For long, Indians have indulged
in extrapolating their skills and hiding shortcomings while preparing their
resumes. Despite changes in HR practices, the trend continues.
A survey done by recruitment
consultancy First Advantage showed that the rate of faking has increased to
9.9% in 2012 from 8.1% in 2011, with Mumbai, Bangalore and Chennai leading the
pack. Chennai registered 7.57% discrepancies between October and December 2012,
which means 76 of every 1,000 resumes had a bogus element in it.
"People create fake
resumes when they don't get jobs on campus. The skill levels are low and people
don't get good jobs immediately after graduation. When students lose time, they
aren't seen as freshers by companies and hence they cook up 'work
experience'," said Madhumurthy Ronanki, president, TalentSprint, a skill
development firm.
While it isn't
industry-specific, fake resumes are more common in the IT industry. With many
fake resumes floating about, companies take everything with a pinch of salt and
have tweaked their HR practices. "Companies em ploy private detectives for
verifica tion before recruiting middle-level and senior people who have been
part-time employees of another company," said an HR official of a software
consultancy firm in Chennai. "Some companies have
outsourced background screening to (external) agencies, which verify
information such as previous employers and institutions where candidates have
studied," said Chithranath Vadakkeppat, a senior human resource manager.
The bug doesn't bite private
firms alone. "At least a dozen civil servants have been caught in similar
crimes in last two years. They manipulate or forge documents proving age,
caste, religion, qualification and even achievements," said a senior official
with the state employment exchange.
"Most cases go unchecked
or are ignored due to lack of provisions to verify facts," he said. Tamil
Nadu has a separate government body, Professional and Executive Employment
Office, to speed up recruitment processes.
Initiatives to curb faking
resumes, like Nasscom's National Skill Registry, which has a database of all
skilled talent and employable people for IT companies, haven't had an effect
yet, Ronanki said. "About 20% of employees are fired within three months
of joining the company when verification results show up discrepancies,"
he said.
Deep checks are really
important to ensure good hiring in an organization or else what is ultimately hampered is the productivity of the business. So next time when you hire an employee,
make sure his resume speaks complete truth.
Source:TOI
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