August



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August 21, 2018
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Can You Actually Still Speak The Languages Listed On Your CV?

Are employment candidates adding language skills to their CVs and resumes that they have no applicable knowledge of?

Several years ago, Facebook started allowing users to add ‘languages spoken’ to their profiles.  All at once, everyone started to clai thay they wereemultilingual!

This trend doesn’t end with Facebook profiles either. The embellishment seeps into the workplace, surfacing when people apply for jobs. On LinkedIn and in job applications, many people don’t think twice about slapping down a greatly exaggerated foreign language ability.  But can this backfire?

Language skills are easy to lie about

Of course, CVs have been riddled with little white lies practically as long as the modern labour market has existed, so this isn’t new. In a 2015 survey by CareerBuilder of 2,000 full-time hiring managers in the US, 56% said they had caught an applicant in a lie, like bloating past job titles and responsibilities to even listing an imaginary university. What’s more, they specifically said that 63% of applicants embellished a skill on their CV.

Another survey of 2,000 hiring managers by Hloom, a company that provides templates for cover letters and CVs, found that the second-worst lie an applicant could put on their CV was foreign language fluency – topped only by lying about the university they graduated from, and followed by academic major.

A premise known as 'elastic justification' appears to be the fundamental reason as there's no clear standard to hit to determine language skills. It’s a sort of self-delusion that might seem harmless at first, but it can rebound once the liar starts applying for more prominent or public positions.

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August 20, 2018
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Why employee screening isn't an HR function

In many organisations, the recruitment function is often left up to the human resources department. While there is certainly merit in partnering with HR throughout the talent acquisition process, seeking the advice and guidance of professional employee screening services is essential.

In an over-regulated labour law environment, employers often find themselves in hot water when they realise too late that they’ve hired an incompetent person to fulfil a critical position. According to Kyle Condon, MD of D&K Management Consultants, effective Pre-employment screening is crucial and could save the company time, money and aggravation by ensuring the right person is hired the first time around.

“Creating a partnership with industry experts allows the business to hire employees, knowing full well that the candidate is, in fact, the correct investment,” adds Condon. To be effective, the pre-screening process must be conducted by professional investigation and risk management specialists. These skillsets are not ordinarily built into an HR function.

A full background check includes many elements that are far beyond the HR practitioners scope of work. “It should go further than checking educational qualifications and calling references,” advises Condon.

“The investigator should delve into the candidate’s past employment, their market reputation, their true level of experience and their lifestyle. Do they have a criminal record? Do they have a bad credit rating? Are they really qualified for the job at hand (work permits, driver’s license, truck license, forklift license, for example)? Are they who they say they are – can their identity be verified? Does their address exist, are their bank account details correct, and do they operate with integrity?

“All of these questions are pertinent in determining whether an employee will become an asset or a liability, if hired.”

Recruitment can be an arduous process – and so it should be. It is worth taking the time to screen candidates properly, because there’s nothing quite as debilitating as realising the business has hired the wrong person but has no grounds on which to let them go. With a thorough vetting, a hiring decision can be made knowing that a mindset of questioning, analytical thinking and critical exploration has been applied throughout the recruitment process.

“The fact is that the most important asset in a business (its employees) is also its single biggest threat,” concludes Condon. “Companies must make use of professional employee background screening services when recruiting; those which have access to reliable data and global sources. In doing so, they are effectively taking the risk out of hiring.”

 

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August 20, 2018
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Permission from applicants to carry out background checks now required in California

The state Supreme Court ruled that California employers, lenders and landlords must inform applicants before looking into their background.  This was due to In the case involving over 1,000 bus drivers who filed a lawsuit against First Student, Inc., claiming that the company violated the state background check law. 

Two privacy laws must now be obeyed, one requiring prior notice, the other covering more consumer-oriented information:

  • The Investigative Consumer Reporting Agencies Act (ICRAA) covers background checks in which information on a consumer’s “character, general reputation, personal characteristics, or mode of living” is obtained through any means. Among other things, ICRAA requires the person procuring the report to certify that they made certain required disclosures, and that the consumer gave written authorization for the report’s procurement.
 
  • The Consumer Credit Reporting Agencies Act (CCRAA), on the other hand, covers information “bearing on a consumer’s credit worthiness, credit standing, or credit capacity,” and does not have a written authorization requirement.

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