Accidentaly organized two job interviews for overlapping, how to communicate to minimize loss? [duplicate]

The name of the pictureThe name of the pictureThe name of the pictureClash Royale CLAN TAG#URR8PPP





.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty margin-bottom:0;







up vote
0
down vote

favorite













This question already has an answer here:



  • Two interviews at once

    1 answer



Thus, the problem is that I mistakenly changed a week row in my calendar. And now, I have two job interviews (by different companies), on the same time.



Unfortunately, I acknowledged soon my presence by both companies.



What could I do now to minimize the face loss?



Extension: They gave me multiple datetime proposals to let me choose, which is for me okay. This selection gone bad.



Extension: Please don't sign this as a duplicate, because this question is focusing not on the organizing part, but on the face loss avoidance.







share|improve this question














marked as duplicate by gnat, scaaahu, IDrinkandIKnowThings, Myles, keshlam May 10 '15 at 3:33


This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.










  • 1




    Different question, but same answer - Two interviews at once
    – David K
    May 7 '15 at 12:48










  • @DavidK There is a difference: this time I risk a hard face loss by at least one of the companies, because of my terrible mistake.
    – Gray Sheep
    May 7 '15 at 12:51






  • 5




    @user8558 The other questions contains the only viable answer to this issue. You'll have to reschedule with the job that either interests you less or you feel you have a much less of a chance of getting
    – Dan
    May 7 '15 at 13:09






  • 2




    @user8558 How do you know that you will face a 'hard face loss' from one of the companies? This is very relevant to answering your question - if one company cannot flex the least on your interview, obviously you should reschedule with the other company instead.
    – Zibbobz
    May 7 '15 at 14:09






  • 1




    @Zibbobz This is what I did! Thank you very much. (They let me felt, that they are not happy, but I will get a new schedule soon.)
    – Gray Sheep
    May 7 '15 at 20:17
















up vote
0
down vote

favorite













This question already has an answer here:



  • Two interviews at once

    1 answer



Thus, the problem is that I mistakenly changed a week row in my calendar. And now, I have two job interviews (by different companies), on the same time.



Unfortunately, I acknowledged soon my presence by both companies.



What could I do now to minimize the face loss?



Extension: They gave me multiple datetime proposals to let me choose, which is for me okay. This selection gone bad.



Extension: Please don't sign this as a duplicate, because this question is focusing not on the organizing part, but on the face loss avoidance.







share|improve this question














marked as duplicate by gnat, scaaahu, IDrinkandIKnowThings, Myles, keshlam May 10 '15 at 3:33


This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.










  • 1




    Different question, but same answer - Two interviews at once
    – David K
    May 7 '15 at 12:48










  • @DavidK There is a difference: this time I risk a hard face loss by at least one of the companies, because of my terrible mistake.
    – Gray Sheep
    May 7 '15 at 12:51






  • 5




    @user8558 The other questions contains the only viable answer to this issue. You'll have to reschedule with the job that either interests you less or you feel you have a much less of a chance of getting
    – Dan
    May 7 '15 at 13:09






  • 2




    @user8558 How do you know that you will face a 'hard face loss' from one of the companies? This is very relevant to answering your question - if one company cannot flex the least on your interview, obviously you should reschedule with the other company instead.
    – Zibbobz
    May 7 '15 at 14:09






  • 1




    @Zibbobz This is what I did! Thank you very much. (They let me felt, that they are not happy, but I will get a new schedule soon.)
    – Gray Sheep
    May 7 '15 at 20:17












up vote
0
down vote

favorite









up vote
0
down vote

favorite












This question already has an answer here:



  • Two interviews at once

    1 answer



Thus, the problem is that I mistakenly changed a week row in my calendar. And now, I have two job interviews (by different companies), on the same time.



Unfortunately, I acknowledged soon my presence by both companies.



What could I do now to minimize the face loss?



Extension: They gave me multiple datetime proposals to let me choose, which is for me okay. This selection gone bad.



Extension: Please don't sign this as a duplicate, because this question is focusing not on the organizing part, but on the face loss avoidance.







share|improve this question















This question already has an answer here:



  • Two interviews at once

    1 answer



Thus, the problem is that I mistakenly changed a week row in my calendar. And now, I have two job interviews (by different companies), on the same time.



Unfortunately, I acknowledged soon my presence by both companies.



What could I do now to minimize the face loss?



Extension: They gave me multiple datetime proposals to let me choose, which is for me okay. This selection gone bad.



Extension: Please don't sign this as a duplicate, because this question is focusing not on the organizing part, but on the face loss avoidance.





This question already has an answer here:



  • Two interviews at once

    1 answer









share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited May 7 '15 at 19:51

























asked May 7 '15 at 12:44









Gray Sheep

1,0771921




1,0771921




marked as duplicate by gnat, scaaahu, IDrinkandIKnowThings, Myles, keshlam May 10 '15 at 3:33


This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.






marked as duplicate by gnat, scaaahu, IDrinkandIKnowThings, Myles, keshlam May 10 '15 at 3:33


This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.









  • 1




    Different question, but same answer - Two interviews at once
    – David K
    May 7 '15 at 12:48










  • @DavidK There is a difference: this time I risk a hard face loss by at least one of the companies, because of my terrible mistake.
    – Gray Sheep
    May 7 '15 at 12:51






  • 5




    @user8558 The other questions contains the only viable answer to this issue. You'll have to reschedule with the job that either interests you less or you feel you have a much less of a chance of getting
    – Dan
    May 7 '15 at 13:09






  • 2




    @user8558 How do you know that you will face a 'hard face loss' from one of the companies? This is very relevant to answering your question - if one company cannot flex the least on your interview, obviously you should reschedule with the other company instead.
    – Zibbobz
    May 7 '15 at 14:09






  • 1




    @Zibbobz This is what I did! Thank you very much. (They let me felt, that they are not happy, but I will get a new schedule soon.)
    – Gray Sheep
    May 7 '15 at 20:17












  • 1




    Different question, but same answer - Two interviews at once
    – David K
    May 7 '15 at 12:48










  • @DavidK There is a difference: this time I risk a hard face loss by at least one of the companies, because of my terrible mistake.
    – Gray Sheep
    May 7 '15 at 12:51






  • 5




    @user8558 The other questions contains the only viable answer to this issue. You'll have to reschedule with the job that either interests you less or you feel you have a much less of a chance of getting
    – Dan
    May 7 '15 at 13:09






  • 2




    @user8558 How do you know that you will face a 'hard face loss' from one of the companies? This is very relevant to answering your question - if one company cannot flex the least on your interview, obviously you should reschedule with the other company instead.
    – Zibbobz
    May 7 '15 at 14:09






  • 1




    @Zibbobz This is what I did! Thank you very much. (They let me felt, that they are not happy, but I will get a new schedule soon.)
    – Gray Sheep
    May 7 '15 at 20:17







1




1




Different question, but same answer - Two interviews at once
– David K
May 7 '15 at 12:48




Different question, but same answer - Two interviews at once
– David K
May 7 '15 at 12:48












@DavidK There is a difference: this time I risk a hard face loss by at least one of the companies, because of my terrible mistake.
– Gray Sheep
May 7 '15 at 12:51




@DavidK There is a difference: this time I risk a hard face loss by at least one of the companies, because of my terrible mistake.
– Gray Sheep
May 7 '15 at 12:51




5




5




@user8558 The other questions contains the only viable answer to this issue. You'll have to reschedule with the job that either interests you less or you feel you have a much less of a chance of getting
– Dan
May 7 '15 at 13:09




@user8558 The other questions contains the only viable answer to this issue. You'll have to reschedule with the job that either interests you less or you feel you have a much less of a chance of getting
– Dan
May 7 '15 at 13:09




2




2




@user8558 How do you know that you will face a 'hard face loss' from one of the companies? This is very relevant to answering your question - if one company cannot flex the least on your interview, obviously you should reschedule with the other company instead.
– Zibbobz
May 7 '15 at 14:09




@user8558 How do you know that you will face a 'hard face loss' from one of the companies? This is very relevant to answering your question - if one company cannot flex the least on your interview, obviously you should reschedule with the other company instead.
– Zibbobz
May 7 '15 at 14:09




1




1




@Zibbobz This is what I did! Thank you very much. (They let me felt, that they are not happy, but I will get a new schedule soon.)
– Gray Sheep
May 7 '15 at 20:17




@Zibbobz This is what I did! Thank you very much. (They let me felt, that they are not happy, but I will get a new schedule soon.)
– Gray Sheep
May 7 '15 at 20:17










3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
11
down vote



accepted










You can't go to both of these interviews - it's impossible to be in two places at once. You will have to reschedule one of them.



You do not need to mention that you are rescheduling because of another interview - just pick a company and tell them you have an appointment you can't miss, and ask them to reschedule. If they refuse, ask the other company if they can reschedule.



If neither company will reschedule, call and cancel the interview you will miss the least - or just don't show up for it, if you cannot handle cancelling the interview. But if neither one of them will reschedule, it is the polite thing to do to cancel at least one so that you leave them on good terms.



Call as soon as possible - it improves the company's ability to reschedule for you, and is much more courteous and convenient to their needs as well.




As for saving face, the effect of asking to re-schedule an interview is very minimal in terms of losing respect from your employer, both for the interviewer and for the HR department. You should be courteous and polite in requesting to re-schedule, understanding if they cannot accommodate your schedule, and apologize for the inconvenience at most.



This really isn't a huge issue - scheduling mishaps happen all the time. It's better to own up to it now and ask to reschedule than it is to stew over the mistake and make things more difficult for HR and your potential boss by not correcting the mistake.






share|improve this answer





























    up vote
    5
    down vote













    You call the first company and say "I have an interview on Monday at 3pm. Unfortunately, I received another rather important appointment at the exact same time. I can come to the interview, but it would really help me if we could move it to a different time". Then you see what the reaction is. The person doing the interview might be quite happy doing it in the morning, or the next day, or the day before, and you are fine. If not, tell them that you will come to the interview and call the second company with the same story.



    If neither interview can be moved, you decide which one you'd rather go to, call the other and say that unfortunately you can't come. You could not call them, in case the other interview is cancelled on the last minute. If one can be moved but not the other, it is a judgement call whether this is coincidence or whether one company is generally more flexible and therefore better to work with.






    share|improve this answer




















    • They gave me multiple datetime proposals, I choosed badly from them.
      – Gray Sheep
      May 7 '15 at 19:49










    • @user8558 Then it is time to correct that by asking to re-schedule.
      – Zibbobz
      May 7 '15 at 19:53










    • @Zibbobz If I say them that I want to reschedule my interview because of another interview from another company, maybe it won't be the best first impression, don't you think?
      – Gray Sheep
      May 7 '15 at 19:56






    • 2




      @user8558 Probably not, and you don't have to say that - you could just tell them you need to reschedule because of another 'appointment' - you don't have to say it's another interview. It isn't really a huge deal - hiring managers know that prospective employees might have multiple interviews going on, and they won't hold a grudge over that. But you don't even have to bring it up to ask them to reschedule.
      – Zibbobz
      May 7 '15 at 20:00


















    up vote
    1
    down vote













    The best thing to do at such a time is to try to reschedule one of them on different time or a different date. You can request the concerned authority that you would need a rescheduling. Show them that you are keen on taking that interview and if they could possibly reschedule at a time suitable to them.



    Make clear that it is due to something that is urgent or something that has come up and needs immediate attention or simple state that you would be unavailable on the said date due to a thing beyond your control and request for a change in time.



    Request such a change at the place you feel is more flexible, or where you are comparatively less keen.






    share|improve this answer



























      3 Answers
      3






      active

      oldest

      votes








      3 Answers
      3






      active

      oldest

      votes









      active

      oldest

      votes






      active

      oldest

      votes








      up vote
      11
      down vote



      accepted










      You can't go to both of these interviews - it's impossible to be in two places at once. You will have to reschedule one of them.



      You do not need to mention that you are rescheduling because of another interview - just pick a company and tell them you have an appointment you can't miss, and ask them to reschedule. If they refuse, ask the other company if they can reschedule.



      If neither company will reschedule, call and cancel the interview you will miss the least - or just don't show up for it, if you cannot handle cancelling the interview. But if neither one of them will reschedule, it is the polite thing to do to cancel at least one so that you leave them on good terms.



      Call as soon as possible - it improves the company's ability to reschedule for you, and is much more courteous and convenient to their needs as well.




      As for saving face, the effect of asking to re-schedule an interview is very minimal in terms of losing respect from your employer, both for the interviewer and for the HR department. You should be courteous and polite in requesting to re-schedule, understanding if they cannot accommodate your schedule, and apologize for the inconvenience at most.



      This really isn't a huge issue - scheduling mishaps happen all the time. It's better to own up to it now and ask to reschedule than it is to stew over the mistake and make things more difficult for HR and your potential boss by not correcting the mistake.






      share|improve this answer


























        up vote
        11
        down vote



        accepted










        You can't go to both of these interviews - it's impossible to be in two places at once. You will have to reschedule one of them.



        You do not need to mention that you are rescheduling because of another interview - just pick a company and tell them you have an appointment you can't miss, and ask them to reschedule. If they refuse, ask the other company if they can reschedule.



        If neither company will reschedule, call and cancel the interview you will miss the least - or just don't show up for it, if you cannot handle cancelling the interview. But if neither one of them will reschedule, it is the polite thing to do to cancel at least one so that you leave them on good terms.



        Call as soon as possible - it improves the company's ability to reschedule for you, and is much more courteous and convenient to their needs as well.




        As for saving face, the effect of asking to re-schedule an interview is very minimal in terms of losing respect from your employer, both for the interviewer and for the HR department. You should be courteous and polite in requesting to re-schedule, understanding if they cannot accommodate your schedule, and apologize for the inconvenience at most.



        This really isn't a huge issue - scheduling mishaps happen all the time. It's better to own up to it now and ask to reschedule than it is to stew over the mistake and make things more difficult for HR and your potential boss by not correcting the mistake.






        share|improve this answer
























          up vote
          11
          down vote



          accepted







          up vote
          11
          down vote



          accepted






          You can't go to both of these interviews - it's impossible to be in two places at once. You will have to reschedule one of them.



          You do not need to mention that you are rescheduling because of another interview - just pick a company and tell them you have an appointment you can't miss, and ask them to reschedule. If they refuse, ask the other company if they can reschedule.



          If neither company will reschedule, call and cancel the interview you will miss the least - or just don't show up for it, if you cannot handle cancelling the interview. But if neither one of them will reschedule, it is the polite thing to do to cancel at least one so that you leave them on good terms.



          Call as soon as possible - it improves the company's ability to reschedule for you, and is much more courteous and convenient to their needs as well.




          As for saving face, the effect of asking to re-schedule an interview is very minimal in terms of losing respect from your employer, both for the interviewer and for the HR department. You should be courteous and polite in requesting to re-schedule, understanding if they cannot accommodate your schedule, and apologize for the inconvenience at most.



          This really isn't a huge issue - scheduling mishaps happen all the time. It's better to own up to it now and ask to reschedule than it is to stew over the mistake and make things more difficult for HR and your potential boss by not correcting the mistake.






          share|improve this answer














          You can't go to both of these interviews - it's impossible to be in two places at once. You will have to reschedule one of them.



          You do not need to mention that you are rescheduling because of another interview - just pick a company and tell them you have an appointment you can't miss, and ask them to reschedule. If they refuse, ask the other company if they can reschedule.



          If neither company will reschedule, call and cancel the interview you will miss the least - or just don't show up for it, if you cannot handle cancelling the interview. But if neither one of them will reschedule, it is the polite thing to do to cancel at least one so that you leave them on good terms.



          Call as soon as possible - it improves the company's ability to reschedule for you, and is much more courteous and convenient to their needs as well.




          As for saving face, the effect of asking to re-schedule an interview is very minimal in terms of losing respect from your employer, both for the interviewer and for the HR department. You should be courteous and polite in requesting to re-schedule, understanding if they cannot accommodate your schedule, and apologize for the inconvenience at most.



          This really isn't a huge issue - scheduling mishaps happen all the time. It's better to own up to it now and ask to reschedule than it is to stew over the mistake and make things more difficult for HR and your potential boss by not correcting the mistake.







          share|improve this answer














          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer








          edited May 7 '15 at 19:57

























          answered May 7 '15 at 14:08









          Zibbobz

          6,68752453




          6,68752453






















              up vote
              5
              down vote













              You call the first company and say "I have an interview on Monday at 3pm. Unfortunately, I received another rather important appointment at the exact same time. I can come to the interview, but it would really help me if we could move it to a different time". Then you see what the reaction is. The person doing the interview might be quite happy doing it in the morning, or the next day, or the day before, and you are fine. If not, tell them that you will come to the interview and call the second company with the same story.



              If neither interview can be moved, you decide which one you'd rather go to, call the other and say that unfortunately you can't come. You could not call them, in case the other interview is cancelled on the last minute. If one can be moved but not the other, it is a judgement call whether this is coincidence or whether one company is generally more flexible and therefore better to work with.






              share|improve this answer




















              • They gave me multiple datetime proposals, I choosed badly from them.
                – Gray Sheep
                May 7 '15 at 19:49










              • @user8558 Then it is time to correct that by asking to re-schedule.
                – Zibbobz
                May 7 '15 at 19:53










              • @Zibbobz If I say them that I want to reschedule my interview because of another interview from another company, maybe it won't be the best first impression, don't you think?
                – Gray Sheep
                May 7 '15 at 19:56






              • 2




                @user8558 Probably not, and you don't have to say that - you could just tell them you need to reschedule because of another 'appointment' - you don't have to say it's another interview. It isn't really a huge deal - hiring managers know that prospective employees might have multiple interviews going on, and they won't hold a grudge over that. But you don't even have to bring it up to ask them to reschedule.
                – Zibbobz
                May 7 '15 at 20:00















              up vote
              5
              down vote













              You call the first company and say "I have an interview on Monday at 3pm. Unfortunately, I received another rather important appointment at the exact same time. I can come to the interview, but it would really help me if we could move it to a different time". Then you see what the reaction is. The person doing the interview might be quite happy doing it in the morning, or the next day, or the day before, and you are fine. If not, tell them that you will come to the interview and call the second company with the same story.



              If neither interview can be moved, you decide which one you'd rather go to, call the other and say that unfortunately you can't come. You could not call them, in case the other interview is cancelled on the last minute. If one can be moved but not the other, it is a judgement call whether this is coincidence or whether one company is generally more flexible and therefore better to work with.






              share|improve this answer




















              • They gave me multiple datetime proposals, I choosed badly from them.
                – Gray Sheep
                May 7 '15 at 19:49










              • @user8558 Then it is time to correct that by asking to re-schedule.
                – Zibbobz
                May 7 '15 at 19:53










              • @Zibbobz If I say them that I want to reschedule my interview because of another interview from another company, maybe it won't be the best first impression, don't you think?
                – Gray Sheep
                May 7 '15 at 19:56






              • 2




                @user8558 Probably not, and you don't have to say that - you could just tell them you need to reschedule because of another 'appointment' - you don't have to say it's another interview. It isn't really a huge deal - hiring managers know that prospective employees might have multiple interviews going on, and they won't hold a grudge over that. But you don't even have to bring it up to ask them to reschedule.
                – Zibbobz
                May 7 '15 at 20:00













              up vote
              5
              down vote










              up vote
              5
              down vote









              You call the first company and say "I have an interview on Monday at 3pm. Unfortunately, I received another rather important appointment at the exact same time. I can come to the interview, but it would really help me if we could move it to a different time". Then you see what the reaction is. The person doing the interview might be quite happy doing it in the morning, or the next day, or the day before, and you are fine. If not, tell them that you will come to the interview and call the second company with the same story.



              If neither interview can be moved, you decide which one you'd rather go to, call the other and say that unfortunately you can't come. You could not call them, in case the other interview is cancelled on the last minute. If one can be moved but not the other, it is a judgement call whether this is coincidence or whether one company is generally more flexible and therefore better to work with.






              share|improve this answer












              You call the first company and say "I have an interview on Monday at 3pm. Unfortunately, I received another rather important appointment at the exact same time. I can come to the interview, but it would really help me if we could move it to a different time". Then you see what the reaction is. The person doing the interview might be quite happy doing it in the morning, or the next day, or the day before, and you are fine. If not, tell them that you will come to the interview and call the second company with the same story.



              If neither interview can be moved, you decide which one you'd rather go to, call the other and say that unfortunately you can't come. You could not call them, in case the other interview is cancelled on the last minute. If one can be moved but not the other, it is a judgement call whether this is coincidence or whether one company is generally more flexible and therefore better to work with.







              share|improve this answer












              share|improve this answer



              share|improve this answer










              answered May 7 '15 at 13:50









              gnasher729

              71k31131222




              71k31131222











              • They gave me multiple datetime proposals, I choosed badly from them.
                – Gray Sheep
                May 7 '15 at 19:49










              • @user8558 Then it is time to correct that by asking to re-schedule.
                – Zibbobz
                May 7 '15 at 19:53










              • @Zibbobz If I say them that I want to reschedule my interview because of another interview from another company, maybe it won't be the best first impression, don't you think?
                – Gray Sheep
                May 7 '15 at 19:56






              • 2




                @user8558 Probably not, and you don't have to say that - you could just tell them you need to reschedule because of another 'appointment' - you don't have to say it's another interview. It isn't really a huge deal - hiring managers know that prospective employees might have multiple interviews going on, and they won't hold a grudge over that. But you don't even have to bring it up to ask them to reschedule.
                – Zibbobz
                May 7 '15 at 20:00

















              • They gave me multiple datetime proposals, I choosed badly from them.
                – Gray Sheep
                May 7 '15 at 19:49










              • @user8558 Then it is time to correct that by asking to re-schedule.
                – Zibbobz
                May 7 '15 at 19:53










              • @Zibbobz If I say them that I want to reschedule my interview because of another interview from another company, maybe it won't be the best first impression, don't you think?
                – Gray Sheep
                May 7 '15 at 19:56






              • 2




                @user8558 Probably not, and you don't have to say that - you could just tell them you need to reschedule because of another 'appointment' - you don't have to say it's another interview. It isn't really a huge deal - hiring managers know that prospective employees might have multiple interviews going on, and they won't hold a grudge over that. But you don't even have to bring it up to ask them to reschedule.
                – Zibbobz
                May 7 '15 at 20:00
















              They gave me multiple datetime proposals, I choosed badly from them.
              – Gray Sheep
              May 7 '15 at 19:49




              They gave me multiple datetime proposals, I choosed badly from them.
              – Gray Sheep
              May 7 '15 at 19:49












              @user8558 Then it is time to correct that by asking to re-schedule.
              – Zibbobz
              May 7 '15 at 19:53




              @user8558 Then it is time to correct that by asking to re-schedule.
              – Zibbobz
              May 7 '15 at 19:53












              @Zibbobz If I say them that I want to reschedule my interview because of another interview from another company, maybe it won't be the best first impression, don't you think?
              – Gray Sheep
              May 7 '15 at 19:56




              @Zibbobz If I say them that I want to reschedule my interview because of another interview from another company, maybe it won't be the best first impression, don't you think?
              – Gray Sheep
              May 7 '15 at 19:56




              2




              2




              @user8558 Probably not, and you don't have to say that - you could just tell them you need to reschedule because of another 'appointment' - you don't have to say it's another interview. It isn't really a huge deal - hiring managers know that prospective employees might have multiple interviews going on, and they won't hold a grudge over that. But you don't even have to bring it up to ask them to reschedule.
              – Zibbobz
              May 7 '15 at 20:00





              @user8558 Probably not, and you don't have to say that - you could just tell them you need to reschedule because of another 'appointment' - you don't have to say it's another interview. It isn't really a huge deal - hiring managers know that prospective employees might have multiple interviews going on, and they won't hold a grudge over that. But you don't even have to bring it up to ask them to reschedule.
              – Zibbobz
              May 7 '15 at 20:00











              up vote
              1
              down vote













              The best thing to do at such a time is to try to reschedule one of them on different time or a different date. You can request the concerned authority that you would need a rescheduling. Show them that you are keen on taking that interview and if they could possibly reschedule at a time suitable to them.



              Make clear that it is due to something that is urgent or something that has come up and needs immediate attention or simple state that you would be unavailable on the said date due to a thing beyond your control and request for a change in time.



              Request such a change at the place you feel is more flexible, or where you are comparatively less keen.






              share|improve this answer
























                up vote
                1
                down vote













                The best thing to do at such a time is to try to reschedule one of them on different time or a different date. You can request the concerned authority that you would need a rescheduling. Show them that you are keen on taking that interview and if they could possibly reschedule at a time suitable to them.



                Make clear that it is due to something that is urgent or something that has come up and needs immediate attention or simple state that you would be unavailable on the said date due to a thing beyond your control and request for a change in time.



                Request such a change at the place you feel is more flexible, or where you are comparatively less keen.






                share|improve this answer






















                  up vote
                  1
                  down vote










                  up vote
                  1
                  down vote









                  The best thing to do at such a time is to try to reschedule one of them on different time or a different date. You can request the concerned authority that you would need a rescheduling. Show them that you are keen on taking that interview and if they could possibly reschedule at a time suitable to them.



                  Make clear that it is due to something that is urgent or something that has come up and needs immediate attention or simple state that you would be unavailable on the said date due to a thing beyond your control and request for a change in time.



                  Request such a change at the place you feel is more flexible, or where you are comparatively less keen.






                  share|improve this answer












                  The best thing to do at such a time is to try to reschedule one of them on different time or a different date. You can request the concerned authority that you would need a rescheduling. Show them that you are keen on taking that interview and if they could possibly reschedule at a time suitable to them.



                  Make clear that it is due to something that is urgent or something that has come up and needs immediate attention or simple state that you would be unavailable on the said date due to a thing beyond your control and request for a change in time.



                  Request such a change at the place you feel is more flexible, or where you are comparatively less keen.







                  share|improve this answer












                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer










                  answered May 7 '15 at 15:50









                  Rising Star

                  273




                  273












                      Comments

                      Popular posts from this blog

                      List of Gilmore Girls characters

                      What does second last employer means? [closed]

                      One-line joke