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The
CV detectives
It might seem like the only way to secure that dream job, but
with one in four people lying on their CVs, employers are wising
up, and have identified the typical fibs people tell.
So, you founded your university debating society, did you? And
what was your greatest challenge in that role?
However unlikely, it's a job interview question some people would
dread, if they are one of the many people to have faked parts
of their curriculum vitae.
A quarter of 3,000 CVs submitted with job applications in 2004
had a lie in them, says employee screening firm Risk Advisory
Group. And while the section headed "personal interests and
achievements" may seem like a legitimate area for exaggeration,
some of the lies are far more serious than fibs about undergraduate
life.
Neil Taylor produced a bogus degree certificate to land the position
as head of the Shrewsbury and Telford Hospitals NHS Trust in 2003.
But after admitting the offence of obtaining a pecuniary advantage
through deception, he now faces the possibility of prison.
You'd be surprised to know how common it is to lie about qualifications
Marcia RobertsRecruitment and Employment Confederation
So what sort of things are people lying about?
Inflated job titles, increased salaries and benefits, length of
service and qualifications are the most common areas, says Marcia
Roberts of the Recruitment and Employment Confederation.
"You'd be surprised to know how common it is to lie about
qualifications and how stupid it is because it's easy to check,"
she says. "Recruiters should never accept that someone has
lost their certificates. You'd be surprised how many claim to
have been to foreign universities when they don't even exist."
In an extreme case of faking it, people have even been known to
send someone else to undertake an interview for them, she says.
Combating the lies
The personal achievements are harder to check and few employers
bother. But a skilled interviewer can pick apart any holes in
a CV, adds Ms Roberts.
While some people may view the odd lie as acceptable to get the
job they think they are fully capable of doing, in areas such
as social services or education, there are obvious dangers to
employing a bogus carer or teacher. And a criminal records check,
which is statutory in some industries, will not pick up lies concerning
experience.
But some employers have had enough and are fighting back. London
and Quadrant Housing Trust, which provides rented homes to low-income
families, says checks on prospective employees reveal so many
to have lied that about one in 15 provisional job offers the housing
association makes has to be withdrawn.
This is due to the references not standing up or there being errors
on the application form such as falsified sick leave. To rectify
this, London and Quadrant is among an increasing number of employers
turning to outside help.
Checking CVs and application forms is a growing industry, and
one that Risk Advisory Group and Kroll Background Worldwide are
working within.
Hedley Clark, Kroll's managing director, says: "Companies
in the past have done reference checking themselves and just asked
people to bring in their qualification certificates when they
start.
"What's changing is that people are taking it more seriously
and seeing more public instances where a CV fabrication has gone
on."
Offenders fired
The extreme examples include people saying they have qualifications
they don't have or covering up a period where they were in jail,
he says.
Kroll helps the company to devise an application form which is
designed to get to the truth in areas like employer history, professional
qualifications and directorships. Applicants are warned the forms
will be vetted, but that still doesn't prevent nearly one in three
containing an error, says Mr Clark.
For between £75 and £300, depending on the seniority
of the individual, the person's background as outlined on the
form is investigated. This includes financial integrity checks
and could mean getting references in different languages.
The penalties vary from being refused the job to being fired if
the offender has already started work. Or as Mr Taylor's case
demonstrates, the punishment can be even stronger.
Source: BBC News: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/magazine/4167204.stm
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