched one of his old roommates in the past.
past before I moved in because they had an argument. A couple months living in the apartment
and one evening I come home from school and my housemate out of nowhere was actually waiting
for me to come home and he rushed me. I barely stepped into the doorway before he was all up in my
face. He was yelling and trying to start a fight with me while I was backed into a corner.
At this time I was practicing effective and calm communication and not feeding the fire.
The yelling and pressuring went on for about five minutes and all this time my two other friends
just stood there doing nothing. I made eye contact with them and all they did was stare. They didn't
back me up or try getting between me and my other housemate. If it had been them in that situation,
I don't know if I would have swung and fought or broke up the fight, but I definitely would have done
something. My question is, what is a friend supposed to do in this situation? Ever since that day,
I've had trouble seeing them as my friends and I have no idea if I'm being overly dramatic,
but I expected them to back me up in that situation because that's what I would have done.
Just a guy with no backup.
So this sucks.
But first of all, yeah, your friends are whims who didn't know what to do.
That's for sure.
But it doesn't really mean they're not your friends.
You know, I would ask them privately what the heck is going on here.
You do deserve an answer for that.
But the real problem is not them.
You know, what do you expect?
I would love it if you were like, and then my friend went to the liquor cabinet,
grabbed a full bottle of cheap whiskey and bashed it over the guy's head and now he's in the hospital.
Like, that would be awesome.
because that guy deserves it.
He sounds like a bullying a-hole who needs to be taught a lesson.
And I don't advocate for violence.
But look, if you're going to use violence, then you get violence.
If that's the language you speak, I'm happy to speak it with you.
Yeah, no doubt, no doubt.
But that doesn't mean they're not your friends, really.
The real problem is not these guys.
The problem is you live with an insecure dipshit who can't manage his emotions and is
violent.
Because I don't care what it looks like from right now he didn't punch you, et cetera.
that's called assault. It's not battery. It's assault, though, full on. That is a jail time offense
that this guy's doing to you. And it doesn't seem like this is his first rodeo. Oh, he's got
aggressive behavior. It wasn't like he was just wasted one day and did some thing that was totally
out of character and is like, wow, I can't drink again. This guy is just like that. Yeah.
Randomly. He punched the guy that was, you know, there before him. So he has a history of violent behavior.
Yeah, I mean, what are you going to do? Wait to get punched. He's going to do it to you, obviously. It's going to
happen. He would have done it before if he didn't think he was going to get triple teamed by your
friends who now he knows aren't going to do anything. So I'd move out if I were you and call the
police. Again, this is assault and you have two witnesses who can be essentially compelled to
testify about this. And they should. They should at least do that for you. Now, make sure you can
get out of there before you do that because I have a feeling if you call the cops on this guy,
he's going to be unpredictable. But I think he deserves a lesson, as do many bullies. And even if you
don't have the police confront him, document what happened by writing it all down, times, dates,
everything, and record an audio version of your two Winnie Friends accounts of what happened as well.
Like, if you have to record the conversation and look into your local wiretapping laws,
but chances are, if you live in a one-party state, you can record a conversation with yourself
and to other people, and you say, what was that all about?
And they go, yeah, I don't know.
Steve just came out of nowhere and attacked you, and you can say, just what happened?
even remember exactly what happened. Can you tell me the story from what happened from your
perspective? And they'll say, oh, what do you mean? You came home and you just ran after you.
And you're like, but I didn't do anything right. No, you didn't do anything. You walked in the door and he
attacked you. I mean, that's what you need to get on tape. Use your phone or whatever. Then file that
away with an attorney and someone at school administration. If you live on campus and the cops,
because that way, if this a hole does anything else, you've got it documented and you'll have a
stronger case. Because, of course, when he does inevitably beat you up or punch you, he's going to be
well, he did this thing first.
And you can be like, no, he's got a documented case of attacking me.
And he's going to go, I do not.
Nothing ever happened.
And you'll be like, great, here's all this evidence that I filed beforehand when I was actually worried about my safety and witnesses.
And also this guy punched this other guy.
And look, even if the cops are like, look, we can't prosecute this.
It was all sort of privately in the location and the prosecutor's really busy.
The school's going to go, you know what?
We don't want violent assholes in our school.
We're going to expel this guy.
We have enough evidence for an administrative disciplinary action here.
and this guy doesn't belong in school.
He sounds like he belongs in jail, honestly.
He needs to get therapy for himself.
And you might also want to invest in a few cheap security cameras for inside the house
and let the other roommates know they're there
because that will get around the two-party rule if you're in a two-party state for recording.
If they know that there are security cameras in the house and you're recording,
next time this happens, you will have video evidence.
Yeah, you know what?
That's not a bad idea.
Go and grab like a nest cam or something like that.
I prefer the Logitech Circle cameras because they're much cheaper and they give you 24 hours of free recording.
So there you go.
Go grab that.
And there's some that are like, we have one on our bookshelf and it's like a battery operated USB chargeable.
The battery lasts freaking like three weeks.
And you can grab one of those.
And yeah, the next time he rushes you or does something, you're going to have a video the whole thing.
So when he goes ahead and denies it, you're like, nope, here's him assaulting me.
And they're like, oh, okay, you're going to jail now.
Right.
Because I think the guy's blowing smoke and he's a bully who's just mad.
massively insecure and probably has an abusive past.
I mean, of him being abused, we already know he's abused other people.
And what's up with him dating?
Who's the girl that you guys live with or whatever?
That, I mean, she's clearly dealing with this, too.
There's really, and I'm drawn a generalization here, there's probably no such thing as a guy
who abuses other people but doesn't abuse the people he lives and works with.
Sorry, but you're dating somebody and he abuses all these other people, but he never
mistreats you.
Come on, give me a break.
That's not true at all.
She's probably just not saying anything.
So you've got to make sure you're handling this properly.
But yeah, give your friends a break, man.
They were obviously scared out of their minds.
It sucks.
I get it.
I'm picturing the Big Bang theory, Jason.
None of those guys would have stuck up for each other.
You think if Sheldon's getting yelled at in the corner,
freaking what's the guy, Johnny Galecki or whatever?
Do you think he's going to run up and attack the guy?
You think Howard's going to run up there?
Actually, Howard would do it.
I think Howard would do it.
He's the one with the balls in the group.
Probably. Yeah, you're right. He's the only one.
Yeah. He's been to space. That's right. He has been to space. So maybe him, but you're not friends with him. You're friends of these two Jetses. And again, you know, cut him a break. Like, I get it. You're in college. They were terrified. And you weren't getting punched. I'd like to think that if you were getting punched, they would have done something. But you can't count on that. You can't count on other people. People are not always cut out for combat. That is a fact.
That is true. That is absolutely true. Yes.
We'll be right back with more feedback Friday after these really, really, really short but oh, so necessary announcements.
Thanks for listening and supporting the Jordan Harbinger Show. Your support keeps us on the air.
And for a list of all the discounts from our amazing sponsors, visit Jordan Harbinger.com slash advertisers.
And if you'd be so kind, please drop us a nice rating and review in iTunes or your podcast player of choice.
It really helps us out. And I really do mean really helps us out. I'm not joking there.
So if you want some tips on how to do that, just head on over to Jordan Harbinger.
com slash subscribe. And now for the nail-biting conclusion of Feedback Friday.
All right. Next up. Hi, Jordan and Jason. I'm a 27-year-old woman. I recently questioned my boyfriend
of five years, who's a 28-year-old man on what is his stance on his health, his career, and his
finances, along with his family and friends and our love life. I've been unsatisfied with his actions
after this, and I will try to do better, which was basically his response. He has many health
issues but won't go to the doctor to treat them. He'll take advice from our friends, but not me,
to take the steps to go to the doctor. He uses physical pain and depression often as excuses
for the following two points. He wants to make big purchases like a car to drive to work and an
international holiday with me, but he can't stop buying small items like the newest game with his
casual retail assistant rate. He admitted buying things gambling and gaming give him temporary
enjoyment through his depression. He says he wants to go back to tertiary education for the last four years,
his financial situation gets in the way. He wants the romantic spark of the past to come back,
but the above irks me and makes him unattractive. I tried letting him plan dates one month,
and I do the other month, but his dates always resulted me driving to pick him up from his parents'
home and then driving to a restaurant he didn't book and settle for fast food as the restaurant
was full. Friends have told me to stick around because he's a good person and he just hasn't
grown up. Do you believe you can still care and love someone but no longer be compatible with them
to be their partner. Kindest regards, dating a man-child.
Yeah, of course I believe that. Are you kidding me?
That's like, yes, I absolutely believe you can love somebody but not be a good partner for them.
That is like the story of everyone's life. My goodness. I'm getting deja vu. Remember the doctor
who wrote in and was dating a guy who couldn't get it together and made a bunch of excuses and only
played golf? Yeah. Yeah. Yeah, I mean, this is a very similar situation. He wants to make
big purchases. Okay, that's a dream. He wants to take an international vacation.
Okay, that's a dream.
And by the way, Jason, I never put together that tertiary education was what you take after secondary school.
I've never heard that term before, tertiary education.
Me neither.
Yeah, but it makes sense.
So university, things like that.
Okay, so he's not doing any of that.
And he's living with his parents.
He's living with his parents, which is, you know, fine, whatever you're young and happens.
He wants the romantic spark of the past to come back.
Okay, cart before the horse.
First of all, he's got all his personal health stuff.
He's not really trying to clean it up.
He's not trying to make you happy.
So, yeah, you can love someone.
That's an emotion, but you can be a terrible match for them, which is where the logical
side of things kicks in, and the clear solution is to leave and move on.
You don't owe him anything.
If you're trying and he's not, you don't owe him anything, especially if it's been a while.
And it really does just remind me of that doctor.
You deserve better.
You deserve better.
I see this in my inbox all the time.
Women and men who deserve more, but are sticking.
in something because they've been in it for a while.
It's just like, well, I've been in it for a while.
My friends say he's a good person.
Okay.
Then they should date him.
Exactly.
That's what I was thinking.
I'm like, well, if you like him so much, here he is.
Yeah.
I mean, that's so weird.
Oh, he's a good person who just hasn't grown up yet.
Cool.
Call me when you're a freaking adult.
Because I'm an adult.
Yeah.
What the hell?
I mean, yeah, that's ridiculous.
Do they not think you can do better?
Because if that's the case, then F you, friends.
Come on.
Seriously.
You know, like, geez, that's really ridiculous.
I can't believe anybody would say that.
I think, look, if you've been married a decade, someone's going through a hard time, that's one thing.
If you're dating and the other person is mailing it in, it doesn't really matter why.
Especially if they're not going to take your advice, they're not going to put any effort into doing better.
You deserve more.
And sometimes people need to kick in the pants to get their own stuff together.
I really believe that.
You know, and yes, oh, he's got these issues maybe, but he hasn't gone to the doctor, so he's not addressing them.
He basically has no incentive to do anything because he actually, he has what he actually wants, Jason.
He has a girlfriend, he has video games, he has junk food.
He doesn't want a better life.
Sure, he wishes for some things to be better in some vague way, but he doesn't actually want it.
He's a professional settler.
He's going to settle for the good things.
He's got a girlfriend.
He's got the games.
Yeah, he's got a job, not a great job.
job, but he's got a job. He's, you know, mooching off the parents. Why, why change? God,
why would you have to get up in the morning and, like, make your life better when you have all
of that great stuff? Because it's going to last forever. We all know that, right? Yeah, sure. If he did
really want to change things, he would be making an attempt to change things. It's not like he's
so disabled with depression that he can't do that. If he's holding a job, he's otherwise
functional, there are people with real depression and they just, they can't do stuff. They
can't get out of bed. They've got real issues. Those people need medical attention. This guy,
needs to go to a therapist and a doctor and address this stuff for sure, but he's able to do a lot of these other things.
He's just not actually doing any of it for himself and for you. He's doing what he wants to do,
mailing it in to keep the relationship going, buying video games, and playing them, going to the job to earn money, et cetera.
But he's not doing anything for you because he's not really doing anything that you want him to do for himself.
So give him a chance to go to a therapist and get himself together. But if he can't do that,
he does not care enough about your quality of life.
You should move on to somebody who does.
All right, next.
Hey, Jordan and Jason.
I found out a friend of mine is getting involved with a landmark organization.
He's done the intro and solo course and is now about to do the couples course with his girlfriend
and is starting to invest significant money.
I've done Jordan Harbinger courses before, so I'm not against spending time and resources on
self-improvement, but there are cult-like elements of landmark that don't sit well with me.
people have been known to only associate with landmark people once they're in and investing significant amounts of money into furthering their landmarkness,
and I've seen it in practice from a friend of my sister who drank the Kool-Aid.
I think if his friends just tell him it's a cult and push him too hard, it's going to backfire.
I recall Jordan's interview with Christian Piccolini a while back and was wondering if there's any practical approach you can think of
to help him think critically about this and really do the research before investing more time and money.
Thanks.
Signed, Ken the Colt.
So normally I would be like, oh my gosh, cults are so bad.
Here's what you got to do.
But I will say Landmark, I haven't done it.
I've gone to some of their intro stuff.
It doesn't interest me because I've been to similar things.
And I'm just, I'm not a fan of a lot of that stuff.
But Landmark's not really a cult.
People get really into it.
But in general, it can be okay.
It's what you make of it.
Again, I'm not a huge fan of it.
There's high pressure sales tactics.
I don't have three or four days to listen to really,
repetitive stuff from many times kind of an unqualified teacher who's sort of, I don't want to go
down that road during this answer here either.
But that said, a lot of people love it.
They may be getting real value from it.
The good news is that most of the people who go through something like this, they just lose
interest after a while.
They've done a bunch of it.
It gets old.
Or the organization inevitably tries to rope them into doing free work all the time, which is
pretty common.
I've seen it a thousand times.
There's people who are so into this stuff.
Landmark or the other zillion things like this.
And then they're like, I'm doing the doctorate program, which by the way is not a doctorate
program.
It's just them working in the office doing sales.
And they're like, you're going to learn so much about yourself.
And then they make you do free work and eventually people go, what the hell?
I just have a job for which I am unpaid.
This is such BS.
Right?
And people lose interest.
So that said, it's not a cult.
Real cults are far more dangerous.
Landmark depends on who is running it.
It mostly is okay.
It's a little overzealous in their sales.
it's overhyped in the results for most people,
but they're not necessarily trying to isolate you from your family,
they're not trying to isolate you from your friends.
Sure, you're going to spend tons of time with other people in that,
but if you're doing this in a healthy way,
I know plenty of people that went to Landmark and we're like,
yeah, it was all right, it was good.
And then went to another thing, and they're like, yeah, it was fine.
And we stayed friends and everything was totally cool.
I know other people that went to Landmark,
and it's like, they only hang out with Landmark people,
oh, where your family now?
And then a year later, they're like, oh, yeah,
I went to that weird phase.
Yeah, that was so weird.
I don't go to their stuff anymore.
I kind of regret doing a lot of it.
I mean, whatever.
You know, he's going to lose some time.
He's going to lose some money, but you don't have to alienate him.
You're not going to be able to save him from this.
They've got a very powerful sales and persuasion organization.
And if he's getting what he thinks is value from it, fine.
So don't panic.
And you can wait it out if need be, especially while they go through their insufferable phase
of only talking about landmark stuff all the time.
And, you know, in the...
I just think about the Americans, because landmark is basically est.
Yeah, and Est is what they talked about
all the Americans all the time. And I was watching
those episodes and I'm like, oh God, shut up
about it already.
Yeah, that's 100% what it is.
In the end, look, if they're trying to better
themselves, you can be supportive because
after all, it's not Scientology.
They're not going to lose their kids. They're not going to lose
their family. They're going to spend a bit of cash.
They're going to waste some time. They might even spend the time
wisely. Who knows? They might resent it. They might not.
But that's pretty much it. You know,
you're not watching somebody join
a cult that requires them to move
to a trailer park in the middle of Idaho and not have a phone, right?
That stuff is freaky.
The wild, wild country, they're not becoming Rajneeshis, right?
Yeah, seriously.
He's just going to some courses after work and taking some time off.
That's pretty much it.
Recommendation of the week, go see a roller derby match.
You know, these things are funny.
It's like, how would you describe it is?
And it's kind of like a, there's people roller skating around in circles.
It's like rugby, kind of.
And is it always women?
It is, right?
Well, no, it's not always women, but the bulk of it nowadays is women doing roller derby.
I know my friend Michael Burns is one of the big bouncers over at the derby dolls here in L.A.
If you don't know the rules, then it's just like, okay, why are they, I'm looking at roller skating traffic.
But once you, like, you got to learn the rules before you go.
So you got to know where the people need to be and who's doing what with whom.
And it is actually fascinating to see how much of a real sport it actually is.
It's pretty cool stuff.
Yeah, I've been to Derby Dolls in L.A.
I actually witnessed a pretty awesome upset.
I can't remember what the teams were, but one team was just clearly smashing the other team.
And everyone left.
And there was a handful of kind of like fans and drunk people, and I stuck around.
And then the tide just started to turn.
And then in the last few minutes of the match, the underdog, the massive underdog, came back and won.
And people were screaming their heads off.
It was really cool, really exciting.
And we're talking like taco trucks and beer.
And it's just fun.
You know, it's a fun time, and you're going to see these people who are not paid anything slash that much to go do something they love.
It's just a fun night out.
And it's not super crowded.
You get in for cheap, and it's a bunch of people who are just really there for the experience.
You know, I used to do wrestling stuff when I was living in Chicago.
I'd go to, like, you know, home brew wrestling shows out there.
And I think this is kind of like it.
It's like dinner theater with violence with a beer.
That's really kind of what it is.
It's really fun.
And to be clear, the roller derby stuff oftentimes is kid-friendly.
Like, it kind of depends.
You might want to check it out for yourself first before you leave the babysitter.
But, like, a lot of times it's just a funny thing.
It's kind of like a monster truck rally kind of deal.
But it's not dangerous.
You're not going up against a bunch of, like, low-class thugs.
Nobody's throwing glass bottles.
At least not a derby doll.
It's WWE on wheels.
Yeah, yeah, exactly.
Exactly.
Hope you all enjoyed that.
I want to thank everyone that wrote in this week.
Don't forget, you can email us Friday at Jordan Harbinger.com to get your questions answered on the air.
Happy to keep you anonymous, of course.
A link to the show notes for this episode can be found at Jordan Harbinger.com.
Quick shout out to Mind Pump.
They run an awesome show.
They've been supporting us from the very beginning.
I heard they mentioned us a few times on their show.
Just good dudes.
All around.
Really love those guys.
Go check out Mind Pump Fitness podcast as well.
And a shout out to American Dream University, a charity I work with, along with Robert Fulton,
to help veterans readjust to civilian life,
get things moving for them,
get things moving for their business.
If you're looking for a good charity to support,
check them out, American DreamU, the letter you, dot org.
I'm on Instagram and Twitter at Jordan Harbinger.
It's a great way to engage with the show.
And Jason, tell them where to find you.
You can find links to all my socials at jpd.mee.
And you can check out my other podcast, grumpy old geeks.
For more information on that show,
just go to gog.
For how to subscribe.
Keep sending in those questions to Friday at Jordan Harbinger.
Try to keep them concise if you can.
Makes things a lot easier for us on our end.
Share the show with those you love and even those you don't.
We've got a lot more in the pipeline.
We're excited to bring it to you.
In the meantime, do your best to apply what you hear on the show
so you can live what you listen, and we'll see you next time.
And now for our special bonus interview with Ian Siegel of ZipRecruiter.
ZipRecruiter is kind of a novel concept.
There's plenty of job sites, except most of them just funnel resumes in kind of a buckshot fashion.
So tell me what problem ZipRecruiter was solving for you and why you started the company.
Well, the idea for ZipRecruiter came to me when I was working at multiple startups,
and I was required to do my own recruiting because those companies were too small to have their own HR department.
And so as a result of that, I was literally posting the same job to Monster, Career Builder, Craigslist, LinkedIn, over and over and again, the same job.
And it was so onerous and it was so time-consuming.
And I just kept thinking, this is exactly the kind of thing the web is designed to solve.
This is the problem the technology is built for.
And I constantly imagine this one-button push solution.
And that's what we built.
So a zipper could you can post to over 100 job sites with a single submission.
And the response to that from the day we launched was overwhelming.
And I think the only, you know, real improvement that we've had to make,
over time is, you know, when you post to 100 job sites, you deliver a lot of candidates.
And what's really become our focus as we've evolved is delivering not just candidate volume,
but candidate quality.
How do you do that?
I mean, I know there's a complicated algorithm that's involved and everything, but how does it
essentially, in a nutshell, work?
Because it seems like it's really hard to actually evaluate those things.
I've tried hiring people from other websites, Craigslist and stuff like that.
And you're like, all right, my plan is to me.
make them jump through these seven hoops. First of all, 99% of people can't do that, which I guess is a
good filter. But then you get these people that will jump through like the first two hoops and you go,
great. And then they blow it everywhere else because of just sheer laziness and incompetence.
So like, are you able to filter those people out? Because I think that's a huge pain point for
anybody hiring anyone, especially entry level. The answer to your, the first part of your question is
technology has come into play over the last two years that has allowed things to happen from a
matching perspective that were literally impossible throughout the course of human history until
now. And it's this technology that people sometimes refer to as machine learning or deep
learning or even AI. But fundamentally, computers are really, really good at discrete problems
like take the qualifications that are required in a job description and match it to the qualifications
that are listed in a resume, far better than human beings ever will be.
And the evidence bears out in we have a really simple mechanism by which we can measure satisfaction,
which is there's a thumbs up and a thumbs down on every candidate that applies to a job on
ZipRecruiter.
And we can just see whether employers like these candidates or not.
And fundamentally, the thumbs up rate has gone up a double digit percentage ever since
we let computers start doing the matching.
And there's a really fun angle on this, which is,
the truth is that we've received so many job descriptions for the same job over time,
that we effectively already have a superset of what the requirements would be for any job.
So if you just give us a job title and a geography,
we can immediately start showing you candidates before you even write a job description.
And that's in fact exactly what we've started to do.
And that's not just good for employers.
It's actually proven to be really good for candidates.
We are a marketplace, so we serve both sides of the market.
So the moment that you enter a job title on a location on ZipRecruiter now,
we just start showing you candidates who are most importantly, actively in market looking for work
and who meet all of the qualifications that you have listed.
Now, the question of whether or not when you actually talk to them,
they're a culture fit or a personality fit, that's a step no site has been able to solve yet.
But the truth is that the solution to that is imminent.
So how can a job applicant on the other side of this equation make him or herself stand out?
Because this is a question you get a lot, but not usually posed to somebody who has hundreds of thousands, potentially of data points?
I think the thing that has been the conventional wisdom for a long time and is now exactly the opposite of what you as a job seeker want to do is make your resume stand out, make your resume special, put a lot of time into the design of your resume.
Be really thoughtful about when they look at that resume, have done something to it that makes that employer stop and say, wait a minute, what is this?
And the reality is the majority of candidate applications now are reviewed by a computer before they're reviewed by a human.
And computers are linear thinkers.
So the most important thing for that computer is that you have structured the information in a way that is easy to parse.
and you have clearly listed your skills and the number of years of experience you have with those
things. So I advise people to use the simplest possible resume template that they possibly can
spend a lot of time thinking about formatting to make sure they're not using anything
non-standard, no special characters. And then these algorithms are really good at picking up
things like misspellings or grammatical mistakes. So the basic advice of proof read your resume has
never been more important than it is right now. Interesting. So the computer, does it know to ding
you if you've got some sort of grammar or spelling error in the resume? You know, the nature of the
new technology that we're using is something called deep learning. And the really fascinating thing
about deep learning algorithms is fundamentally you let the computer develop its own algorithm.
You give it a general rule construct of what the problem is you're trying to solve. And then it tests
many different hypotheses in rapid sequential order to figure out which one is deriving the best result.
And it's using so many dimensions of information that it's actually impossible for us to reverse engineer
exactly why it's making the matches it has.
The way we evaluated is on the response from the employers who are receiving these applicants.
Are they happy?
Are they giving thumbs-ups?
Are they reaching out and contacting them, which is something else we can see?
So we look for all these positive data signals.
And what we have found is that computers are astonishingly better at finding the right matches.
It used to be that when you posted a job, you were effectively posting in print.
You were just hoping serendipity would bring you the right candidates.
And now it's a science.
It's really amazing what the computers are capable of doing.
So we can't sort of say, look, I need somebody, this is a writing job.
They misused there and there.
Dang it.
Can we do something like that?
Can we tune it like that or not really?
I love this question because I often speak about the hiring market in general.
And I always pose two questions to any audience I'm speaking to.
And the first question is when you write a job description, do you want my service to automatically
correct your spelling and your grammar?
And 100% of employers raise their hands and say, yes,
I want you to do that.
And then I say, okay, do you want me to correct the spelling and grammar of the applicants who apply?
And I'd say 80% of employers say no because they consider that to be signal,
useful signal that they can use in determining whether they like a candidate or not.
So this question of like how important are misspellings is a really interesting one.
As far as whether the algorithm is using that data or not, here's what I can tell you.
The algorithm is using every piece of the animal.
It has 64 different dimensions of data that it's looking at at any candidate.
And it's not just looking at the information you've put in your resume.
It's also looking at your overall behavior.
How many jobs have you applied to?
How qualified are you for those jobs?
What's the response from employers to your other applications, etc., etc.?
So we have all this data signal that's really rich.
It may be that you will get a candidate who has misspelled the word there,
but they will have checked every other box that you could possibly have wanted.
And so what I can tell you is the algorithms at this point are nearly twice as good as human
beings at finding the right applicants.
Huh, that's so interesting.
I feel like that mirrors my desire, right?
I would want it to correct my spelling and grammar.
I need a good impression.
I'm in a hurry.
But yeah, I don't want somebody to slip through the cracks and then have it be
like, oh, well, the computer made this intelligible. Before that, it was gibberish, and they spent
three hours fixing it, because it is signal. It is useful signal. So is there any criticism that
one might foist upon a service like ZipRecruiter, and I realize I'm asking you to sort of out
your own service here, that one might say, look, I'm getting skewed results because I actually
want to know if this person is going to be able to do this themselves, or is the benefits, obviously,
I would say, of course, outweigh the disadvantage. You know, me getting a right candidate that has
some qualifications versus it spell checking, I'll take that any day. But is there some, I would say,
weak criticism that could be placed on a service like ZipRecruiter if machines are really doing a lot of
the presentation? I mean, I think you're hitting what I would consider a low level issue with the
matching algorithm. Definitely. There is, there, there is in fact pretty high level issues that we spend
a lot of time worrying about thinking about and trying to factor into how we build technology, because
fundamentally, whether it's machine learning or deep learning, the information that the algorithm
is using to determine which candidates are good and which are bad is based on the training
data that humans are providing. And one thing that's absolutely true is there is a tremendous
amount of subconscious bias within our society. And that has been proven over again.
If you have an African or American or a Latino name, your probability of getting an interview
is 20% lower than if you have a traditional Anglo-Saxon name.
And if you are a woman, there are definitely biases, particularly in certain job categories
against you.
And so the question is, if we just fed the algorithm all the data we had, arguably, it could
potentially be perfecting the subconscious bias that exists.
It'll definitely give you candidates that you would love, but it would be refining that
bias. And so we have to be thoughtful about what information we do and don't give it access to
to try and eliminate that bias from the hiring process. Oh, interesting. So you actually have to
not tell it certain things otherwise the service would actually probably program that bias into
its machine learning algorithm. 100%. You can look at some of the most forward thinking organizations
in the world like Google.
Google did its own internal survey where it found that the subconscious bias that I already
articulated existed in its organization. And then it actually went to its African American and
Latino managers and then looked at their behavior and discovered they exhibited exactly the
same bias as the overall population. So that's how powerful subconscious bias is. And there is
no organization that is free of it. Our society as a whole is guilty of it. And therefore,
you know, when people talk about how do you create more diversity in workplaces, I think simply
trying to train out the bias is a long-term solution. It will take multiple generations to get
rid of it. But interestingly, because algorithms are doing a lot of the matching, and it's where
I've said before that the dawn of robot recruiting is here, it's just so,
much better predicting the right candidates for a job. Interestingly, the short-term solution is actually
moving to these algorithms because then we can control the information, which is considered.
That's, man, that is really fascinating. I wish you had more time to go down that thread,
go down that road, because I think it's kind of like, oh, surprise, everyone's sort of kind
kind of racist. And also, there's not a whole lot we can do about that in terms of programming,
but what we can do is maybe fix it with computers. Maybe. Exactly. Exactly. That's right.
Exactly right.
So we're kind of like, oh, your computer's racist.
Yeah, but we can tell it not to be, try that with your uncle, not going to work, right?
Exactly, exactly.
All right.
So what are mistakes that a lot of people are making when they apply for a job?
Because, of course, we know, like coming in on Kemp and all that, like all of the, look them in the eye and have a firm handshake, that's great.
But you've got data that might show us something surprising, right?
Like maybe people who apply in the afternoon, don't get as many jobs as those people who apply in the morning.
Do you have any kind of counterintuitive data points that have arisen from the research that you've accidentally had by running ZipRecruiter?
I mean, it's not accidental research.
We do a lot of research on this.
And the number one insight that we've gleaned is that, you know, there's a lot, there's really two different jobseeker types.
There are job seekers who kind of spray and prey who apply to every job they can possibly find in the hopes that they'll get at least one callback.
Yeah.
And then there are job seekers who are highly selective about which jobs they will apply.
And what we've discovered is that the response rate in terms of the number of contacts that
these two populations get is almost, there's almost no difference. And the reason why is that
the selective group is actually researching the companies that they are applying to and putting
time and attention into the applications they submit, often also including a cover letter, which is a dying
art. And they are also often speaking directly about the business to the business. So one of the things
a lot of job seekers miss is five minutes of research about a company can give you the sentence
that will start a conversation with that company that lets you stand out from all the other
applicants. So it might be something like, you know, I was reviewing what people said about you
on Glassdoor and your culture sounds like something that's just right for me. Or it could be,
I was looking at how you differentiated from your competitors in your marketing and I think
it's really compelling and it's got me interested in coming to work for you. Anything that you can
say that is specific and complementary is something that will help you stand out from the crowd.
So that kind of extra five minutes of, hey, I did look at the website and your bio on the
site says that you used to work in when I was an attorney, like white collar criminal defense,
that little type of, this is one of the reasons I'd like to work here instead of just sort of
I want to work here because I want to work anywhere.
If I only got to give one piece of advice to every job seeker that is looking for work right now,
it would be to remember this sentence, okay?
The first sentence you either want to put in your cover letter or the first sentence you want to utter
when you sit down in that job interview is, I'm so excited to be here, insert a compliment.
I'm so excited to be here because I love what your business is doing for ex-population.
I'm so excited to be here because your marketing makes me laugh every time I see it,
and I feel like it would be a pleasure to work at a company that has that kind of culture.
I'm so excited to be here because of the great reviews I read about your business online,
this is a place where I feel like I can contribute and grow.
Something specific.
Talk about them.
You know, that's interesting because it seems so common, and yet, obviously, people are not really doing this all the time
because they're batching or they're lazy or maybe.
Maybe they don't know this, but chances are they're just in a huge hurry because they filed
78 job applications in the last two hours.
And this isn't part of their workflow.
That's right.
And it's the demonstration of availability that signifies interest.
By saying I'm so excited to be here, you're making yourself vulnerable.
You're saying, like, I want this job.
I'm ready to fight for this job.
And I think a lot of people innately are a little more standoffish and they like to
protect themselves a little more.
but if you really want to capture the attention of the person you're speaking to,
or if you really want to capture the attention of the person reading your cover letter or your
resume, put in the sentence, I'm so excited to talk to you.
I'm so excited to be here because that is a sentence that only takes you good places.
So how can a small company then be competitive against a large company for talent?
Because if we're looking at larger companies, typically they pay more.
they've got maybe more room for upward mobility, hard to say, how can a small business using
a tool like ZipRecruiter to hire, how can they really get the best folks when it seems like
a lot of those people would inherently be looking to work at a Fortune 500 company instead?
Well, I think there's an assumption in your question that the best people want to work at the
biggest companies.
Right.
And in fact, you know, roughly half the people in the country are employed at businesses that have 100 or less employees.
And just like there are some people who want to live in large apartment complexes and there are others who want to live in sort of boutique spaces that fit their personality, that is true of the job market as well.
And in fact, what you find is that a lot of the people who are really talented have more of an entrepreneurial streak and prefer to work at smaller companies.
But I don't think the question is black and white like that.
I think that the good question that you asked in there is,
how does a small company that may not be able to offer all the perks that a larger company has to offer
compete for talent?
And I think that one of the real strong emerging trends that we see with the nearly million new job postings
a month that are posted to ZipRecruiter is this notion of workplace market.
For a long time, employers treated the job description, like, I'm going to give you a list of
requirements, and then you've got to sell me on convincing me that you should work here.
And what really has happened as a result of a lot of the rating sites for employers that have
come out and a lot of the sort of shared knowledge around best practices of how to recruit
is that employers are putting a lot of time and attention into describing what it's like
to work for them and what the benefits are of being there.
So while you may be a small business, you may be located in the heart of an interesting area,
and that geography puts you close to restaurants and shops and great places to live.
You may be a dog-friendly space.
You may have a family-like environment.
There are things you can say that no Fortune 5,000 company would ever say or ever allow,
and it gives you a great opportunity to differentiate.
What type of job trends are you seeing, given that you've,
probably have one of the most complete pictures, or at least wide or broad pictures of job
trends right now, given the scale of ZipRecruiter. What sorts of trends are you seeing in the
market? What's clear right now is that there's tremendous demand in three categories,
technology, construction, and healthcare. These are three of the fastest growing categories
in America, and there's a real dearth of talent in all three of these, and all of them
require some sort of specialized skill that usually takes a few years of training in order to
become proficient. So if you're a student or you're someone who's contemplating a second
career, those are all great categories to invest in. But I think one of the really interesting
problems that we're seeing in the job market today is there's a real disconnect between
the jobs that are available in large quantities and the overall populations,
general desire to do those jobs. For example, there are a few million different forms of driver jobs
that are open right now, whether it's Uber, Lyft, FedEx, UPS, over-the-road trucking, livery service,
taxi service. There are so many driving jobs. And yet, I assure you that less than one percent of all
job seekers come onto any job site and search for driver as a job that they are actively looking for.
So you have between driver jobs and between construction jobs, a lot of mismatch between the demand and the market and the desire of the job-seeking population.
For the generation about to enter the job market, what advice would you give them?
We talked about standing out a little bit, but that might be for somebody with a little bit of experience or something like that.
What if we are fresh out of school and we need to get an entry-level position?
are there specific tips or ideas that you would share with those people?
The number one piece of advice I have for kids who are in school right now
and who are about to enter the job market and feel somewhat insecure
about the amount of experience they have is that study after study right now
is showing that it's EQ over IQ in terms of predicting success in the workplace.
And what does that mean?
It means look people in the eye, shake their hand, be accountable,
show up on time.
It's all the basic best practices that encourage someone to invest in you, whether it's in giving you training or giving your responsibility or giving you autonomy.
These are the basic skills that most employers are looking for with entry-level positions.
They know that you do not have a work background.
And therefore, the only way you can stand out is with your sincerity, your enthusiasm, and your attentiveness.
So I implore you to look people in the eye, put your phone down, and do everything you say you are going to do.
Thank you very much, man. I really appreciate it. I know you're really busy.
Thanks, Jordan. This episode is sponsored in part by Something You Should Know podcast.
Finding a new great podcast shouldn't be this hard, so let me save you some time.
If you like the Jordan Harbinger show, you'll probably like Something You Should Know with Mike Carruthers.
It's one of those shows that makes you smarter in a practical, useful way.
Same curiosity vibe we go for here, just in a fast-focused format.
Mike brings on top experts and asks the exact questions that you'd want to ask,
and the topics are all over the place in the best way.
Recently, they've covered things like why we care so much what other people think,
the benefits of laughter, why sports fans get so invested,
and what makes people like you or not.
The through line is always the same.
Smart ideas you can actually use in real life.
Something you should know has been featured in Apple's shows we love,
and it's got thousands of five-star reviews because it's consistently interesting.
So if you want another show that scratches that I want to understand how people in the world really work itch, search for something you should know wherever you get your podcasts.
Look for the bright yellow light bulb and start listening. You can thank me later.
