Showing posts with label firing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label firing. Show all posts

Thursday, April 9, 2009

The Six Biggest Applicant Lies!


Although statistics vary widely, there is widespread agreement that a substantial number of resumes belong in the "fiction" section of the bookstore. The rate of fraud can be as high as 40% and higher according to different sources. Applicants certainly have the right to put their best foot forward, and puffing their qualifications is an American tradition. But when puffing crosses the line into fabrication, an employer needs to be concerned. When you hire an applicant who uses lies and fabrication to get hired, the issue is that the same type of dishonesty will continue once they have the job.

What are the six most common fabrications from job applicants? According to a nationally recognized background checking firm, Employment Screening Resources (www.ESRcheck.com), they are:

1. Claiming a degree not earned: Yes, believe it or not, applicants will make up a degree. Sometimes, they actually went to the school but never graduated. Some applicants may have had just a few credits to go, and decided to award themselves the degree anyway. On some occasions, an applicant will claim a degree from a school they did not even attend. The best practice for an employer is to state clearly on the application form that the applicant should list any school they want the employer to consider. In that way, if an applicant lies, the employer can act on the lack of truthfulness regardless of whether the educational requirement is part of the job requirements.

2. Diploma Mills or Fake Degree: A related issue is diploma mills or fake degrees that can be purchased online. For those that actually attended classes, read books, wrote papers and took tests to earn a diploma, you apparently did it the old fashioned way. Now, getting a "degree" is as easy as going online and using your credit card. There are even websites that will print out very convincing, fake degrees from nearly any school in America. In fact, the author obtained a degree for his dog in Business Administration from the University of Arizona--and the dog had been dead for ten years. A transcript was even obtained and the dog got a "B" in English! Some sites will even provide a phone number so an employer can call and verify the fake degree. Some of the degree mills even have fake accreditation agencies with names similar to real accreditation bodies, in order to give a fake accreditation for a fake school.

3. Job Title: Another area of faking is the job description or job title. Applicants can easily give their career an artificial boost by "promoting" themselves to a supervisor position, even if they never managed anyone.

4. Dates of Employment: Another concern for employers is applicants that cover up dates of employment in order to hide "employment gaps." For some applicants, it may be a seemingly innocent attempt to hide the fact that it has taken awhile to get a new job. In other cases, the date fabrication can be more sinister, such as a person that spent time in custody for a crime who may be trying to hide that fact.

5. Compensation: A related issue is pay - applicants have been known to exaggerate compensation in order to have a better negotiating position in the new job.

6. Lack of Criminal Record: Nearly every application will have a question about past criminal conduct. Although employers may not "automatically" eliminate a job applicant without a showing of a "business necessity," if the person lies, then the employer would have grounds to deny employment based upon dishonesty.

The common denominator in all of these: they can be all be discovered by a program of pre-employment screening. To quote a phrase popular in the 1980s. "Trust, but verify."


About the Author

Lester Rosen runs http://www.esrcheck.com and has authored two books. He is a frequent presenter nationwide at human resources, fraud and security conferences, and was the chair of the steering committee that founded the National Association of Professional Background Screeners (NAPBS) and served as its first co-chair. He has testified as an expert in negligent hiring cases in California, Florida and Arkansas.

While Others Are Firing, You Should Be Hiring


In tough economic times, most organizations' first and most predictable reaction is to cut expenses; in today's service economy, the largest expenses are manpower-related. The result is that thousands of talented employees have been released into the marketplace. This increase in talented unemployed workers creates a great opportunity. When others are cutting, now is the time for you to redefine, realign and rehire to pick from the best and create a more powerful and greater performing team.

Most companies are stuck in industrial-age thinking; they feel that any employee can do any job. This encourages their "layoff" and "cut" approach to managing expenses in recessionary periods. However, as our economy moves from the skill-focused (make things) industrial age to today's talent-focused (make ideas) intellectual age, we need new and more personalized performance from each employee. There are very few one-size-fits-all roles anymore; each role now requires specific talents and thinking to be done well. And in a period where we need more done with less, it is critical that all roles have the best and highest performing employees.

Our people are our profits, particularly in an intellectual and service workplace. What employees know, and how they use what they know, advances our innovation, efficiency and profitability - but only if employees work in roles that allow them to use their talents and strengths; performance today is more based on thinking and natural abilities than learned skills or rote procedures. This requires organizations to implement a more significant process to assess employee talents and match them to the talents needed in each role as the method to hire effectively. Today's recession has created the ability for proactive organizations to select from the great amount of new available unemployed talent in the marketplace. So as others are terminating and cutting, use the three steps of redefine, realign and rehire to attract and hire the best talent now available to improve the performance power of your team. This talent availability will not last for long.

Use this three-step process to ensure you have the best performing team:

Redefine - An intellectual economy requires significantly different work from its employees than does an industrial economy. In an intellectual workplace employees make more unique decisions - they think their way through the day. Since each of us thinks differently, not every employee is a good fit for every role. Therefore, it is critical to clearly define the talents and strengths (thinking) needed in each role. Once defined, existing employees and new candidates can be reviewed to determine whether their unique talents and strengths match those needed in the role. The more closely the employee's talents are matched to the talents needed in the role, the greater the potential for significant employee performance. Talent assessment tools will help identify the language and definitions needed to create a talent profile for each role so that the right employees can be sourced. In yesterday's industrial age, skills and experience drove performance. In today's intellectual age, thinking, talents and strengths drive performance Clearly redefining the talents needed in each role in the organization will allow for effective employee realignment or a successful new hire.

Realign - it is critical to keep great talent; however, talent is only perceived as great if it is appropriate to the role. If I am an extraordinary salesman (my talents encourage relationship building and great personal contact) but I work as an accountant, I will never fully use my talents and the organization will neither notice, nor benefit from, what I do intrinsically well; it is critical that each role allow the employee to maximize his/her talents. Once all roles have been redefined for talents, assess your existing employees to determine whether they are working in the right roles. Many times you may have great employees whose performance is average or disengaged because they are not working in their talent areas. When properly realigned, they become more connected to their work, more engaged in their jobs and contribute more significantly to results.

An economic downturn, with the focus of doing more with less, is an opportune moment to realign employees to ensure the right employees are in the right roles. Though great organizations don't wait for a recession to realign (they commit to hiring employees into the right roles), a recession more readily allows for personnel changes. Use the recession to realign employees to the right roles and move out employees whose talents do not match the talent needs of the organization. Keep only those employees who are fully contributing and driving results.

Rehire - In the process of redefining and realigning, it is frequently noted that the required talents are not available in the existing manpower. This may be from the assessment that certain employees are in the wrong roles (and that no better match for their talents exist) and therefore must go, or new roles are created requiring an external candidate. In either case, a need to rehire exists. The starting point for all rehiring is to clearly understand the talents needed in the open roles, then develop a sourcing plan that will locate candidates with the required talents. Today's leading organizations source candidates by presenting the role and its required talents. Candidates are encouraged to respond with talent-based resumes, not skill and experience resumes. This better defines the critical thinking needed to be successful in the role and shares this information with the population of available talent. Focusing the hiring discussion around talents naturally encourages more qualified candidates, a more meaningful interview process and a greater likelihood of hiring the right employee.

Today, we are in tough economic times. But with difficulty comes opportunity. Now is the time for organizations to redefine, realign and rehire. It is critical to focus on building the best team, in any economy. It is critical to have a team where each employee works in his/her talent areas. It is critical to take advantage of the supply of unemployed talented employees in today's recession to rebuild your team into one that is more connected, more powerful and more focused on performance.

We will work through this economic challenge. When we do, many organizations will be weaker because their recessionary approach was to cut the largest expense - their talent. Their cuts and layoffs have now provided you with a great selection and variety of quality workplace talent. Use this opportunity to redefine, realign and rehire the best employees. When the recession is over, your workforce will be more connected, more engaged and well ahead of others.

Jay Forte, a former financial executive and educator, now performance speaker, author and talent management consultant, is a nationally ranked Thought Leader and President of Humanetrics. Jay teaches organizations how to ignite passionate employee performance, create loyal customers and maximize bottom line results through a new and more effective method of management known as the Fire Up! Process. He has helped organizations of all sizes become more performance-driven and financially successful.

As an expert in activating employee performance, he is regularly interviewed by national publications and as a guest on business radio programs. His many dozen articles have been nationally and internationally published. He is the author of the new book, "Fire Up Your Employees and Smoke Your Competition; How to Invite, Incite and Ignite Employee Performance", an innovative, practical, hands-on manager guide to activate exceptional employee performance. Get the book at http://www.FireUpYourEmployees.com

See his daily performance tips called BLOGucation at http://www.HumanetricsLLC.com He can be reached at jay.forte@humanetricsllc.com or at 401.338.3505

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