ShaylaTheRoo
Member
So on Monday, I have an interview with an Apple recruiter for a telecommute IT support position. I'm super excited, as I really like Apple products, and have been trying to study up on iOS app development, not to mention I've really wanted to get a telecommute job that is location independent (my husband graduates his Forensics program in May, and we'll likely have to relocate for his job). The pay is less than I'm making now (by a cringe-worthy amount), but I can ditch having my own car if I'm working from home full time.
They sent me this nice email to help me prepare for the interview, including instructions telling me to complete this new portion of the online application. Part of this new portion of the application is asking for professional references. I always feel weird about this, because I'm never sure who to use. I know my current (pseudo former - according to HR he's my manager still, but that's only until some paperwork gets finalized and he's officially in a different group) manager likes me and thinks I do good work, so he's a definite one to include. But, I need two more.
For a second reference, I'd been thinking I'd use a local business owner I've done volunteer work for/with - I basically managed to coordinate an entire huge charity event for the Child's Play organization to be held in his store, with about a month's notice before the event (needed to coincide with a Magic tournament). I also was a one-woman Alzheimer's research bake sale, planning a menu and baking somewhere in the neighborhood of 260 cupcakes - all made from scratch the day before the bake sale, including handmade frosting. Basically, I move mountains to do volunteer work at this man's store, and I know he'd hire me in a heartbeat if he could afford it, ha ha.
My third reference is a hard one to figure out. I'd like to use a former coworker (he's since gotten a different job), since we worked closely together and I know he'd say good things.
I worry about the second and third references, though, since they weren't my actual managers or anything, just a guy that I do volunteer work for and a coworker. I'd use more managers, but my past two are very iffy cases. I don't have contact info for one (she got a new and amazing job right after I left, before I could get her personal contact info). I'd use someone else at the company, but I left because I'd been being bullied by the other employees, including my boss's boss. You can see the predicament, as I really just want to pretend I never worked there, even though I did some good work.
The other has been demoted and won't be with the company anymore as of May 1st, so I don't think I'd really like to have a new employer contacting him because of all this drama. It might not reflect particularly well on me, or he might not be in the best of mentalities to be saying nice things about his former employees.
During college I worked as a teacher's assistant and am in contact with a few students still - do you think one of them might be more relevant?
Basically, TL;DR, I'm having some trouble picking who to use as my references on a job application. Anyone have some advice on this? I have a few days to finish the application, but I'd like to stop worrying about it before I start studying the other interview materials Apple sent.
They sent me this nice email to help me prepare for the interview, including instructions telling me to complete this new portion of the online application. Part of this new portion of the application is asking for professional references. I always feel weird about this, because I'm never sure who to use. I know my current (pseudo former - according to HR he's my manager still, but that's only until some paperwork gets finalized and he's officially in a different group) manager likes me and thinks I do good work, so he's a definite one to include. But, I need two more.
For a second reference, I'd been thinking I'd use a local business owner I've done volunteer work for/with - I basically managed to coordinate an entire huge charity event for the Child's Play organization to be held in his store, with about a month's notice before the event (needed to coincide with a Magic tournament). I also was a one-woman Alzheimer's research bake sale, planning a menu and baking somewhere in the neighborhood of 260 cupcakes - all made from scratch the day before the bake sale, including handmade frosting. Basically, I move mountains to do volunteer work at this man's store, and I know he'd hire me in a heartbeat if he could afford it, ha ha.
My third reference is a hard one to figure out. I'd like to use a former coworker (he's since gotten a different job), since we worked closely together and I know he'd say good things.
I worry about the second and third references, though, since they weren't my actual managers or anything, just a guy that I do volunteer work for and a coworker. I'd use more managers, but my past two are very iffy cases. I don't have contact info for one (she got a new and amazing job right after I left, before I could get her personal contact info). I'd use someone else at the company, but I left because I'd been being bullied by the other employees, including my boss's boss. You can see the predicament, as I really just want to pretend I never worked there, even though I did some good work.
The other has been demoted and won't be with the company anymore as of May 1st, so I don't think I'd really like to have a new employer contacting him because of all this drama. It might not reflect particularly well on me, or he might not be in the best of mentalities to be saying nice things about his former employees.
During college I worked as a teacher's assistant and am in contact with a few students still - do you think one of them might be more relevant?
Basically, TL;DR, I'm having some trouble picking who to use as my references on a job application. Anyone have some advice on this? I have a few days to finish the application, but I'd like to stop worrying about it before I start studying the other interview materials Apple sent.