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Friday, November 21, 2014

Liar, Liar! You Won't Get Hired

  SaD       Friday, November 21, 2014



Employers reveal the lies they've discovered








Lie

By Debra Auerbach



People lie about a lot of things: age, weight ... number of Botox
injections. Sometimes lies can be harmless (who needs to know that your
natural hair color isn't really blond?); other times they can get you into big trouble.



When it comes to employment, bending the truth on your resume might seem
worth it in today's competitive workforce, but it will likely get your
resume sent to the reject pile. According to a CareerBuilder survey,
58 percent of hiring managers say they've caught a lie on a resume; 33
percent of these employers have seen an increase in resume
embellishments post-recession.



While half of employers (51 percent) would automatically dismiss a
candidate if they caught a lie on his or her resume, 40 percent say that
it would depend on what the candidate lied about. Seven percent of
employers would even be willing to overlook a lie if they clicked with
the candidate.



Most frequent fibs

So what fabrications are job seekers most likely to make on their
resume, with the hopes that they'll go unnoticed? According to
employers, the most common lies they catch relate to:

  • Embellished skills – 57 percent

  • Embellished responsibilities – 55 percent

  • Dates of employment – 42 percent

  • Job title – 34 percent

  • Academic degree – 33 percent

  • Companies worked for – 26 percent

  • Accolades/awards – 18 percent


Incidences by industry

Lies aren't confined to a certain occupation or job level – job seekers
of all types commit lies to boost up their resume. Yet some fields have
more offenders than others. The survey found that employers in the
following industries catch resume lies more frequently than average:

"Trust is very important in professional relationships, and by lying on
your resume, you breach that trust from the very outset," says Rosemary
Haefner, vice president of human resources at CareerBuilder. "If you
want to enhance your resume, it's better to focus on playing up tangible
examples from your actual experience. Your resume doesn't necessarily
have to be the perfect fit for an organization, but it needs to be
relevant and accurate."



The tallest tales ever told

It's one thing to spin your experience to make it more relevant to the
position you're pursuing. It's another thing to claim you have more
years of experience than is possible at your age. And that's actually
happened: One employer surveyed says an applicant claimed to have 25
years of experience at age 32.



Other unusual and outrageous lies employers recall include:

  • Applicant included job experience that was actually his father's.
    Both father and son had the same name (one was Sr., one was Jr.).

  • Applicant claimed to be the assistant to the prime minister of a foreign country that doesn't have a prime minister.

  • Applicant claimed to have been a high school basketball free throw champion. He admitted it was a lie in the interview.

  • Applicant claimed to have been an Olympic medalist.

  • Applicant claimed to have been a construction supervisor. The
    interviewer learned the bulk of his experience was in the completion of a
    doghouse some years prior.

  • Applicant claimed to have worked for 20 years as the babysitter of known celebrities such as Tom Cruise, Madonna, etc.

  • Applicant listed three jobs over the past several years. Upon
    contacting the employers, the interviewer learned that the applicant had
    worked at one for two days, another for one day and not at all for the
    third.

  • Applicant applied to a position with a company that had just
    terminated him. He listed the company under previous employment and
    indicated on his resume that he had quit.

  • Applicant applied twice for the same position and provided different work history on each application.


    



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