TEXT D As college seniors hurtle
into the job hunt, little fibs on the resume--for example, claiming s degree
when they’re three credits shy of graduation--seem harmless enough. So new grads
ought to read this memo now: those 20-year-old falsehoods on cream-colored,
32-1b. premium paper have poleaxed so many high-profile executives that you
wonder who in the business world hasn’t got the message. A resume listing two
fictitious degrees led to the resignation of David Edmondson, CEO of RadioShack.
Untruthful curricula vitae have also hobbled the careers of executives at Bausch
& Lomb, Veritas Software and the U. S. Olympic Committee.
The headlines haven’t dented job seekers desire to dissemble even as
employers have grown increasingly able to detect deception. InfoLink Screening
Services, a background-checking company, estimates that 14% of job applicants in
the U.S. lie about their education on their resumes. (A common boast by guys:
that they played on the college football team. ) ResumeDoctor, com, a
resume-writing business, found that of 1,000 resumes it vetted over six months,
43% contained one or more "significant inaccuracies." Leery of
executive Pinocchios lurking in their boardrooms, employers are stepping up
efforts to spot them and weed them out. In the field of industrial and
organizational psychology, figuring out why and how job applicants lie is a hot
research topic, and new studies are warning companies about the dangers of
employing a liar. As a result, 96% of businesses now conduct some Sort of
background check on job applicants, according to the Society for Human Resource
Management (S. H. R, M. ), a trade group. Meanwhile, the ranks of third-party
screeners have exploded in the past 10 years into a $ 2 billion
industry. Psychologists call lying a form of impression
management--an extension of the common human impulse to look better in someone
else’s eyes. "It’s a way to resolve the discrepancy between the average
applicant you think you are and the ideal applicant you think they seek," says
Roland Kidwell, associate professor at the University of Wyoming’s College of
Business, who has researched resume padding. Lies about education are perhaps
prevalent because only 35% of employers say they "always" verify degrees
conferred, says S. H. R. M.. Employees who lie to get in the
door can wreak untold havoc on a business, experts say, from tarnishing the
reputation and credibility of a firm to upending co-workers and projects to
igniting shareholder wrath and that’s if the lie is found out. Even when it
isn’t, the falsified resume can indicate a deeply rooted inclination toward
unethical behavior. "There’s a lot of evidence that those who
cheat on job applications also cheat in School and in life," says Richard
Griffith, director of the industrial and organizational psychology program at
the Florida Institute of Technology and author of a forthcoming book on
job-applicant faking. "If someone says they have a degree and they don’t, I’d
have little faith that person would tell the truth when it came to financial
statements and so on." Employers’ fears have sparked a boom in
the background-screening industry. About 700 firms exist now, compared to only a
handful 10 years ago. Analysts say revenues for the industry are growing 7% to
10% a year. Though exhaustive checks on CEO-level individuals can cost $10,000
or more, some companies offer basic vetting for as little as $10. Hire Right of
Irvine, Calif. , screens 1 million resumes a year and says business has grown
tenfold over the past five years: employers have grown so watchful, says David
Nachman, the company’s head of marketing and business development, that they now
cheek the resumes of temporary staff and local hires in their offices
overseas. But guarding the henhouse does little good if the fox
is already nestled inside. To unmask the deceivers among them, some employers
are conducting checks upon promotion. Verified Person markets its ability to
provide ongoing employee screening through automated criminal checks. With this
increased vigilance comes a thorny new dilemma: figuring out whether every fib
is really a fireable offense. Many bosses feel that a worker’s track record on
the job speaks more strongly than a stretched resume, says John Challenger of
the outplacement firm Challenger, Gray & Christmas. Rather than booting
talented workers, Challenger suggests, employers should offer an amnesty period.
"A moratorium would let anyone who needs to come clean," he says. And the
culprit could always go back to school and finish that degree-maybe even on
company time. According to the passage, what are third party screeners
A.Those who help detect deceptions. B.Those who help employ workers. C.Those who help glee counseling. D.Those who help write resumes.