The
Background Buzz Insider - Fake References and Resumes
August 11, 2009
Good day,
We thought this information we discovered on ‘fake references
and resumes’ was important enough that you should know about
it immediately so you can make sure that your clients do not hire
people based on information from these sites. I hope you find
this information useful and we welcome your feedback.
Have a fabulous day and enjoy the rest of your summer.
The
Fake Credentials Industry is Feasting During Down Economy
Hank Williams’ song line ‘one man's famine, is another
man's feast’ has proven to be true with the economy in a
down spin diploma mills and websites providing fake credentials
for references to degrees are seeing rapid growth. It is estimated
that there are as many as 3,000 such firms worldwide and more
than 700 of them are in the US.
While diploma mills have been around for years a new development
has been the emergence of firms providing fake experience certificates
and references. This first came to light last year from a report
issued by KPMG India. KPMG report revealed the existence of 150-250
such firms, often masquerading as information technology (IT)
companies. KPMG India's executive director Rohit Mahajan stated,
“There are some kind of setups that issue fraudulent experience
certificates. We have identified almost 150 firms that are fictitious
companies.” Abhay Aggarwal, chief executive of Integrity
Verification Services Pvt. Ltd indicated that “During our
background verification process for clients over the past one
year [2008], we found 250 firms that fake experience letters,
salary slips and relieving letters to candidates.”
Jason Morris, CEO, EmployeeScreeningIQ and Past President, NAPBS
believes this is not a problem that is likely unique to India.
Jason added, “It also is a business that desperation breeds
because ‘people have to work’ so when there is a down
turn or lack of opportunities people get creative in finding ways
to get a job. When people are desperate they will take any means
necessary to support themselves and their family.” Jason
was prophetic with his comments because with the many of the economies
of the world struggling and unemployment souring people are desperate
for jobs and making desperate decisions. He also sees this as
a real risk to the professional background screening industry
because it is very difficult to verify beyond a shadow of doubt
that a company giving a reference is legitimate. because anybody
can form a company on paper and then start giving out references.
Some of the websites we have discovered that focus on offering
fake job references include
alibihq.com, http://www.absolutealibis.com/Fake%20Employment%20Verification.html
and careerexcuse.com (careerhoax.com
and careercheat.com point
to this site). In addition, we discovered a site that writes ‘fake
resumes’ as well - http://www.amazing-cover-letters.com/?hop=derekwj.
We pulled the following testimonial from the site "Now I'm
working in my dream job... for which I had no experience at all..."
We also found this information on the site; “What exactly
is a fake resume? Basically, a fake resume is one in which a specific
alteration of your employment history is made in order to deceive
a human resources person or hiring authority in order to get hired.”
They leave no doubt that the purpose and intent is to deceive.
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W. Barry Nixon, SPHR is the President of PreemploymentDirectory.com
the leading online directory that features background screening
firms and co-author of ‘Background Screening Investigations:
Managing Hiring Risk from HR and Security Perspectives.’
For More Information contact Barry at wbninxon@preemploymentdirectory.com.
This
email was sponsored by BackChecked.
Contact John Kloos at jkloos@backchecked.com
or 480-970-3612 for more information.
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