Charpie said:
I asked one company for feedback. They said "you say a lot of "we did", you don't say "I did" so the team was not sure what you did and what the team did". That was after the final round of a job I wanted. I thought if they had any questions, they could have easily asked me. Anyway I kept that in mind and I use more "I" in interviews. I saw someone mention that on Linkedin as well, so maybe it is a good point.
How many interviews have you been on and not been hired? You need to get more feedback because you have been rejected a number of times. There has to be a reason why.
I instead of we isn't real feedback and it isn't the reason you didn't get the job.
But… you need to find a way to get real feedback for sure.
The problem with asking for feedback point blank from an external source or somebody who really barely knows you is that the vast majority of it won't be genuine… like this.
I'd do a couple things in your shoes:
1. If you've gotten rejected for roles you are seemingly qualified for this often… it might not be them… it might be you. Go grab lunch with somebody you trust to be brutally honest who knows you professionally and them for feedback on your professional style. Everybody has ticks and traits that grate others… make sure you are self aware of yours.
2. Similar vein, do the same and mock interview with mentors you might trust. Personal story… I was deemed 'ready' to move into a Sr level job earlier in my career and kept getting asked to apply for them internally and getting rejected for various reasons. Finally, 2 mentors pulled me aside and said I needed to get my **** together when it came to presenting myself. One spent an hour with me laying a template out in how to interview prep that took like an hour of my own time and basically set me up to answer anything and the other just grilled me for 2 hours on how I answered questions stopping me when I went astray etc almost as practice. Highly invaluable insights from both of them and I interviewed with a person who rejected me once and they actually called me after and said they were blown away with how much better I presented myself just 3 months later.
3. Learn how to get feedback in relative real time and interpret it because even real time feedback with those who don't know you well probably won't address the issue directly. Instead of asking for feedback after the fact for instance, maybe at the end of the interview just ask if there's anything you are lacking for the role. You can glean loads of insights to a hiring manager and process by doing this. If they say they can't think of anything… well… what you are dealing with most likely is an open role nobody has put much thought around what they need… if that's the case, expect them not to get back to you quickly. Then whatever they tell you, if it isn't a lack of a technical skill, then you have to learn to read a bit between the lines what they are saying but at minimum you know that they are probably seriously looking and considering an imminent hire because they have thoughts on the question.