Comcast has severe brand problems with hiring.
*Only 1/15 applications will even get an updated application status in their HR system. Most of the time they show as received, and are never updated after... FOR YEARS. This is not a joke, applications remain open for years without completion (I've moved through a company and been back before some were closed). How hard is it to flip the application to "Decline to Hire" and press save, so that one of your canned responses is sent out?
*Side note: For a company that prides itself on "responsiveness" and "collaboration", you can't be bothered to respond to applicants, and no one is addressing that your applicants go weeks/months without a reply, which should be a metric of "good service" within HR.
* Comcast will put under or lesser-qualified candidates into position before they will hire an external. I've been bluntly told as much by existing employees, and personally witnessed an entry-level employee placed into a mid-senior managerial role with less than one year of prior manager experience, versus better-qualified candidates. They love taking retail store employees and turning them into salaried analysts and filling professional job positions that require 2-3 years of experience (per Comcast hiring requirements) - unless you're internal.
* Comcast is ABSOLUTELY a company to post job openings, when the selected internal hire has been pre-determined. When the internal employees know the internal candidate for a hire, later put into the position, before the job position EVEN HITS THE JOB BOARD, it's obvious. It's also not legal in Colorado.
* Your HR application system eats data (wipes it out permanently) when accessed from a mobile device. This results in applicants having to spend H-O-U-R-S refilling out the application paperwork just to be in the running for a job at your company. There's a few positions I've applied to in your company that would have resulted in this being fixed.
* The company recruits for positions it doesn't always need or doesn't know it will not need. Someone isn't doing their due diligence. I’ve had multiple positions cancelled post-interview.
*They do NOT pay better than market average. If you ask for more, you will almost certainly be denied the position. If you negotiate, their go-to is to sell you on table stakes benefits you get day 1 regardless. They go to great lengths not to raise base above mid-point. If you want average employees, pay average salary. There's a reason many employees run rotations between Comcast, DISH, Spectrum.
*Comcast supposedly has worked hard to overcome its past reputation, but I see ghosts of old "you're not privileged enough to work here" mentality alive and well in Colorado.
*You will get NO feedback if declined on the deciding factor you did not possess. This means you can’t improve yourself to become more desirable to Comcast in the future. If they won't develop someone off the street by spending 2 minutes of time in, imagine being an employee who needs development.
* Many recruiters aren't qualified. When you're running your own interview as the recruiter doesn't know what to ask, there's a problem.
* Multi-week response times. If you're lucky enough to actually get a call or email from this company, it will be somewhere between 3-5 weeks from application. God help you if you're out of work, or interviewing elsewhere. Another company will screen, interview, and offer before Comcast schedules a phone screen. If Comcast is your preferred company, you're screwed before you start.
* They LOVE requiring advanced degrees/certs for the same positions they pay average or sub-par salaries for. Prosci, PMP, MBA, CISSP, CPA...
* Referrals on external candidates mean virtually nothing. Someone gave an HR breakdown that best case it accounts for 10% of consideration to the applicant.
* Comcast thinks everything is a transferable skill. 10 yrs experience, certifications, demonstrated results. They claim hiring on personality is more important than hiring on qualification. This conveniently permits subjective hiring decisions.
Your applicants are also ambassadors of your brand as much as your current/former customers are. You have 150k+ employees, $100B in business, but your HR reps can't even close out applications, and your HR managers check on why?
Comcast may be the best offer to a candidate, but it doesn't matter if the candidate needs work now; they can’t wait on Comcast. This leaves people who might want to work here, landing elsewhere out of necessity. Be more objective, monitor your systems/people and be transparent about positions (particularly pay, which effective 1/1/2021 you're required to post bands publicly for all positions in Colorado - yes, your applicants are versed in such things.) Try harder than you are today.
I just wish I were an actual Comcast employee today. I'd put this all into your eNPS system.