Firstly, for a reputable company like LexisNexis/Relx, their application system is flawed. Many of my applications remained in “submitted” status for extended periods, with only intermittent responses over several weeks. This reflects a lack of consistent candidate communication and poor process management.
Secondly, I had an interview scheduled for a permanent paralegal position. After a week of preparation, thirty minutes before the interview, the recruiter disclosed that the role was actually a temporary contract. Such last-minute changes disrupt candidates and erode trust in the process.
Thirdly, for another paralegal role, the recruiter confirmed that applicants from Durban, Johannesburg, and Cape Town were eligible. The legal manager reinforced this, citing her own remote arrangement from Johannesburg. Two weeks later, the role was awarded to a Johannesburg-based candidate only, contradicting earlier representations and creating unnecessary confusion.
I escalated these concerns with evidence to both the Recruitment Team Lead and the Talent Acquisition Team Lead in the UK. While acknowledged, the explanation given that “job advertisements may not match actual hiring requirements” shifted accountability to candidates rather than addressing misleading and inconsistent communication.
In conclusion, the LexisNexis recruitment process in 2024 was marked by misleading postings, inconsistent communication, and inadequate escalation handling. This undermined confidence in the company’s hiring standards and resulted in a disappointing, unnecessarily time-consuming candidate experience.