What To Do If You Have The Flu And An Interview

The flu has been in the news lately. The flu has hit early and hard this year. Hopefully you have been spared.

If you are a job sSick Young Woman Lying in Bedearcher with a scheduled interview, nothing could be worse than getting the flu at that time. You will do your candidacy more good by staying home than going to the interview. The people you are scheduled to meet will appreciate that you are not sharing your germs.

However, canceling an interview is a delicate procedure that may lead to breaking a relationship you are trying to build. When you cancel an interview, you aren’t guaranteed it will be rescheduled. The interviewer has the option of rescheduling if the cancellation is for good cause

Call to cancel your interview as soon as you know you won’t be able to make it. A day or two in advance would be ideal, but if that isn’t the case, call as early in the day of your interview as possible. Don’t leave a message. Keep calling until you are able to reach someone. The people you should try calling are the interviewer, the interviewer’s assistant, the person who arranged the interview or your contact in human resources. Leaving a message isn’t a good idea because it may not be read right away.

When you reach a person to talk, you want to let them know that you are unable to make the interview. You can give them a brief reason for the cancellation, but don’t go into personal details; keep it professional. Apologize for the inconvenience and thank them for the consideration. It’s the right thing to do, and you want to keep the inconvenience as minimal as possible. Doing anything less is closing the door to a professional relationship and preventing you from ever being hired by the company.

After you have spoken to a person, or if you have tried several times but have failed to reach a person, send an email. In the email, apologize for the cancellation, state a brief reason, name of the interviewer, time, date, location of the interviewer and the position. Be courteous and respectful in all your communications with the company.

You will, of course, want to reschedule your interview. When you do reschedule, be flexible taking into consideration the time it will take to recuperate. If you reschedule by email, you can give a 2 or 3 times you will be able to interview. If you are calling on the phone, ask the interviewer for a time that is good for the interviewer.  Apologize again for the inconvenience and thank them for accommodating your needs. Follow up by sending an email to confirm the date and time of the interview.

The best thing you can do is avoid the flu, but if you do get the flu, rest and drink plenty of fluids. To your health!

2 Comments to "What To Do If You Have The Flu And An Interview"

  1. Emily Stoik's Gravatar Emily Stoik
    January 17, 2013 - 3:42 pm | Permalink

    Great post! Great minds must think alike! I just posted about how to beat the flu without getting the flu shot 2 days ago! ;-D

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