Lies,
omissions and inaccuracies on CVs are on the increase, but this is good news
for the UK's
pre-employment screening and vetting agencies, as John Charlton finds
out.
"A
month or so ago we vetted a candidate who claimed to have a degree from Bristol
University.
They'd never heard of him and said the degree certificate he sent to us was
forged. It turned out he'd attended the University of the West of England, and
gained enough credits for a degree there, but hadn't applied for one."
Strange,
but just another CV lie uncovered by pre-employment screening agency Zephon, part of the Risk Advisory Group (RAG). Another
vetting specialist, Kroll, recently uncovered a candidate who had a criminal
record as a letter bomber targeting the very industry he applied to work in.
Such
lies, omissions and inaccuracies are rising, which may worry employers but is
good news for the UK's
pre-employment screening and vetting agencies.
"Volumes
in the first six months of 2004 were two-and-a-half times higher than the
average of the previous three years, and we've more than doubled the number of
our researchers," says RAG marketing manager Alan Beazley. "2004 has
been our busiest year since we started in 1999."
This
is borne out by other vetting services companies. Paul Freeman, senior partner
with NDF Associates, says its business - in terms of cases handled - has
"grown by 460 per cent in the first six months of this year compared to
the last six months of last year".
And
Keith Brown, managing director of Suffolk-based Employright,
says vetting is becoming more and more prevalent. Hedley Clark, managing
director of Kroll Background Screening, says the firm is enjoying
"consistent growth".
It's
hardly surprising. Not only have well-publicised security breaches, and cases
such as the Soham murders, raised the pre-employment
vetting issue, but lying on CVs appears to be endemic. An IAG study of CV
inaccuracies, published earlier this year,found 65 per cent of the 3,057
CVs examined contained lies or inaccuracies - a 16 per cent rise on 2002's 56
per cent.
Some
66 per cent of male CVs examined contained discrepancies, compared to 64 per
cent of females. CVs of women aged 31 to 35 were most likely to contain
discrepancies (77 per cent of them).
Vetting
agencies say the commonest inaccuracies are: exaggerations of dates of
employment; job titles; gaps between employment or study; qualifications and undeclared
directorships. Less common omissions are county court judgments and convictions.
"As
soon as I see a date of employment given as, say, 1993-94, I suspect
something's up," says Brown. "That could mean started at the end of
one year and finished at the start of the next. Others to watch out for are
people who say they're managers when they were assistant managers, or claim
they're members of an institute when they're associate members. But in itself,
it doesn't say someone's a liar."
Brown's
company, Employright, charges according to the amount
of work involved in the vetting process. "Prices start at £70 plus VAT.
For that we do a 10-year background search, check CCJs,
directorships held, failed directorships etc. For in-depth references I talk to
previous employers, but don't usually go to HR departments as they only give
bare details." More in-depth checks cost up to £140 plus VAT while it
could cost £1,000 plus VAT to vet an applicant for a very senior post.
Paul
Freeman says NDF's charges depend on what's required:
"We try to keep it under £200." Zephon
charges £100 to £400 depending on the service required.
All
these services require candidates' permission, which must be in writing.
"Sometimes when they're told, they say 'you can stuff your job',"
says Freeman. Employright requires candidates to
complete a form as well as submit their CVs. "I'd say there's a 50 per
cent discrepancy rate there," says Brown.
Some
vetting specialists can run criminal record checks, but they have to be
registered as an umbrella company with the Criminal Records Bureau - NFD, Kroll
and Zephon enjoy this status.
Vetting
specialists insist the fees are reasonable compared to the cost of hiring an
unscreened candidate who turns out to be crooked or a liar. Nick Leeson's actions brought down Barings Bank, yet his CV was
littered with discrepancies. Manchester United suffered a PR disaster when
£125,000-a-year communications director Alison Ryan was hired in 2000. Various
CV discrepancies, including exaggerating her Cambridge
degree, meant she was fired shortly afterwards.
"Business
is growing across the board," says Brown. "I've had an inquiry from a
high street company which wants to outsource all reference-checking from its HR
function. This is something that will continue to grow."
NFD
hopes to win a "big contract" to check people applying for
freight-handling jobs at UK
airports. They must have an unbroken five-year employment record.
Kroll
says one driver is globalisation. "The global nature of screening in
multiple jurisdictions and languages is an increasing trend due to the
globalisation of business," says Hedley Clark.
And
where is this business coming from?
Alan
Beazley says the biggest users are financial services firms "but there is
increasing interest from technology and communications firms", a view
shared by Kroll's Clark who adds that pharmaceutical companies are regular
clients.
Certainly
security scares, and the growing propensity of candidates to lie, omit and
exaggerate, is an ill wind that blows good for the vetters
and screeners.
The nuclear option
If
HR directors are tempted to introduce lie-detection tests, they had better
think twice. US
federal agencies' use of polygraphs is widespread - the US Energy Department
adopted polygraph screening of lab workers in 2000 after a suspected case of
espionage, and random testing is also routine
in the FBI, CIA and the Secret Service - but there is increasing doubt over
their reliability.
A
2002 report by the US National Research Council said the scientific basis for
polygraph testing is "weak" and that research supporting its use
"lacks scientific rigour".
But
technology never sleeps and US
company Nemesys-co has developed spectacles which contain a
microchip to screen responses to set questions and judge if the respondent is
lying. The chip analyses, says the company, incoming voice waveforms from which
it detects various levels of emotional states. Apparently, from this, the wearer
can detect whether the subject needs further questioning.
Links:
www.KrollWorldwide.com
www.ndfassociates.co.uk
www.employright.com
www.zephon.com
www.vworldwide.com