My interview has been cancelled at short notice, I cannot reschedule, what to do?





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I had a phone interview last week with the controller of a new company I am interested in. They then wanted to meet with me today for an interview. I was scheduled for an interview today, and three hours before they cancelled it and wanted to reschedule it for next week. I already took PTO from my current job. What do I do? I don't want to look bad calling out again. It will be hard to find another excuse to call off especially since I commute in the city.



How can I communicate effectively that I am unable to reschedule, but am still interested in the position?










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  • Is your current employer not flexible to this? Its your PTO, you should be allowed to use it as you see fit, provided the needs of the company or met (ie too many others also off).
    – SiXandSeven8ths
    yesterday






  • 7




    @SiXandSeven8ths lots of places wont give PTO whenever you want. You typically need to book a bit in advanced. Also, why should OP waste from PTO when there is chance they will miss that one as well
    – SaggingRufus
    yesterday










  • How much $$ are you out of pocket for one PTO day off?
    – smci
    yesterday






  • 6




    Can you tell your current employer that what you needed time for (fantasy dr appointment or whatever) has been postponed, and that you'd like to reschedule next week? And just stay at work? If that's not allowed, I can understand only too well why you might want a different job :-)
    – George M
    yesterday






  • 1




    In the US (you don't specify where you are) we're celebrating Thanksgiving this week. Many employees have Friday off as well as Thursday. Nobody wants to interview on a holiday, but you may consider suggesting a Friday 11/23 interview date to your potential employer after explaining to them the difficulty of scheduling a new PTO day.
    – FreeMan
    15 hours ago

















up vote
59
down vote

favorite
4












I had a phone interview last week with the controller of a new company I am interested in. They then wanted to meet with me today for an interview. I was scheduled for an interview today, and three hours before they cancelled it and wanted to reschedule it for next week. I already took PTO from my current job. What do I do? I don't want to look bad calling out again. It will be hard to find another excuse to call off especially since I commute in the city.



How can I communicate effectively that I am unable to reschedule, but am still interested in the position?










share|improve this question









New contributor




Maria is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.




















  • Is your current employer not flexible to this? Its your PTO, you should be allowed to use it as you see fit, provided the needs of the company or met (ie too many others also off).
    – SiXandSeven8ths
    yesterday






  • 7




    @SiXandSeven8ths lots of places wont give PTO whenever you want. You typically need to book a bit in advanced. Also, why should OP waste from PTO when there is chance they will miss that one as well
    – SaggingRufus
    yesterday










  • How much $$ are you out of pocket for one PTO day off?
    – smci
    yesterday






  • 6




    Can you tell your current employer that what you needed time for (fantasy dr appointment or whatever) has been postponed, and that you'd like to reschedule next week? And just stay at work? If that's not allowed, I can understand only too well why you might want a different job :-)
    – George M
    yesterday






  • 1




    In the US (you don't specify where you are) we're celebrating Thanksgiving this week. Many employees have Friday off as well as Thursday. Nobody wants to interview on a holiday, but you may consider suggesting a Friday 11/23 interview date to your potential employer after explaining to them the difficulty of scheduling a new PTO day.
    – FreeMan
    15 hours ago













up vote
59
down vote

favorite
4









up vote
59
down vote

favorite
4






4





I had a phone interview last week with the controller of a new company I am interested in. They then wanted to meet with me today for an interview. I was scheduled for an interview today, and three hours before they cancelled it and wanted to reschedule it for next week. I already took PTO from my current job. What do I do? I don't want to look bad calling out again. It will be hard to find another excuse to call off especially since I commute in the city.



How can I communicate effectively that I am unable to reschedule, but am still interested in the position?










share|improve this question









New contributor




Maria is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











I had a phone interview last week with the controller of a new company I am interested in. They then wanted to meet with me today for an interview. I was scheduled for an interview today, and three hours before they cancelled it and wanted to reschedule it for next week. I already took PTO from my current job. What do I do? I don't want to look bad calling out again. It will be hard to find another excuse to call off especially since I commute in the city.



How can I communicate effectively that I am unable to reschedule, but am still interested in the position?







professionalism interviewing






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Maria is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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share|improve this question









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edited yesterday









smci

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asked yesterday









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Check out our Code of Conduct.






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Check out our Code of Conduct.












  • Is your current employer not flexible to this? Its your PTO, you should be allowed to use it as you see fit, provided the needs of the company or met (ie too many others also off).
    – SiXandSeven8ths
    yesterday






  • 7




    @SiXandSeven8ths lots of places wont give PTO whenever you want. You typically need to book a bit in advanced. Also, why should OP waste from PTO when there is chance they will miss that one as well
    – SaggingRufus
    yesterday










  • How much $$ are you out of pocket for one PTO day off?
    – smci
    yesterday






  • 6




    Can you tell your current employer that what you needed time for (fantasy dr appointment or whatever) has been postponed, and that you'd like to reschedule next week? And just stay at work? If that's not allowed, I can understand only too well why you might want a different job :-)
    – George M
    yesterday






  • 1




    In the US (you don't specify where you are) we're celebrating Thanksgiving this week. Many employees have Friday off as well as Thursday. Nobody wants to interview on a holiday, but you may consider suggesting a Friday 11/23 interview date to your potential employer after explaining to them the difficulty of scheduling a new PTO day.
    – FreeMan
    15 hours ago


















  • Is your current employer not flexible to this? Its your PTO, you should be allowed to use it as you see fit, provided the needs of the company or met (ie too many others also off).
    – SiXandSeven8ths
    yesterday






  • 7




    @SiXandSeven8ths lots of places wont give PTO whenever you want. You typically need to book a bit in advanced. Also, why should OP waste from PTO when there is chance they will miss that one as well
    – SaggingRufus
    yesterday










  • How much $$ are you out of pocket for one PTO day off?
    – smci
    yesterday






  • 6




    Can you tell your current employer that what you needed time for (fantasy dr appointment or whatever) has been postponed, and that you'd like to reschedule next week? And just stay at work? If that's not allowed, I can understand only too well why you might want a different job :-)
    – George M
    yesterday






  • 1




    In the US (you don't specify where you are) we're celebrating Thanksgiving this week. Many employees have Friday off as well as Thursday. Nobody wants to interview on a holiday, but you may consider suggesting a Friday 11/23 interview date to your potential employer after explaining to them the difficulty of scheduling a new PTO day.
    – FreeMan
    15 hours ago
















Is your current employer not flexible to this? Its your PTO, you should be allowed to use it as you see fit, provided the needs of the company or met (ie too many others also off).
– SiXandSeven8ths
yesterday




Is your current employer not flexible to this? Its your PTO, you should be allowed to use it as you see fit, provided the needs of the company or met (ie too many others also off).
– SiXandSeven8ths
yesterday




7




7




@SiXandSeven8ths lots of places wont give PTO whenever you want. You typically need to book a bit in advanced. Also, why should OP waste from PTO when there is chance they will miss that one as well
– SaggingRufus
yesterday




@SiXandSeven8ths lots of places wont give PTO whenever you want. You typically need to book a bit in advanced. Also, why should OP waste from PTO when there is chance they will miss that one as well
– SaggingRufus
yesterday












How much $$ are you out of pocket for one PTO day off?
– smci
yesterday




How much $$ are you out of pocket for one PTO day off?
– smci
yesterday




6




6




Can you tell your current employer that what you needed time for (fantasy dr appointment or whatever) has been postponed, and that you'd like to reschedule next week? And just stay at work? If that's not allowed, I can understand only too well why you might want a different job :-)
– George M
yesterday




Can you tell your current employer that what you needed time for (fantasy dr appointment or whatever) has been postponed, and that you'd like to reschedule next week? And just stay at work? If that's not allowed, I can understand only too well why you might want a different job :-)
– George M
yesterday




1




1




In the US (you don't specify where you are) we're celebrating Thanksgiving this week. Many employees have Friday off as well as Thursday. Nobody wants to interview on a holiday, but you may consider suggesting a Friday 11/23 interview date to your potential employer after explaining to them the difficulty of scheduling a new PTO day.
– FreeMan
15 hours ago




In the US (you don't specify where you are) we're celebrating Thanksgiving this week. Many employees have Friday off as well as Thursday. Nobody wants to interview on a holiday, but you may consider suggesting a Friday 11/23 interview date to your potential employer after explaining to them the difficulty of scheduling a new PTO day.
– FreeMan
15 hours ago










4 Answers
4






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
247
down vote













It's annoying when that happens - and with the best will in the world it does happen. Interviewers are humans too and just as subject to last minute hiccups as the rest of us (illness etc). A good employer will recognise that this has put you in an awkward position and should be willing to work with you to rearrange with that in mind.



It's totally fine to say something like:




It was unfortunate that we weren't able to meet as planned. I'm still very interested in the role but I'm going to struggle to get time off again next week. Would you be able to meet me one night after work? Say at x time?







share|improve this answer



















  • 112




    This is exactly the right approach. It gently conveys the inconvenience caused you, and thus is more likely to get them to agree to an after-hours interview.
    – Joe Strazzere
    yesterday






  • 44




    Not only does it show the inconvenience, but it shows that you're willing to roll with it and figure something out while still managing to meet your current obligations. After all, when you eventually leave their company, they don't want someone that drops the ball before you've left, right?
    – corsiKa
    yesterday






  • 21




    If they are embarrassed at having had to cancel at short notice this gives them a graceful way to make amends.
    – Patricia Shanahan
    yesterday






  • 14




    @Ertai87, in that event, you thank them for their consideration, express your regrets that you will not be able to meet with them, and THANK YOUR LUCKY STARS THAT THEY SHOWED THEIR TRUE COLORS BEFORE YOU HIRED IN, rather than after.
    – John R. Strohm
    14 hours ago






  • 3




    @Dukeling That's not the problem. The problem is they cancelled 3 hours before the interview, wasting the OP's day off. Try canceling anything else like that (court date, flights, hotel booking) and see what happens. Usually the person doing the cancelling pays for it, not the other way around.
    – Nelson
    4 hours ago




















up vote
6
down vote













I think it comes down to a question of how badly you want this new position and how good an opportunity it is. Also, it depends on what you think you can 'get away' with with your current employer.



If the job is a great opportunity to advance your career and you can't afford to pass it up, then I would probably do whatever I could to make the interview happen, such as 'feigning' a sick day or family emergency, if necessary. You have to think about your own career first and I don't think most employers would be too concerned about one day, especially if you are a good employee, working hard and getting good results, and as long as it isn't a regular thing.



However, if you do that, I think it is also very important to make the new employer aware beforehand of the difficulty for you in taking time off, and that it is unlikely you would be able to re-schedule again if they cancel again at such short notice.






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    up vote
    2
    down vote













    Remember that your current job may be the only one you have. So be very careful. Honesty is the best policy, but don't give out details to your current employer they don't need. Best wishes for success.






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      up vote
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      down vote













      Take another day off. Just schedule it now so that it's not "calling in" again and it should be fine. If you can't get it on the schedule and you don't have anymore time off allowances, explain it to the interviewer.



      If you got an interview, then you can probably get another job. The job you have right now is not the only thing in the world. Don't let it overstep your boundaries. Just be reasonable and mindful of what you signed up for when you agreed to take your current role and you'll be fine.






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        4 Answers
        4






        active

        oldest

        votes








        4 Answers
        4






        active

        oldest

        votes









        active

        oldest

        votes






        active

        oldest

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        up vote
        247
        down vote













        It's annoying when that happens - and with the best will in the world it does happen. Interviewers are humans too and just as subject to last minute hiccups as the rest of us (illness etc). A good employer will recognise that this has put you in an awkward position and should be willing to work with you to rearrange with that in mind.



        It's totally fine to say something like:




        It was unfortunate that we weren't able to meet as planned. I'm still very interested in the role but I'm going to struggle to get time off again next week. Would you be able to meet me one night after work? Say at x time?







        share|improve this answer



















        • 112




          This is exactly the right approach. It gently conveys the inconvenience caused you, and thus is more likely to get them to agree to an after-hours interview.
          – Joe Strazzere
          yesterday






        • 44




          Not only does it show the inconvenience, but it shows that you're willing to roll with it and figure something out while still managing to meet your current obligations. After all, when you eventually leave their company, they don't want someone that drops the ball before you've left, right?
          – corsiKa
          yesterday






        • 21




          If they are embarrassed at having had to cancel at short notice this gives them a graceful way to make amends.
          – Patricia Shanahan
          yesterday






        • 14




          @Ertai87, in that event, you thank them for their consideration, express your regrets that you will not be able to meet with them, and THANK YOUR LUCKY STARS THAT THEY SHOWED THEIR TRUE COLORS BEFORE YOU HIRED IN, rather than after.
          – John R. Strohm
          14 hours ago






        • 3




          @Dukeling That's not the problem. The problem is they cancelled 3 hours before the interview, wasting the OP's day off. Try canceling anything else like that (court date, flights, hotel booking) and see what happens. Usually the person doing the cancelling pays for it, not the other way around.
          – Nelson
          4 hours ago

















        up vote
        247
        down vote













        It's annoying when that happens - and with the best will in the world it does happen. Interviewers are humans too and just as subject to last minute hiccups as the rest of us (illness etc). A good employer will recognise that this has put you in an awkward position and should be willing to work with you to rearrange with that in mind.



        It's totally fine to say something like:




        It was unfortunate that we weren't able to meet as planned. I'm still very interested in the role but I'm going to struggle to get time off again next week. Would you be able to meet me one night after work? Say at x time?







        share|improve this answer



















        • 112




          This is exactly the right approach. It gently conveys the inconvenience caused you, and thus is more likely to get them to agree to an after-hours interview.
          – Joe Strazzere
          yesterday






        • 44




          Not only does it show the inconvenience, but it shows that you're willing to roll with it and figure something out while still managing to meet your current obligations. After all, when you eventually leave their company, they don't want someone that drops the ball before you've left, right?
          – corsiKa
          yesterday






        • 21




          If they are embarrassed at having had to cancel at short notice this gives them a graceful way to make amends.
          – Patricia Shanahan
          yesterday






        • 14




          @Ertai87, in that event, you thank them for their consideration, express your regrets that you will not be able to meet with them, and THANK YOUR LUCKY STARS THAT THEY SHOWED THEIR TRUE COLORS BEFORE YOU HIRED IN, rather than after.
          – John R. Strohm
          14 hours ago






        • 3




          @Dukeling That's not the problem. The problem is they cancelled 3 hours before the interview, wasting the OP's day off. Try canceling anything else like that (court date, flights, hotel booking) and see what happens. Usually the person doing the cancelling pays for it, not the other way around.
          – Nelson
          4 hours ago















        up vote
        247
        down vote










        up vote
        247
        down vote









        It's annoying when that happens - and with the best will in the world it does happen. Interviewers are humans too and just as subject to last minute hiccups as the rest of us (illness etc). A good employer will recognise that this has put you in an awkward position and should be willing to work with you to rearrange with that in mind.



        It's totally fine to say something like:




        It was unfortunate that we weren't able to meet as planned. I'm still very interested in the role but I'm going to struggle to get time off again next week. Would you be able to meet me one night after work? Say at x time?







        share|improve this answer














        It's annoying when that happens - and with the best will in the world it does happen. Interviewers are humans too and just as subject to last minute hiccups as the rest of us (illness etc). A good employer will recognise that this has put you in an awkward position and should be willing to work with you to rearrange with that in mind.



        It's totally fine to say something like:




        It was unfortunate that we weren't able to meet as planned. I'm still very interested in the role but I'm going to struggle to get time off again next week. Would you be able to meet me one night after work? Say at x time?








        share|improve this answer














        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer








        edited yesterday









        Lightness Races in Orbit

        7,95321634




        7,95321634










        answered yesterday









        motosubatsu

        39.5k19102164




        39.5k19102164








        • 112




          This is exactly the right approach. It gently conveys the inconvenience caused you, and thus is more likely to get them to agree to an after-hours interview.
          – Joe Strazzere
          yesterday






        • 44




          Not only does it show the inconvenience, but it shows that you're willing to roll with it and figure something out while still managing to meet your current obligations. After all, when you eventually leave their company, they don't want someone that drops the ball before you've left, right?
          – corsiKa
          yesterday






        • 21




          If they are embarrassed at having had to cancel at short notice this gives them a graceful way to make amends.
          – Patricia Shanahan
          yesterday






        • 14




          @Ertai87, in that event, you thank them for their consideration, express your regrets that you will not be able to meet with them, and THANK YOUR LUCKY STARS THAT THEY SHOWED THEIR TRUE COLORS BEFORE YOU HIRED IN, rather than after.
          – John R. Strohm
          14 hours ago






        • 3




          @Dukeling That's not the problem. The problem is they cancelled 3 hours before the interview, wasting the OP's day off. Try canceling anything else like that (court date, flights, hotel booking) and see what happens. Usually the person doing the cancelling pays for it, not the other way around.
          – Nelson
          4 hours ago
















        • 112




          This is exactly the right approach. It gently conveys the inconvenience caused you, and thus is more likely to get them to agree to an after-hours interview.
          – Joe Strazzere
          yesterday






        • 44




          Not only does it show the inconvenience, but it shows that you're willing to roll with it and figure something out while still managing to meet your current obligations. After all, when you eventually leave their company, they don't want someone that drops the ball before you've left, right?
          – corsiKa
          yesterday






        • 21




          If they are embarrassed at having had to cancel at short notice this gives them a graceful way to make amends.
          – Patricia Shanahan
          yesterday






        • 14




          @Ertai87, in that event, you thank them for their consideration, express your regrets that you will not be able to meet with them, and THANK YOUR LUCKY STARS THAT THEY SHOWED THEIR TRUE COLORS BEFORE YOU HIRED IN, rather than after.
          – John R. Strohm
          14 hours ago






        • 3




          @Dukeling That's not the problem. The problem is they cancelled 3 hours before the interview, wasting the OP's day off. Try canceling anything else like that (court date, flights, hotel booking) and see what happens. Usually the person doing the cancelling pays for it, not the other way around.
          – Nelson
          4 hours ago










        112




        112




        This is exactly the right approach. It gently conveys the inconvenience caused you, and thus is more likely to get them to agree to an after-hours interview.
        – Joe Strazzere
        yesterday




        This is exactly the right approach. It gently conveys the inconvenience caused you, and thus is more likely to get them to agree to an after-hours interview.
        – Joe Strazzere
        yesterday




        44




        44




        Not only does it show the inconvenience, but it shows that you're willing to roll with it and figure something out while still managing to meet your current obligations. After all, when you eventually leave their company, they don't want someone that drops the ball before you've left, right?
        – corsiKa
        yesterday




        Not only does it show the inconvenience, but it shows that you're willing to roll with it and figure something out while still managing to meet your current obligations. After all, when you eventually leave their company, they don't want someone that drops the ball before you've left, right?
        – corsiKa
        yesterday




        21




        21




        If they are embarrassed at having had to cancel at short notice this gives them a graceful way to make amends.
        – Patricia Shanahan
        yesterday




        If they are embarrassed at having had to cancel at short notice this gives them a graceful way to make amends.
        – Patricia Shanahan
        yesterday




        14




        14




        @Ertai87, in that event, you thank them for their consideration, express your regrets that you will not be able to meet with them, and THANK YOUR LUCKY STARS THAT THEY SHOWED THEIR TRUE COLORS BEFORE YOU HIRED IN, rather than after.
        – John R. Strohm
        14 hours ago




        @Ertai87, in that event, you thank them for their consideration, express your regrets that you will not be able to meet with them, and THANK YOUR LUCKY STARS THAT THEY SHOWED THEIR TRUE COLORS BEFORE YOU HIRED IN, rather than after.
        – John R. Strohm
        14 hours ago




        3




        3




        @Dukeling That's not the problem. The problem is they cancelled 3 hours before the interview, wasting the OP's day off. Try canceling anything else like that (court date, flights, hotel booking) and see what happens. Usually the person doing the cancelling pays for it, not the other way around.
        – Nelson
        4 hours ago






        @Dukeling That's not the problem. The problem is they cancelled 3 hours before the interview, wasting the OP's day off. Try canceling anything else like that (court date, flights, hotel booking) and see what happens. Usually the person doing the cancelling pays for it, not the other way around.
        – Nelson
        4 hours ago














        up vote
        6
        down vote













        I think it comes down to a question of how badly you want this new position and how good an opportunity it is. Also, it depends on what you think you can 'get away' with with your current employer.



        If the job is a great opportunity to advance your career and you can't afford to pass it up, then I would probably do whatever I could to make the interview happen, such as 'feigning' a sick day or family emergency, if necessary. You have to think about your own career first and I don't think most employers would be too concerned about one day, especially if you are a good employee, working hard and getting good results, and as long as it isn't a regular thing.



        However, if you do that, I think it is also very important to make the new employer aware beforehand of the difficulty for you in taking time off, and that it is unlikely you would be able to re-schedule again if they cancel again at such short notice.






        share|improve this answer

























          up vote
          6
          down vote













          I think it comes down to a question of how badly you want this new position and how good an opportunity it is. Also, it depends on what you think you can 'get away' with with your current employer.



          If the job is a great opportunity to advance your career and you can't afford to pass it up, then I would probably do whatever I could to make the interview happen, such as 'feigning' a sick day or family emergency, if necessary. You have to think about your own career first and I don't think most employers would be too concerned about one day, especially if you are a good employee, working hard and getting good results, and as long as it isn't a regular thing.



          However, if you do that, I think it is also very important to make the new employer aware beforehand of the difficulty for you in taking time off, and that it is unlikely you would be able to re-schedule again if they cancel again at such short notice.






          share|improve this answer























            up vote
            6
            down vote










            up vote
            6
            down vote









            I think it comes down to a question of how badly you want this new position and how good an opportunity it is. Also, it depends on what you think you can 'get away' with with your current employer.



            If the job is a great opportunity to advance your career and you can't afford to pass it up, then I would probably do whatever I could to make the interview happen, such as 'feigning' a sick day or family emergency, if necessary. You have to think about your own career first and I don't think most employers would be too concerned about one day, especially if you are a good employee, working hard and getting good results, and as long as it isn't a regular thing.



            However, if you do that, I think it is also very important to make the new employer aware beforehand of the difficulty for you in taking time off, and that it is unlikely you would be able to re-schedule again if they cancel again at such short notice.






            share|improve this answer












            I think it comes down to a question of how badly you want this new position and how good an opportunity it is. Also, it depends on what you think you can 'get away' with with your current employer.



            If the job is a great opportunity to advance your career and you can't afford to pass it up, then I would probably do whatever I could to make the interview happen, such as 'feigning' a sick day or family emergency, if necessary. You have to think about your own career first and I don't think most employers would be too concerned about one day, especially if you are a good employee, working hard and getting good results, and as long as it isn't a regular thing.



            However, if you do that, I think it is also very important to make the new employer aware beforehand of the difficulty for you in taking time off, and that it is unlikely you would be able to re-schedule again if they cancel again at such short notice.







            share|improve this answer












            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer










            answered yesterday









            Time4Tea

            2,86431027




            2,86431027






















                up vote
                2
                down vote













                Remember that your current job may be the only one you have. So be very careful. Honesty is the best policy, but don't give out details to your current employer they don't need. Best wishes for success.






                share|improve this answer








                New contributor




                JosephDoggie is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                Check out our Code of Conduct.






















                  up vote
                  2
                  down vote













                  Remember that your current job may be the only one you have. So be very careful. Honesty is the best policy, but don't give out details to your current employer they don't need. Best wishes for success.






                  share|improve this answer








                  New contributor




                  JosephDoggie is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                  Check out our Code of Conduct.




















                    up vote
                    2
                    down vote










                    up vote
                    2
                    down vote









                    Remember that your current job may be the only one you have. So be very careful. Honesty is the best policy, but don't give out details to your current employer they don't need. Best wishes for success.






                    share|improve this answer








                    New contributor




                    JosephDoggie is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                    Check out our Code of Conduct.









                    Remember that your current job may be the only one you have. So be very careful. Honesty is the best policy, but don't give out details to your current employer they don't need. Best wishes for success.







                    share|improve this answer








                    New contributor




                    JosephDoggie is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                    Check out our Code of Conduct.









                    share|improve this answer



                    share|improve this answer






                    New contributor




                    JosephDoggie is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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                    answered 14 hours ago









                    JosephDoggie

                    1213




                    1213




                    New contributor




                    JosephDoggie is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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                    New contributor





                    JosephDoggie is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                    Check out our Code of Conduct.






                    JosephDoggie is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                    Check out our Code of Conduct.






















                        up vote
                        0
                        down vote













                        Take another day off. Just schedule it now so that it's not "calling in" again and it should be fine. If you can't get it on the schedule and you don't have anymore time off allowances, explain it to the interviewer.



                        If you got an interview, then you can probably get another job. The job you have right now is not the only thing in the world. Don't let it overstep your boundaries. Just be reasonable and mindful of what you signed up for when you agreed to take your current role and you'll be fine.






                        share|improve this answer

























                          up vote
                          0
                          down vote













                          Take another day off. Just schedule it now so that it's not "calling in" again and it should be fine. If you can't get it on the schedule and you don't have anymore time off allowances, explain it to the interviewer.



                          If you got an interview, then you can probably get another job. The job you have right now is not the only thing in the world. Don't let it overstep your boundaries. Just be reasonable and mindful of what you signed up for when you agreed to take your current role and you'll be fine.






                          share|improve this answer























                            up vote
                            0
                            down vote










                            up vote
                            0
                            down vote









                            Take another day off. Just schedule it now so that it's not "calling in" again and it should be fine. If you can't get it on the schedule and you don't have anymore time off allowances, explain it to the interviewer.



                            If you got an interview, then you can probably get another job. The job you have right now is not the only thing in the world. Don't let it overstep your boundaries. Just be reasonable and mindful of what you signed up for when you agreed to take your current role and you'll be fine.






                            share|improve this answer












                            Take another day off. Just schedule it now so that it's not "calling in" again and it should be fine. If you can't get it on the schedule and you don't have anymore time off allowances, explain it to the interviewer.



                            If you got an interview, then you can probably get another job. The job you have right now is not the only thing in the world. Don't let it overstep your boundaries. Just be reasonable and mindful of what you signed up for when you agreed to take your current role and you'll be fine.







                            share|improve this answer












                            share|improve this answer



                            share|improve this answer










                            answered 10 hours ago









                            Steve

                            1,155314




                            1,155314






















                                Maria is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.










                                 

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                                Maria is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.













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