Job Recruitment Website - Job seeking and recruitment - A game company called me for an interview. Their company was recruiting apprentices and I submitted my resume, but I

A game company called me for an interview. Their company was recruiting apprentices and I submitted my resume, but I

Whether online or offline, whether it is recruitment websites or roadside telephone poles, there are many scammer companies that have been posting advertisements claiming to be recruiting for many years. By the way, I would like to remind future netizens. If you ignore someone who comes uninvited or if you are not local, you are not good enough for the company to take the initiative to find you. The threshold is super low and the treatment is super good. Ignore it. Why can’t you find people who can’t find anyone despite giving you such a huge salary? Ignore small, informal websites where anyone can post recruitment information. Even large websites may not be reliable. Because I once worked on behalf of a company to post business license information on a regular recruitment website, although there was no malice. No matter where you see job postings, be sure to do the following. First, check whether the company is legal and check the registration information through the local industrial and commercial department or Hongdun.com. If you can't find the information, if it doesn't match the information, or if you find a record of violations and penalties, then you can know whether the other party is reliable. Second, check whether the recruitment information is authentic, find the contact information by looking up the number, and ask yourself. If you keep a mobile phone instead of a landline, and keep a PHS phone pretending to be a landline, you can’t find the number, and it turns out that it doesn’t match the real owner. It doesn’t matter if you call the number for directory enquiry. Use your toes to think about how many people have encountered this. Claiming to be recruiting - interviewing out of town - falling into the trap of transfer. Especially PHS in 0769 (Dongguan), 0751 (Shaoguan), 0752 (Huizhou), 0760 (Zhongshan), 0753 (Meizhou) and other places. The old, young, border and poor areas, such as Luoyang in Henan (pretend to be China Railway Group, etc.), Weinan in Shaanxi, Yuncheng in Shanxi, and various parts of Guangxi - these seem to be the base camps for transfer. Third, search the company name/location/phone number one by one, and check other relevant information about the company on the Internet. If what you see is a cookie-cutter job posting without any physical information, it’s probably a handbag company. If what you see is disgusting advocacy, words of praise that satisfy all your imagination, personal statements or hearsay about how grateful you/your friends/relatives are to this place, then that is trust. If you see a large number of information about netizens being exposed and deceived, you must think that it is not a scam. Well, you won't listen to us anyway, so I'll ask you to try it yourself and come back as a negative lesson. Finally, you need to keep your eyes open and your wallet tight. No matter how fancy and attractive the words are, they are nothing more than taking advantage of your eagerness to get money. Physical examination at a designated location, interview at another place, file storage fee, clothing fee, reserved position fee, actor model signing fee, photography fee, registration fee, induction fee, deposit, handling fee, archiving fee, registration fee, confidentiality fee , membership fees, deposits... there are many tricks, but in fact they are all scams! Cheating money! ! As long as you hold your wallet tightly, don't pull out a dime, and then call the police, there is nothing they can do.