
The other day I heard a very funny story about a man who wanted to do something special with his resume and the application he filled out. He was sitting in the lobby of the famous Silicon Valley company. He filled the application with a fully scripted block letter of a skilled engineer. He then took his resume printed on a special weave parchment paper. He carefully places the application on his resume and allows 1.5 inches of parchment paper to protrude from the bottom of the application. Then he carefully made them to paper airplanes.
This is not an airplane of paper but an exact replica of the same paper plane as NASA's challenge in an aircraft hangar where the world record, which is the longest flight time of a paper plane, was broken. He used the same fold and used exactly the same design. After that, I must walk to the back of the lobby and run about 40 yards. He carefully waited until ventilation is just before the air current is just perfect when someone was just walking. He launched a paper airplane. It flied perfectly across the lobby. And it is a surprise to everyone who has arrived completely at the desk just behind the reception desk counter.
The gentleman thought to myself, "I was perfect." He shampooed and smiled with a smile. His wave was what you expected from the British royal family in the parade. He left the door, entered the parking lot, and entered a fully detailed black BMW. He noticed that he was watching from the second floor of the building, he got a smile and a perfect royal wave. He drifted carefully from the parking lot, stopped at the signs of all the stops on the way to the street, and went out.
Later, very interesting things happened. Nobody took him back. He could not understand why he did not receive a call because the computer scientist's qualification was perfect. He gained a master, three years at MIT, three times at Carnegie Mellon, and a Ph.D. in Computer Science at Stanford University. He had two patents and he was engaged in the startup he shared. Although the defense aerospace company has been staying for more than four years after the acquisition, I could write better codes than anyone else.
Still, they did not call. "Why does the company have to be discriminated against me?" He thought. And he grasped what happened. "The company discriminates against aerospace engineers"
After that, I returned to the Human Resources department, appealed discrimination, told that I was not an aerospace engineer and told him that he was actually a computer scientist. The Human Resources Department told him that he did not have his resume despite sending by plane.
The girl at the front counter in the lobby thought it was a joke. She enlarged a perfectly designed paper airplane, its embedded applications and resume.
This allows everyone to think outside the wind tunnel, not having a sense of humor Let me learn to everyone you are trying to get a job there.

