I am attempting to find a job in silicon valley and have been actively interviewing. I accidentally told an external recruiter that introduced me to Company B that I was scheduled to interview with their competitor Company A. Within the 48 hours, Company A cancelled my scheduled virtual on-site with a rather weak excuse, but leaving the door open to a future conversation. Meanwhile, Company B and the external recruiter are pressing me for scheduling an on-site with them. Luckily for me, my calendar has been filling up without trying (the open slots caused by the cancelled interview were filled up within a couple of hours with new companies).
I did some back-channelling of my own and have discovered that Company A was indeed notified of my intent to interview at Company B, leading to the cancellation. I was initially excited at the prospect of working at either of the two companies; both seemed to have really smart people and a collaborative environment, but given what I know now has left me with a bitter taste. I'm not sure how to proceed.
- Should I pick one company over the other? If so, which one?
- Should I drop both? Don't really want that kind of bad energy at the work-place where I'd have trust issues with colleagues/leaders.
- Is there any legal recourse available? California Labor law clearly restricts companies from colluding to reduce competition for employees as it violates the employees' right to fair employment and I'd like to warn future applicants to be careful dealing with these companies, as well as the recruiter(s).
I've been pretty upset the last 24 hours and am not sure if I'm thinking straight. Needed a second opinion.
Perhaps there will be those who think you are over-reacting. But that is a very personal matter. Some people might not be bothered by such behaviour and even relish the occasional skirmish. Others prefer to focus on their work and results. There is no single "correct" approach. Only the approach that doesn't clash with your moral and ethical standards.
I would suggest sending an email to company A, worded something like: "I am scheduling on-sites between April xx and yy. Is there a day that would be good for you, or should I remove you from the list of companies I'm considering?"
Otherwise, move on, but be polite. Don’t burn bridges.
This seems like a petty move. Probably a red-flag.
If anybody were to disrupt that, I would not do business with that party.