I applied for a senior brand role because the job description was clear, specific, and genuinely aligned with my background. The role was presented as one that required someone who could turn vision into action, bring structure, and lead with clarity and consistency. That is exactly what made the opportunity interesting to me.
What was disappointing was the way the process ended. The initial rejection said that other candidates more closely aligned with the current requirements of the role. When I asked for more specific feedback, that explanation changed to a different standard about candidates bringing additional qualifications on top of the key requirements. A further message then referred to the process being in its final stages and the role having been filled. Taken together, those explanations did not form a clear or coherent basis for the decision.
For a process that was supposed to assess candidates against published requirements, the feedback felt like post hoc justification rather than a transparent evaluation. If a company expects candidates to tailor their applications carefully, then the assessment should remain anchored to the stated criteria from the outset. Changing the rationale after the fact does not help candidates understand the decision and does not reflect a consistent hiring process