List a multi-partner project in a resume if you worked with the smaller, unrecognizeable company?

Interviews General Queries 2 years ago

0 2 0 0 0 tuteeHUB earn credit +10 pts

5 Star Rating 1 Rating

Posted on 16 Aug 2022, this text provides information on General Queries related to Interviews. Please note that while accuracy is prioritized, the data presented might not be entirely correct or up-to-date. This information is offered for general knowledge and informational purposes only, and should not be considered as a substitute for professional advice.

Take Quiz To Earn Credits!

Turn Your Knowledge into Earnings.

tuteehub_quiz

Answers (2)

Post Answer
profilepic.png
manpreet Tuteehub forum best answer Best Answer 2 years ago

 

 

I've got a scenario where Applicant A has listed "United Nations" as their employer on the resume. The truth is, the UN was actually involved in the project, and subcontracted or were partnered with another, much smaller, unrecognizable company, which is the company this person worked for directly. This person did interact with UN staff.

I've seen this same practice with consultants and subcontractors before - a small university project or funded partner (let's say a media lab) contracts someone for some work, and then they list the university as the client. Or, they were employees of the university, and later as consultants state they were a client. Or, the university and the united nations partnered, and the consultants lists both as past clients, even though they were employees at the time. Hopefully with this example you catch my point - there are number of combinations that might lead one to act or state an affiliation.

I see variations of this frequently when I check references, and I'm never totally sure what to think. I can see a few different ways it could be considered dishonest or legitimate.

As companies do more and more subcontracting, does anyone have an idea of hwo to handle this?

Is it appropriate for the prospective employee or the consultant to be doing this?

Should it always be whoever paid the cheque? Are there any rules or laws surrounding this? If you are in HR, is there a best practice?

profilepic.png
manpreet 2 years ago

 

Many questions you are asking, but what I can say is that it depends.

Is it appropriate for the employee or the consultant to be doing this? Is this lying?

There is nothing wrong in boosting your application profile by carefully writing it and good word choice, as long as you are not actually lying or making things up.

You could be hired by small Inc., and they are the ones writing your paycheck, but if you did projects with Big Inc. then writing on your application "Implemented several projects with Big Inc." is actually true; it's just written in a more favorable way.

However, you are saying here that "Applicant A listed "United Nations" as their employer" when actually they were employed by other, smaller entity. If that applicant actually wrote it this way (by saying employer) then that is indeed not true, and unprofessional thing to do (as it is deceptive).

Another story would be if Applicant A wrote instead: "Developed and implemented big project with UN...", case were it would not be lying, but just a creative way of writing your resume.

So, give this a consideration and then decide if you still wish to consider for recruiting; probably he was trying hard (too hard) to make his profile look interesting, but that is something you have to think in order to make a choice


0 views   0 shares

No matter what stage you're at in your education or career, TuteeHub will help you reach the next level that you're aiming for. Simply,Choose a subject/topic and get started in self-paced practice sessions to improve your knowledge and scores.

tuteehub community

Join Our Community Today

Ready to take your education and career to the next level? Register today and join our growing community of learners and professionals.

tuteehub community