Helen Perruzza, receives tons of resumes from hopeful
job applicants everyday. She is a senior personnel
consultant with First Choice Personnel, an employment
agency in Toronto. Early in spring 2000, a young woman
sublimated a resume for a Customer Service position
with one of First Choice’s clients. Her resume
was outstanding and paralleled the job position. Perruzza
invited her in for an interview. Her performance in
the interview was very satisfactory and she was introduced
to the client, who was also impressed by her. A background
check was performed and alas, the diploma she claimed
she had received from college never existed. So no
job offer!
Perruzza’s experience
with this job seeker is unfortunately a common occurrence
for many recruiters. While there are no statistics,
various sources of information indicate that a high
percentage of job applicants lie about their credentials
or work experiences on their resumes. According to
CNN Money, the five most common lies job seekers tell
in their resumes pertain to education, job title,
compensation, reasons for leaving and accomplishments.
Making bogus claims or
exaggerating credentials is very tempting and may
seem like the easy way to go to get that attractive
job, but it is also very risky. Many employers and
recruiters are very much aware of the increasing rate
of resume fraud and as such, conduct extensive background
and reference checks on prospective employees.
“A lot of companies
these days have an outsourced background check company
to perform background checks on applicants,”
says Perruzza.
The consequences of lying
in resume are dire because no organization wants to
have a dishonest candidate on its team.
“The mentality is
that if they had lied about this, what else they are
going to lie about,” says Perruzza.
In the case of Perruzza’s
candidate, her lie stopped her from getting the job
when she was the number one candidate for the position.
A resume fraudster may
assume that being caught lying by one company is just
the end of it and they can carry on with life but
a simple resume lie could very well hurt one’s
long term career prospects. Companies or employment
agencies are likely to red flag a candidate that was
caught lying.
“We work with so
many different clients and we network with them extensively,”
says Raimey Olthuis, senior recruitment consultant
for Everest Management Network. “So it really
gets around that this person is a liar.”
A resume liar can certainly
get past the application and interview process but
they might not be able to live up to the claims they
made in the resume. In addition, that could lead to
a quick termination and a blotch on their resume.
Being as truthful as possible
in ones resume is the best and safest way to go. As
Perruzza points out, there is no shame in saying you
have only completed one or two years of college courses
but to actually say you have completed a degree or
diploma when you have not, or claim you were a manager
of customer service when you were only a customer
service representative would leave a bad taste in
someone’s mouth when they find out later.
“If you have any
questions about wording something or if you want to
be truthful but think it would have a negative connotation,
then you should seek professional advice,” concludes
Perruzza.”
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