Interviews | WIP Seminar with Jason Sockin
When and Where
Speakers
Description
HYBRID EVENT
Zoom Link
Meeting ID: 882 5741 6270
Passcode: wip
Abstract: Interviews allow employers to learn about workers, but do they also enable workers to learn about firms? Studying 500,000 interview reports from Glassdoor, we find candidates for high-paying jobs are more likely to reject a job offer if they believe the interview was easy. Easy interviews appear to convey poor ``fit'' as those who accept offers after easy interviews are two-fifths of a standard deviation less satisfied with their jobs and 10 percent less likely to remain with their employer for at least one year. Analysis of interview narratives using large language models reveals difficult interviews signal colleague ability whereas easy interviews convey a nonselective process. In a small-scale randomized field experiment, an exogenous increase in difficulty elevated perceived difficulty and boosted applicant engagement with the vacancy. Interviews offer workers a preview of match quality, highlighting a channel through which labor markets may become less efficient if firms automate hiring with AI.
Bio: Jason Sockin is an Assistant Professor in The ILR School at Cornell University, whose research centers on better understanding how the Internet and technology have fundamentally altered the ways in which workers and firms interact in today's labor market. He has worked as a researcher at the IZA - Institute of Labor Economics, U.S. Treasury, Penn Wharton Budget Model, Glassdoor, The Congressional Budget Office, The White House's Council of Economic Advisers under the Obama Administration, and The Federal Reserve Board of Governors. He obtained his Bachelor's from The Honors College at Stony Brook University and his PhD in Economics from the University of Pennsylvania.