RonnieD
Foodie
1931
Thu Aug 23, 2007 12:09 pm
The rolling acres of Henry County
David Clancy
Foodie
730
Thu Mar 01, 2007 12:09 pm
A couch in Andy's house.
I will...and have.Ryan Rogers wrote:At the last restaurant I was one of the sous chefs at and handling a lot of the hiring/firing I had multiple cooks come in repeatedly with years of experience as exec chefs and chefs de cuisine. I let all of them know that I was willing to pay X an hour for the position and that I would like them to come in for a trial shift to see if they could cook on my line. None of them ever showed back up. If you can't back up your resume on the line, I'd rather have someone willing to learn.
Chef Sean Kavanaugh
Foodie
10
Sat Oct 30, 2010 11:39 am
KFC Yum! Center
Chef Sean Kavanaugh wrote:Chef Tim,
Over qualified may lead the owner/hiring manager/chef to be wary of of your qualifications and weather or not you will continue to look for employment that better fits your qualifications while working for them.
David Clancy wrote:I will...and have.Ryan Rogers wrote:At the last restaurant I was one of the sous chefs at and handling a lot of the hiring/firing I had multiple cooks come in repeatedly with years of experience as exec chefs and chefs de cuisine. I let all of them know that I was willing to pay X an hour for the position and that I would like them to come in for a trial shift to see if they could cook on my line. None of them ever showed back up. If you can't back up your resume on the line, I'd rather have someone willing to learn.
Stephen D wrote:'OVERQUALIFIED'
I will never believe in the term. Chefs are cooks, first. The sommelier or mixologist must first become bartender.
Hire the best. If they leave for better shores, then offer them the handshake and be proud of thier accomplishment.
Often, they will find the home- and stay for longer than joe-schmoe-'waiting-for the-real-job.'
Nonetheless, you gain the benefit of professionalism- for ever long you may have it.
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