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> lunch ... with someone who doesn't have input

I think part of this could be that they don't know whether to believe that you truly have no input.

When I was an interviewee, my lunch escort told me they didn't, and I was pretty sure it wasn't a devious trick to get me to let my guard down, but I had no way of knowing for sure. I also thought, if there isn't a formal process, maybe if I say something too dumb or wrong, they would still mention it to someone. So I stuck to really superficial topics.

Then I got hired and later served as a lunch escort. Now knowing the process and knowing there truly is no input, I tried to convince the interviewee, and he didn't seem to believe me just like I didn't when I was in his shoes.



Maybe better than a single 'lunch escort' would be a group of friends, or a team the candidate isn't being considered for or something.

So that there's some joviality (or not! Something to get an impression of) without putting such one on one pressure on the candidate so that it still feels like an interview. Candidate can just sit and eat even and enjoy others' conversation.


Yeah, in principle it's a great idea. Realistically no rational candidate would believe that the lunch escort has no input.


Even if they have "no input", if the interviewee did or said something really extreme it would be reported back.


Maybe, but taking the time to talk to hr means it would be awful before someone would go through the effort.




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