Business Why are Olive Garden and FedEx forcing job applicants to endure a strange personality test that turns them into blue avatars? - Wake Up, Babe... New Wagie Humiliation Ritual Just Dropped

Step aside, Na’vi version of Sigourney Weaver: A new blue avatar is becoming famous. If you apply to one of several large corporations today, you might see a blue guy that looks like the Walmart version of Disney’s wide-eyed style of animation. No, it’s not a company mascot; it’s actually part of your evaluation.

The blue avatars are part of a long and confusing personality quiz in the hiring process at a handful of big companies. Many applicants find their presence not only bizarre, but also a bit insulting.

The blue people are courtesy of Paradox.ai, which boasts several billion-dollar companies as clients, including McDonald’s, Wendy’s, Citizens, and more. It’s worth noting that not all of the clients of Paradox.ai use the personality test feature, as different spokespeople from Citizens, 3M, and CVS Health all confirm. Still, many have taken to social media to express their confusion as to why this extra hoop—a long, bizarre personality test—is being placed in front of applicants considering many of these same companies claim to suffer a staffing shortage.

“Getting a dishwashing job at Olive Garden now requires a personality test from an AI company where you respond to more than 60 slides featuring a blue alien called Ash,” tweets Emanual Maiberg, who first reported on said quiz in a larger piece for 404 Media.

Already strung out and cynical about the state of work, employees and job applicants found these types of assessments to be the final nail in the coffin. Although economists maintain that we’re in a tight job market, the hunt is longer and trickier than it used to be in part because of extraneous quizzes and interviews. Just last year, the average time it took to hire an employee reached a record high of 44 days, per Josh Bersin Company and AMS.

“Companies are quick to fire and then are very slow to hire,” says Dan Schawbel, managing partner at Workplace Intelligence, comparing the current situation to the job market coming out of the 2008 recession.

The long, winding, blue road to an Olive Garden job
Let’s say you decide to apply for a job at Olive Garden. One of the first things you’ll see is an A.I. chatbot named Olivia (named after, and using the likeness of, the Paradox’s founder’s fiancée).

After answering a couple of screening questions, you’ll get a pop-up for the personality assessment, illustrated with weird blue humanoids. The personality quiz itself will tell you there’s “not one right answer,” but to look at the picture and either click “me” or “not me” if the depiction of the blue avatar describes how you might act, or feel. You’ll see a bunch of slides like this, featuring the blue avatars in situations like grabbing pizza before others partake, or engaging in artistic endeavors. The process culminates with the AI system telling you your Big 5 personality traits. Many have commented on Maiberg’s tweet to discuss how dystopian these tests feel. Some suggest not being honest on the tests, as answers can be used against you.

Part of the whole process is seeing if you’ll be a willing cog in the machine or rage against it. Companies often shirk applicants that aren’t personality fits “because they don’t want this person that they’re hiring to shake things up. They really want someone to fall in line with the status quo,” says Schawbel.

Dr. Heather Myers, chief IO psychologist at Traitify by Paradox (the official name of the personality test), tells Fortune the personality test can be done in under two minutes, claiming the competition rates for their tests are “significantly higher” than other assessments and that turnover has decreased by up to 25% for Paradox’s clients. Myers says Paradox’s goal is to “simplify the hiring process and remove friction for job applicants,” and that while it’s not meant to eliminate a company’s human decision-making process, automation can help neutralize dead ends and create a more efficient job system.

But in attempting to alleviate employers’ frustration, Paradox is stirring employee frustration—it’s a bit of a paradox, if you will. The test is a way to filter out applicants, according to Schawbel. Adding that it’s a way of seeing who really wants the gig by “put[ting] individuals through the gauntlet,” he explains it “weeds out a lot of people.”

“Paradox was created entirely because we were frustrated by the experience of finding and getting jobs, too,” Adam Godson, Paradox’s president and chief product officer says. “So, we fully appreciate the job seeker perspective.” He added that there’s been too much friction and obstacles in the hiring process at many companies, and that Traitify is a way to take out those obstacles and conflict.

But if one side of the relationship is this irritated, obviously something is wrong. “The goal is, how do we make the entire hiring process good for employers and employees,” says Schawbel. “And if it’s only good for one party, then it’s a broken matchmaking system, or broken hiring system.” He adds that a long process creates more frustration, as burnt out employees are overburdened while they wait for help.


Worker shortage or picky employers?
Despite Paradox’s asserted intentions, the personality tests seem to have struck a chord with people, and not in a good way.

A prospective software engineer for FedEx went viral after posting screenshots of Paradox’s “bizarre personality test” to Reddit, voicing their frustration about “how blatantly prejudicial this type of thing is.” The applicant said they withdrew their application, having felt unrepresented by the results and areas of the test saying they had room to grow.

Another user posted about the same test that Olive Garden gave them. “Man I just want a dishwasher job,” they said. Someone in the comment section asserted, “this is just my opinion, but companies cant [sic] find anyone to hire anymore because they have set their standards so stupidly high that no one seems worth while.”

Indeed, companies are adding these personality tests “for a reason, because they can get away with it,” says Schawbel, explaining that, even if they cry hiring shortage wolf, they are getting enough qualified applicants to want to filter some out. It means that both within the white-collar and blue collar fields, application processes are feeling increasingly long and tiring. And that doesn’t come without consequences. These candidates who have a bad experience are also more likely to be deterred from applying again to the company, to complain about it on social media, and also avoid said company for services in their personal lives, he adds, pointing to past research and studies.

Over the last couple of years, companies in the retail and hospitality sectors (the sectors in which Paradox has many clients)) have complained of staffing issues. During The Great Resignation, many workers left their jobs to find opportunities with less stressful working conditions and greater pay.

But the companies complaining it’s hard to hire and retain right now aren’t making applicants’ lives any easier as they deliver a slew of questions, quizzes, and interviews for jobs that don’t even offer competitive wages. Interview processes have gotten longer in general, according to experts from CNBC Make It. As for the hiring managers, “maybe they’re being too picky. But they don’t think they are,” Schawbel says.

It’s just part of the process, if you ask Olive Garden. “This is one of many ways our restaurant leaders assess candidates to ensure they have the right people in the right roles — which sets our team members up for success and provides great guest experiences,” a spokesperson for Darden Restaurants, which owns Olive Garden, said in a statement to Fortune.

Still, tired job applicants are understandably feeling a bit bristled by having to take the time to pretend to want to work somewhere. “Just in case you’re wondering, it’s absolute hell trying to get jobs of any kind out here, and that’s why half of America is struggling to pay rent (including me),” one person said, quote-tweeting Maiberg’s post.

“I think we’re going to reach a breaking point in labor soon. employers have gone completely off the rails and people are exhausted,” a Twitter user claimed. Americans are feeling disenchanted by their jobs and staring down the barrel of a long job market, these personality tests are all enough to leave us feeling, well … blue.

 
Websites like Indeed and LinkedIn were never meant to help you get employed. They were meant to thin the herd.
LinkedIn advertises on podcasts as a tool for lazy employers. They made no promises to job-seekers.

Incidentally, I suspect that fourth one is how I got a call back from a place that I applied to several months ago. It was one of the places where the interview was scheduled but the actual manager didn't show up. Shows how much they care - especially since it's one of the companies still paying 10 dollars an hour when everyone else is paying 12. The woman who interviewed me told me some stuff she shouldn't have about that particular location, and it sounds like I dodged a bullet.
That's always what I get in interviews, even for crappy ones. Arrive 5 minutes late and they get pissed, but they're allowed to be 15-20 minutes late.

These fucking tests are supposed to weed out shooters, problems, people who might have self-esteem, have any self-worth, or might not put up with stupid shit.
The only way you can be remotely sure is by checking them out in person and check their body language, and even then that's a crapshoot because you're either gonna get nervous but harmless wagie or sociopathic but outwardly normal shooter material. Short of declaring intentions, there's no way to tell for sure and you might not even be the target anyway.
2024-02-19 18_16_11-Eaton Township Weis Markets shooting - Wikipedia - Brave.png
 
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Interviews themselves are bullshit as they are basically the same thing but you have to answer every question like you're Ted Bundy being interrogated by the police. They tell you "just be yourself lol," but if you're not really a social person or you don't have too much going on that would hinder you from answering a question on how you handled the last time your girlfriend left you or some other shit that has absolutely nothing to do with a job staring at a screen all day, then fuck you we're dumping your resume in the trash; your bachelor's degree and certs be damned.

There was this one guy on youtube that owned a cybersecurity company that was on a stream talking about how to get into the field and he straight up said that he has multiple interviews with candidates along with their spouses and judges the candidate based on what the body language of the spouse to "weed out crazies." He was even bragging about how small the industry really was and telling other companies who to not hire based on this insane bullshit. And these motherfuckers wonder why companies are getting hacked left and right as CS positions go unfilled for months.

Also the concept of "entry level" to 99.99% of employers out there is 3-5 years already in the field. I know it's an H-1 visa thing now, but when I was first on the hunt for a shitty desk job I legitimately got depressed over not finding any positions that I could reasonably apply to and thought that I fucked up somewhere. I praise God every single day that I managed to find the one job that I did and I really feel for those trying to get their foot in the door after just graduating nowadays.
 
The job market has been a hot mess for a long time already. There is a reason why "Bootstraps" and "Firm Handshake" is a total meme.

Hell, back in 2015, you could apply for hundreds of jobs and get nowhere. No interview, no response, just ignored. There's even scams pretending to get you a job. Personal favorite is the one that tries to get you saddled with college debt and having to pay for what's basically a shittier version of Monster.

You'd probably have more leeway in selling recycling scrap, finding junk to sell than trying to apply for a job. Especially now. Hope you know what the Hobo economy is. Because that's the 8-5 for someone with no job and no-one to fall back to.
 
The amount of bullshit and failed jobs and failed opportunities is immense. One stunt Kroger did and I'm sure still does is list a possible list of careers at every store, so you look at your local Kroger and they say they're hiring for deli/bakery, gas station attendant, checker, bagger, produce, what have you. And then it turns out that they don't actually have that.

I looked into Costco and they're pulling the same stunt.
 
I've been applying for jobs lately and every single fucking one I've gotten past the "give them my resume" stage, they've had me do some 30-45 minute long personality test. I haven't seen one like this, but I assume it's equally absurd. This shit has been really pissing me off.
We've got an annual 600 question test in the nuclear field, most are mind-numbing, but it's to get you bored and honest when the red flag questions about finances, suicidality, extremism, and similar "maybe this dude shouldn't have unrestricted access to a reactor" questions appear. It doesn't really work, every licensee is autistic as fuck and could be a lolcow in their own way.
 
We've got an annual 600 question test in the nuclear field, most are mind-numbing, but it's to get you bored and honest when the red flag questions about finances, suicidality, extremism, and similar "maybe this dude shouldn't have unrestricted access to a reactor" questions appear. It doesn't really work, every licensee is autistic as fuck and could be a lolcow in their own way.
Big difference between "well-paying job involving nuclear stuff" and "waiting tables at Cheddar's".
 
Big difference between "well-paying job involving nuclear stuff" and "waiting tables at Cheddar's".
I guess I should clarify; the point's that only retards and absolute cretins can fail these things unintentionally. After all, I'm here, that makes me an extremist by HR standards. They really just want to make sure you're not going to call the government mandated diversity hires a slur and get them sued.
Answer like a normal person would and you'll pass. It's not restricted to the nuclear field, I had to take similar to be a grocery bagger way back in the day.
 
Try to get me to do a personality tests and I'll call you an idiot and leave. It's an insult to my intelligence and it's not the same as asking me to be kind and professional to clients and costumers and other co-workers.
 
Slightly OT, but
I've been on quite a few hiring committees in engineering, and without fail, HR always shoves through one women into the final few. If they're lucky a woman with the correct degree applied and it's not obvious, but we've seen some hilarious shit, like high school diplomas or art degrees making it to an interview, and it's not even an entry level engineering job.
With how everything is going to shit around here, if they give us another, I'm likely to hire the art major who's into crystals just to fuck with everyone after I leave.
 
As someone who's done work around HR long enough to see "Behind the curtain", I can actually give a bit of info on this. First off, the tests aren't new, but they've gained a lot of popularity with big corporations over the last decade or so. Most of them are based on the "Four Animals" Test. It's a 2-axis test of People Oriented vs Task Oriented and Assertive vs Passive. It puts you into one of four quadrants. Here's what they mean and (what HR thinks it means):
  • "Lion" - Assertive/Task. Supposed to be good leaders. (Selfish/Bossy/Starting fights)
  • "Otter" - Assertive/People. Supposed to be Class clowns/fun guys. (Slackers/Troublemakers/Rulebreakers)
  • "Golden Retriever" - Passive/People. Supposed to be good team players. (Drones/Doormats/Tattletales)
  • "Beavers" - Passive/Task. Supposed to be problem solvers. (Problem-makers/antisocial/know-it-alls)

The main differences are that they used to do it in-house instead of outsourced and they used to wait until you were actually hired to do it. They'd present it as a "Fun, group activity to get to know each other", but they were definitely recording peoples' results into their files. I don't know the exact metrics of how it was used, but I know it was looked at for considering promotions (Beavers and Lions were prioritized for Middle Management).
 
3 pages and no one posted the little blue people? I think it's important to see themView attachment 5737628View attachment 5737634View attachment 5737635
Really brings home how fucking stupid it all is
The article's opening made it seem like this was gonna be some weird personalized blue-ification of the quiz takers like some spy kids foogly ass shit but this genuinely just seems like some fucking kinda boring mascot for the company behind this quiz stuff to show in the "hypothetical scenarios" associated with character traits it's asking about. She kinda vaguely looks like a blueface version of that one woman that depicted herself as the "cool smart one" with the fucking toothpaste color looking haircut people found out got off to vore or some shit from years ago. If anything that bothers me more than the fact that this shitty internet quiz tier test is a requirement.


Thank you for reminding me of this faggotry:

View attachment 5737811
Ironically one of the last "good" pixar movies is the one that was mid-ish and had it's reputation ruined by marketing guys going off constantly about a one off scene with a cyclops woman mentioning her gf.
There's also the fact it has the "fake Jack Black" thing movies were doing for a while instead of just hiring Jack Black to voice a guy in a movie as a cameo they just based a character on him visually and had some other guy voice him while blatantly having the character act like a caricature of Jack Black's personality.
 
Correct me if I'm wrong (quite possible) but didn't the US introduce something that made it illegal to include IQ tests as part of the hiring process? So is intelligence arbitrarily not part of somebody's personality? Is doing tests on some aspects of a persons mental make-up allowed and some not?

But I liked @Lifeguard Hermit 's theory that the point isn't the assessment but to make the applicant invested in getting the job regardless of salary. Unless it's not a theory and he/she actually saw that as a selling point somewhere.
 
But I liked @Lifeguard Hermit 's theory that the point isn't the assessment but to make the applicant invested in getting the job regardless of salary
Former hiring manager that refuses to work in that corpodrome.

It's Soo bad there's a lady on YouTube that has made a career out of mocking corposcum in general. "Toodle loo"
 
long and confusing personality quiz in the hiring process at a handful of big companies.
Ah, I remember tests like this at the FAA's ATC program used to weed out all white applicants.

Also: it's illegal to subject people to MBTI, but this is ok?

Correct me if I'm wrong (quite possible) but didn't the US introduce something that made it illegal to include IQ tests as part of the hiring process? So is intelligence arbitrarily not part of somebody's personality?
Excluding people based on personality tests should be illegal period.
Diversity of thought is needed.
Without pessimists and "debbie downers" keeping a tight boundary of sanity, every project ends up like the Challenger Launch because cheery yes-men don't focus on what can go wrong.

didn't the US introduce something that made it illegal to include IQ tests as part of the hiring process?
There was no legislative process.
It was a supreme court ruling called "Duke Power Company" by the most communist bench ever to sit.
It basically made it a liability for companies to promote and train from within, period, but the explicit ruling says you can't use IQ tests to find your best talent for promotion because niggers never made the bar.
Basically, starting with "Duke Power", every civil rights decision up to 2021 kept adding anything and everything that niggers couldn't cut added to the civil rights violation pile until companies were unwilling due to excessive legal risk to hire and train on the job.
 
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I’ve had to have fbi background checks, I’ve had to do manual dexterity tests like picking up slippery pins with tweasers and putting them in something like a cribbage board, and I’ve had to do math tests.

I’ve had truncated personality type tests, but not anything over like ten minutes.

I don’t think this is really new, just some industries are starting to have to go through what simple factory workers like myself have had to put up with for a long time.
 
This is the end result of people fucking around with their jobs during the pandemic and quitting with no notice to go live off gibs. Employers feel like they got burned, and this is their response.
I'm offering you the service of my labor and time when you're asking for bodies to fill positions. Where the fuck do you get off wasting my time doing some gay fucking song and dance on the application when you're the cunt asking for people to take care of said labor for you? I'm not even contracted, I'm applying, and you're already acting as if you own MY fucking time. Get fucked.
 
These fucking tests are supposed to weed out shooters, problems, people who might have self-esteem, have any self-worth, or might not put up with stupid shit.

All it takes is one bad day for a person with everything to live for to turn into a person with nothing to live for and willing to take other people with them.
 
All it takes is one bad day for a person with everything to live for to turn into a person with nothing to live for and willing to take other people with them.
For instance, if they apply for a job they're perfectly qualified for and are rejected without a word over some bullshit corporate "personality test"
 
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