One day, I heard a very interesting story about a man who wants to do something special with his resume and the application he filled out. He is sitting in the lobby of a famous Silicon Valley company. He filled out the application with the full script letters of the professional engineer. He then printed his resume on a special woven parchment. He carefully placed the app on his resume and let one and a half inches of parchment stick out from under the app. Then he carefully turned them into paper planes.
It's not any paper plane, it's an exact replica of the same paper plane that recently won NASA's challenge, which happened in the world record-breaking hangar - the longest flight time of a paper plane. He uses the same fold and the exact same design. Then he walked to the back of the hall, and it must go about 40 yards. He waited cautiously until the others just walked in and the airflow was just perfect. He fired a paper plane. It flew flawlessly in the hall, and to everyone's surprise, it fell perfectly on the table behind the receptionist's counter.
The gentleman said to himself, "I am, this is perfect." He waved a smile, with a gentle smile. His wave is that you are looking forward to the parade from the English royal family. He walks out the door, enters the parking lot and enters a very detailed black BMW. As he did, he noticed that he was watching from the second floor of the building, and he gave them a smile and another perfect royal wave. He carefully walked out of the parking lot, stopped on the way to the street, and drove off.
Then something happened very interesting and no one called him back. He could not understand why he did not receive a call because his computer scientist certificate was impeccable. He spent three years at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, studied at Carnegie Mellon University for three years, earned a master's degree, and received a Ph.D. in computer science from Stanford University. He owns two patents and participates in a startup he shares. The company was acquired by a defense airline. He stayed there for more than four years. He can write code better than anyone, but he knows more. many.
They never called; "Why," he thought, "the company must discriminate against me," and then he figured out what happened; "The company discriminates against aerospace engineers."
Then he decided to go back to the human resources department to discriminate and let them know that he is not an aerospace engineer. He is indeed a computer scientist. The human resources department told him that even if he sent it by airmail, they did not receive his resume.
Suddenly, the girl at the front desk of the lobby thought it was a joke. She opened the perfect design of the paper plane, as well as the applications and resumes built into the superstructure.
Let this be a lesson for anyone who wants to find a job. Not everyone has a sense of humour, or you can think outside the wind tunnel.
Orignal From: Paper plane resume story - true enough
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