GILDING THE LILY
RESUME EMBELLISHMENTS
The
truth is... people exaggerate and misrepresent facts
on resumes. We're sorry to say, but this form of deceit
has become a trend in today's workplace environment
and oftentimes those responsible for "gilding
the lily" so to speak, get by with it.
Surveys indicate
that as many as one-third of all resume writers "enhance"
their accomplishments, while up to 10 percent "seriously
misrepresent" their background or work histories.
Bogus job titles, fictional degrees, inflated responsibilities
and false dates of employment are typical embellishments.
Today, many of these
falsehoods are difficult to track and/or detect, especially
when past employers are reluctant to provide little
more than dates of employment.
Each year our firm
disqualifies a hand-full of executive level candidates
because they are caught falsifying information on
their resumes. Interestingly enough, a frequent comment
we hear is that this is the first time that someone
has actually checked their resume and requisite credentials.
A quality-driven executive search approach or internal
corporate recruiting department should verify degree
information and personally talk with enough references
to confirm the key facts a candidate presents on his/her
resume during the course of the interview process.
The bottom line is... effecting
an executive level appointment is challenging at best,
even when candidates are completely open, honest and
candid. Make sure your company and/or the executive
search consultant representing your organization is
thoroughly investigating reference, academic and employment
information provided by candidates. In the long run,
going the extra mile is worth the extra effort to
make sure that you have made a good hire.
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