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Why Get
Your Resume Verified?

Show your future
employers that you are
responsible, honest, and respect
their company and time. As a job
applicant, getting your resume
verified will give you that edge
over your competitors!. Its the
best reference you could ever
have. Not only do we verify the
resume info but we also check
the individuals on-line profiles
- you can learn alot from an
individal by what they are
posting on blog and chat sites
such as myspace.com. Let us
VERIFY your job applicants to
save you the time and money!!.
Corporate
Examples of why getting resumes
verified are important
A
recent survey by the New York
Times Job Market research
team found that 89 percent of
job seekers exaggerate on their
resumes. Typical
resume airbrushing tactics
include exaggerating job
responsibilities, falsifying
employment dates, or covering up
the reasons for leaving a former
employer. According to Nolo.com,
a Web site designed to help
people handle everyday legal
matters, 9 percent of job
seekers falsely claimed they had
a higher degree, listed false
employers, or identified jobs
that didn't exist. Eleven
percent misrepresented why they
left a former employer, and
nearly 33 percent listed
employment dates that were off
by more than 3 months.
"At the executive
level, inflating
responsibilities and falsifying
degrees are two common resume
lies," said Michael Kessler, an
investigative consultant at
international corporate
investigation firm Kessler
International. At lower levels,
he said, changing work dates to
fill gaps of unemployment and
omitting criminal histories are
more common.
Radio Shack Executive resigns
due to false resume.
In February 2006, Electronics
retailer RadioShack Corp. said
that its president and chief
executive, David Edmondson
resigned during an investigation
into credentials listed on his
resume. Edmondson originally
said he had received a Bachelor
of Science degree and then said
he believes, but cannot
document, that he received a The
diploma, awarded for completing
a three-year degree in theology.
Executive Chairman Leonard
Roberts said in a conference
call that at the time of
Edmondson's first hiring in
1994, RadioShack was not in the
practice of verifying academic
credentials. He stressed that
the company now conducts more
stringent background checks.
Other major cases
have seen the chairman of gun
manufacturer Smith & Wesson’s
parent company resign when his
criminal past was revealed and
an executive for Bausch & Lomb
Inc. miss out on a $1.1 million
bonus because he falsely claimed
to have a business school
degree.
It’s important to
be honest on your resume —
whether you’re applying for a
job as company president or as a
janitor — because the risk of
being caught in a lie is so
great it isn’t worth it, experts
say.
Veritas Executive resigns due to
false resume.
Veritas removed
its former CFO because he lied
on his resume, claiming a
Stanford MBA he doesn't have.
Lonchar is the most recent in a
long list of high-profile resume
"padders." George O'Leary, hired
as head coach for the Notre Dame
football team in 2001, got the
ax when it was discovered he
never played football for his
alma mater, the University of
New Hampshire -- though his
resume said he had. He later
confessed his master's degree
was also a sham. Ouch. Resume
padding, of course, isn't just
limited to bogus degrees.
The
business school of the
University of California at
Berkeley is running background
checks on prospective students
and rejecting some for lying on
their applications:
Of 100
students who have qualified for
admittance to the prestigious
Haas School of Business, five
were rejected last month after
staff found they had made false
claims on their applications,
Wharton business school at the
University of Pennsylvania, has
also began requiring applicants
to pay a $35 fee to have an
outside firm verify their
applications. "We wanted to warn
the market, "Don't apply to us
if you plan to fudge your
application," said Rosemaria
Martinelli, director of MBA
admissions and financial aid.
"What I hope to do through all
this is to show that integrity
is the most important thing,"
she said. Woo, the Gillen Dean
of the Mendoza College of
Business at the University of
Notre Dame, thinks running a
check is probably a good idea in
today's business climate.
Dartmouth
athletic director resigns due to
Fake Masters Degree.
"Charles Harris, Dartmouth's new
athletic director, resigned
abruptly after questions were
raised about his resume. Harris
stepped down Monday. Dartmouth
had scheduled to officially
introduce him Tuesday as the
school's new Athletic Director.
Lying on your
resume can come back to haunt
you - sometimes even many years
down the road. Don't fall into
that trap.
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