How do I politely decline providing a reference/recommendation?
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I worked in a large team for several years and over time managed several people. Some have since written and requested recommendations for their LinkedIn profiles.
I promptly wrote recommendations for those I thought deserved them and ignored the others. However not responding at all seems unprofessional.
How does one politely decline personal requests for references/recommendation?
professionalism references linkedin recommendation-letter
add a comment |Â
up vote
24
down vote
favorite
I worked in a large team for several years and over time managed several people. Some have since written and requested recommendations for their LinkedIn profiles.
I promptly wrote recommendations for those I thought deserved them and ignored the others. However not responding at all seems unprofessional.
How does one politely decline personal requests for references/recommendation?
professionalism references linkedin recommendation-letter
If you are a manager at a company then the old standby is "It is against company policy that managers provide references or recommendations for former employees."
– Dunk
Mar 5 '14 at 18:42
This is not true in any of the companies I've worked at. Also, while I want to decline the request, I'd rather not make up a reason - rather I was asking for a polite and professional way of declining the request
– Vivek Kodira
Mar 15 '14 at 6:52
:If you are in the USA then I would be shocked that you haven't run into this. Every company I've worked for has this policy because the company can be sued for managers saying even slightly negative things about a previous employee.
– Dunk
Mar 17 '14 at 22:19
Ah! OK. No, am not in the USA. There are no laws in my country that could be used to sue the company or the individual for a negative recommendation.
– Vivek Kodira
Apr 2 '14 at 4:10
add a comment |Â
up vote
24
down vote
favorite
up vote
24
down vote
favorite
I worked in a large team for several years and over time managed several people. Some have since written and requested recommendations for their LinkedIn profiles.
I promptly wrote recommendations for those I thought deserved them and ignored the others. However not responding at all seems unprofessional.
How does one politely decline personal requests for references/recommendation?
professionalism references linkedin recommendation-letter
I worked in a large team for several years and over time managed several people. Some have since written and requested recommendations for their LinkedIn profiles.
I promptly wrote recommendations for those I thought deserved them and ignored the others. However not responding at all seems unprofessional.
How does one politely decline personal requests for references/recommendation?
professionalism references linkedin recommendation-letter
edited Feb 28 '14 at 13:14


Elysian Fields♦
96.9k46292449
96.9k46292449
asked Feb 28 '14 at 8:42
Vivek Kodira
223126
223126
If you are a manager at a company then the old standby is "It is against company policy that managers provide references or recommendations for former employees."
– Dunk
Mar 5 '14 at 18:42
This is not true in any of the companies I've worked at. Also, while I want to decline the request, I'd rather not make up a reason - rather I was asking for a polite and professional way of declining the request
– Vivek Kodira
Mar 15 '14 at 6:52
:If you are in the USA then I would be shocked that you haven't run into this. Every company I've worked for has this policy because the company can be sued for managers saying even slightly negative things about a previous employee.
– Dunk
Mar 17 '14 at 22:19
Ah! OK. No, am not in the USA. There are no laws in my country that could be used to sue the company or the individual for a negative recommendation.
– Vivek Kodira
Apr 2 '14 at 4:10
add a comment |Â
If you are a manager at a company then the old standby is "It is against company policy that managers provide references or recommendations for former employees."
– Dunk
Mar 5 '14 at 18:42
This is not true in any of the companies I've worked at. Also, while I want to decline the request, I'd rather not make up a reason - rather I was asking for a polite and professional way of declining the request
– Vivek Kodira
Mar 15 '14 at 6:52
:If you are in the USA then I would be shocked that you haven't run into this. Every company I've worked for has this policy because the company can be sued for managers saying even slightly negative things about a previous employee.
– Dunk
Mar 17 '14 at 22:19
Ah! OK. No, am not in the USA. There are no laws in my country that could be used to sue the company or the individual for a negative recommendation.
– Vivek Kodira
Apr 2 '14 at 4:10
If you are a manager at a company then the old standby is "It is against company policy that managers provide references or recommendations for former employees."
– Dunk
Mar 5 '14 at 18:42
If you are a manager at a company then the old standby is "It is against company policy that managers provide references or recommendations for former employees."
– Dunk
Mar 5 '14 at 18:42
This is not true in any of the companies I've worked at. Also, while I want to decline the request, I'd rather not make up a reason - rather I was asking for a polite and professional way of declining the request
– Vivek Kodira
Mar 15 '14 at 6:52
This is not true in any of the companies I've worked at. Also, while I want to decline the request, I'd rather not make up a reason - rather I was asking for a polite and professional way of declining the request
– Vivek Kodira
Mar 15 '14 at 6:52
:If you are in the USA then I would be shocked that you haven't run into this. Every company I've worked for has this policy because the company can be sued for managers saying even slightly negative things about a previous employee.
– Dunk
Mar 17 '14 at 22:19
:If you are in the USA then I would be shocked that you haven't run into this. Every company I've worked for has this policy because the company can be sued for managers saying even slightly negative things about a previous employee.
– Dunk
Mar 17 '14 at 22:19
Ah! OK. No, am not in the USA. There are no laws in my country that could be used to sue the company or the individual for a negative recommendation.
– Vivek Kodira
Apr 2 '14 at 4:10
Ah! OK. No, am not in the USA. There are no laws in my country that could be used to sue the company or the individual for a negative recommendation.
– Vivek Kodira
Apr 2 '14 at 4:10
add a comment |Â
5 Answers
5
active
oldest
votes
up vote
26
down vote
accepted
If the person who is requesting for recommendation has not collaborated with you , but still requesting for a recommendation. You could say that you do not know him/her well and would not be the best person to recommend him/her.
On the other case, if the requester has worked with you and you feel that you cannot give him/her a positive recommendation, you could say that you would not be the best person to write the recommendation.
add a comment |Â
up vote
11
down vote
How does one politely decline personal requests for references/recommendation?
Generally, you will get two types of requests. Personalized requests with a specific message saying "hey Vivek! Could you write a recommendation for me please?" or something more involved, or generic ones through LinkedIn that you can do..
Generic requests. You may get blind requests with no personalized question or request. This is more common for LinkedIn than other recommendations. This question contains good examples of how to not ask like this. In these cases, I would simply ignore the request if you don't feel it would be appropriate. Similar to how you may ignore a friend request from someone you don't know. If someone doesn't bother to make the request personalized you shouldn't feel any obligation to even respond.
Personalized requests. In some cases you may get a more specific request where you feel more obligation to respond (but don't want to write a request). If the reasons are:
I don't remember enough to write one, even though I would if I did - Just ask "Hey I'd love to write one, could you refresh my memory with some of the stuff we worked on together?" and you could get better context for this.
I'm not comfortable publicly recommending you for various reasons. - You can simply say something along the lines of, "Hey, I noticed you requested a recommendation. I don't think I'm the best person to write this. I didn't want to just ignore your request without letting you know, best of luck!" You don't have to give the reason, whether it's because "you sucked" or "I'm too busy." This will satisfy most people, if someone presses you for "why" you can still respond, "I really don't think I'm the best person, sorry!"
add a comment |Â
up vote
3
down vote
You are never obligated to provide a reference. You are never obligated to provide a reason for not doing so. "I'm just not comfortable in that role" is as valid as anything else if you feel compelled to do so.
If they only contacted you via LinkedIn, rather than asking you personally before volunteering you for the role, ignoring them is entirely legitimate. They deserve no more effort than they invested.
You are under UK law, and can be sued in the same way as when you provide a false bad reference, if someone can take you not giving an reference as meaning the person has done something wronge.
– Ian
Mar 5 '14 at 16:45
add a comment |Â
up vote
1
down vote
The best response I've ever heard is, "I will write you an objective recommendation." If they agree to that, make the recommendation. Those that think you will have to say something negative, will probably decline.
If you have any concerns about how to approach it, you should say something. Maybe someone is applying for a management position, but you don't feel they ever asserted themselves or were ever in charge of any projects. You may have a concern that you either can't form an opinion or your "gut feeling" just doesn't think they can do it.
add a comment |Â
up vote
-1
down vote
I have a reputation for being strict and holding friends to higher standards. When someone asks me for a recommendation, I bring this up, remind them that recommendations will involve people calling me to ask about them, and that I won't pull any punches. Usually they decide that my reference could work against them. Those who are fine with it often deserve a strong recommendation.
If someone asks for a reference, tell them you're not going to pull any punches when the person asking for a recommendation calls you. You're politely discouraging them without directly declining.
1
as far as I can tell, this does not even attempt to answer the question asked
– gnat
Feb 28 '14 at 18:42
How does it not answer the question? tldr version: If someone asks for a reference, tell them you're not going to pull any punches when the person asking for a recommendation calls you. You're politely discouraging them without directly declining.
– Muz
Mar 1 '14 at 9:39
2
@Muz - It doesn't answer the question because you're just telling us what you do. But what should the asker do, and most importantly, why should the asker do that? Hint: Editing in everything after "tldr version" in your last comment is a good start, but you might also include any positives and potential negatives of taking this stance. Tell us why is this the right answer? For more guidance, see Good Subjective, Bad Subjective. Hope this helps.
– jmort253♦
Mar 1 '14 at 19:07
3
I edited this to get the ball rolling. Although it's negatively scored, it does answer the question. I think some more editing would help improve the score though, if interested. Good luck and hope this helps.
– jmort253♦
Mar 5 '14 at 5:42
add a comment |Â
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5 Answers
5
active
oldest
votes
5 Answers
5
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
up vote
26
down vote
accepted
If the person who is requesting for recommendation has not collaborated with you , but still requesting for a recommendation. You could say that you do not know him/her well and would not be the best person to recommend him/her.
On the other case, if the requester has worked with you and you feel that you cannot give him/her a positive recommendation, you could say that you would not be the best person to write the recommendation.
add a comment |Â
up vote
26
down vote
accepted
If the person who is requesting for recommendation has not collaborated with you , but still requesting for a recommendation. You could say that you do not know him/her well and would not be the best person to recommend him/her.
On the other case, if the requester has worked with you and you feel that you cannot give him/her a positive recommendation, you could say that you would not be the best person to write the recommendation.
add a comment |Â
up vote
26
down vote
accepted
up vote
26
down vote
accepted
If the person who is requesting for recommendation has not collaborated with you , but still requesting for a recommendation. You could say that you do not know him/her well and would not be the best person to recommend him/her.
On the other case, if the requester has worked with you and you feel that you cannot give him/her a positive recommendation, you could say that you would not be the best person to write the recommendation.
If the person who is requesting for recommendation has not collaborated with you , but still requesting for a recommendation. You could say that you do not know him/her well and would not be the best person to recommend him/her.
On the other case, if the requester has worked with you and you feel that you cannot give him/her a positive recommendation, you could say that you would not be the best person to write the recommendation.
edited Mar 1 '14 at 1:18
Jonathan Van Matre
25715
25715
answered Feb 28 '14 at 9:42
watercooler
2,34911022
2,34911022
add a comment |Â
add a comment |Â
up vote
11
down vote
How does one politely decline personal requests for references/recommendation?
Generally, you will get two types of requests. Personalized requests with a specific message saying "hey Vivek! Could you write a recommendation for me please?" or something more involved, or generic ones through LinkedIn that you can do..
Generic requests. You may get blind requests with no personalized question or request. This is more common for LinkedIn than other recommendations. This question contains good examples of how to not ask like this. In these cases, I would simply ignore the request if you don't feel it would be appropriate. Similar to how you may ignore a friend request from someone you don't know. If someone doesn't bother to make the request personalized you shouldn't feel any obligation to even respond.
Personalized requests. In some cases you may get a more specific request where you feel more obligation to respond (but don't want to write a request). If the reasons are:
I don't remember enough to write one, even though I would if I did - Just ask "Hey I'd love to write one, could you refresh my memory with some of the stuff we worked on together?" and you could get better context for this.
I'm not comfortable publicly recommending you for various reasons. - You can simply say something along the lines of, "Hey, I noticed you requested a recommendation. I don't think I'm the best person to write this. I didn't want to just ignore your request without letting you know, best of luck!" You don't have to give the reason, whether it's because "you sucked" or "I'm too busy." This will satisfy most people, if someone presses you for "why" you can still respond, "I really don't think I'm the best person, sorry!"
add a comment |Â
up vote
11
down vote
How does one politely decline personal requests for references/recommendation?
Generally, you will get two types of requests. Personalized requests with a specific message saying "hey Vivek! Could you write a recommendation for me please?" or something more involved, or generic ones through LinkedIn that you can do..
Generic requests. You may get blind requests with no personalized question or request. This is more common for LinkedIn than other recommendations. This question contains good examples of how to not ask like this. In these cases, I would simply ignore the request if you don't feel it would be appropriate. Similar to how you may ignore a friend request from someone you don't know. If someone doesn't bother to make the request personalized you shouldn't feel any obligation to even respond.
Personalized requests. In some cases you may get a more specific request where you feel more obligation to respond (but don't want to write a request). If the reasons are:
I don't remember enough to write one, even though I would if I did - Just ask "Hey I'd love to write one, could you refresh my memory with some of the stuff we worked on together?" and you could get better context for this.
I'm not comfortable publicly recommending you for various reasons. - You can simply say something along the lines of, "Hey, I noticed you requested a recommendation. I don't think I'm the best person to write this. I didn't want to just ignore your request without letting you know, best of luck!" You don't have to give the reason, whether it's because "you sucked" or "I'm too busy." This will satisfy most people, if someone presses you for "why" you can still respond, "I really don't think I'm the best person, sorry!"
add a comment |Â
up vote
11
down vote
up vote
11
down vote
How does one politely decline personal requests for references/recommendation?
Generally, you will get two types of requests. Personalized requests with a specific message saying "hey Vivek! Could you write a recommendation for me please?" or something more involved, or generic ones through LinkedIn that you can do..
Generic requests. You may get blind requests with no personalized question or request. This is more common for LinkedIn than other recommendations. This question contains good examples of how to not ask like this. In these cases, I would simply ignore the request if you don't feel it would be appropriate. Similar to how you may ignore a friend request from someone you don't know. If someone doesn't bother to make the request personalized you shouldn't feel any obligation to even respond.
Personalized requests. In some cases you may get a more specific request where you feel more obligation to respond (but don't want to write a request). If the reasons are:
I don't remember enough to write one, even though I would if I did - Just ask "Hey I'd love to write one, could you refresh my memory with some of the stuff we worked on together?" and you could get better context for this.
I'm not comfortable publicly recommending you for various reasons. - You can simply say something along the lines of, "Hey, I noticed you requested a recommendation. I don't think I'm the best person to write this. I didn't want to just ignore your request without letting you know, best of luck!" You don't have to give the reason, whether it's because "you sucked" or "I'm too busy." This will satisfy most people, if someone presses you for "why" you can still respond, "I really don't think I'm the best person, sorry!"
How does one politely decline personal requests for references/recommendation?
Generally, you will get two types of requests. Personalized requests with a specific message saying "hey Vivek! Could you write a recommendation for me please?" or something more involved, or generic ones through LinkedIn that you can do..
Generic requests. You may get blind requests with no personalized question or request. This is more common for LinkedIn than other recommendations. This question contains good examples of how to not ask like this. In these cases, I would simply ignore the request if you don't feel it would be appropriate. Similar to how you may ignore a friend request from someone you don't know. If someone doesn't bother to make the request personalized you shouldn't feel any obligation to even respond.
Personalized requests. In some cases you may get a more specific request where you feel more obligation to respond (but don't want to write a request). If the reasons are:
I don't remember enough to write one, even though I would if I did - Just ask "Hey I'd love to write one, could you refresh my memory with some of the stuff we worked on together?" and you could get better context for this.
I'm not comfortable publicly recommending you for various reasons. - You can simply say something along the lines of, "Hey, I noticed you requested a recommendation. I don't think I'm the best person to write this. I didn't want to just ignore your request without letting you know, best of luck!" You don't have to give the reason, whether it's because "you sucked" or "I'm too busy." This will satisfy most people, if someone presses you for "why" you can still respond, "I really don't think I'm the best person, sorry!"
edited Apr 13 '17 at 12:48
Community♦
1
1
answered Feb 28 '14 at 13:29


Elysian Fields♦
96.9k46292449
96.9k46292449
add a comment |Â
add a comment |Â
up vote
3
down vote
You are never obligated to provide a reference. You are never obligated to provide a reason for not doing so. "I'm just not comfortable in that role" is as valid as anything else if you feel compelled to do so.
If they only contacted you via LinkedIn, rather than asking you personally before volunteering you for the role, ignoring them is entirely legitimate. They deserve no more effort than they invested.
You are under UK law, and can be sued in the same way as when you provide a false bad reference, if someone can take you not giving an reference as meaning the person has done something wronge.
– Ian
Mar 5 '14 at 16:45
add a comment |Â
up vote
3
down vote
You are never obligated to provide a reference. You are never obligated to provide a reason for not doing so. "I'm just not comfortable in that role" is as valid as anything else if you feel compelled to do so.
If they only contacted you via LinkedIn, rather than asking you personally before volunteering you for the role, ignoring them is entirely legitimate. They deserve no more effort than they invested.
You are under UK law, and can be sued in the same way as when you provide a false bad reference, if someone can take you not giving an reference as meaning the person has done something wronge.
– Ian
Mar 5 '14 at 16:45
add a comment |Â
up vote
3
down vote
up vote
3
down vote
You are never obligated to provide a reference. You are never obligated to provide a reason for not doing so. "I'm just not comfortable in that role" is as valid as anything else if you feel compelled to do so.
If they only contacted you via LinkedIn, rather than asking you personally before volunteering you for the role, ignoring them is entirely legitimate. They deserve no more effort than they invested.
You are never obligated to provide a reference. You are never obligated to provide a reason for not doing so. "I'm just not comfortable in that role" is as valid as anything else if you feel compelled to do so.
If they only contacted you via LinkedIn, rather than asking you personally before volunteering you for the role, ignoring them is entirely legitimate. They deserve no more effort than they invested.
answered Feb 28 '14 at 18:17
keshlam
41.5k1267144
41.5k1267144
You are under UK law, and can be sued in the same way as when you provide a false bad reference, if someone can take you not giving an reference as meaning the person has done something wronge.
– Ian
Mar 5 '14 at 16:45
add a comment |Â
You are under UK law, and can be sued in the same way as when you provide a false bad reference, if someone can take you not giving an reference as meaning the person has done something wronge.
– Ian
Mar 5 '14 at 16:45
You are under UK law, and can be sued in the same way as when you provide a false bad reference, if someone can take you not giving an reference as meaning the person has done something wronge.
– Ian
Mar 5 '14 at 16:45
You are under UK law, and can be sued in the same way as when you provide a false bad reference, if someone can take you not giving an reference as meaning the person has done something wronge.
– Ian
Mar 5 '14 at 16:45
add a comment |Â
up vote
1
down vote
The best response I've ever heard is, "I will write you an objective recommendation." If they agree to that, make the recommendation. Those that think you will have to say something negative, will probably decline.
If you have any concerns about how to approach it, you should say something. Maybe someone is applying for a management position, but you don't feel they ever asserted themselves or were ever in charge of any projects. You may have a concern that you either can't form an opinion or your "gut feeling" just doesn't think they can do it.
add a comment |Â
up vote
1
down vote
The best response I've ever heard is, "I will write you an objective recommendation." If they agree to that, make the recommendation. Those that think you will have to say something negative, will probably decline.
If you have any concerns about how to approach it, you should say something. Maybe someone is applying for a management position, but you don't feel they ever asserted themselves or were ever in charge of any projects. You may have a concern that you either can't form an opinion or your "gut feeling" just doesn't think they can do it.
add a comment |Â
up vote
1
down vote
up vote
1
down vote
The best response I've ever heard is, "I will write you an objective recommendation." If they agree to that, make the recommendation. Those that think you will have to say something negative, will probably decline.
If you have any concerns about how to approach it, you should say something. Maybe someone is applying for a management position, but you don't feel they ever asserted themselves or were ever in charge of any projects. You may have a concern that you either can't form an opinion or your "gut feeling" just doesn't think they can do it.
The best response I've ever heard is, "I will write you an objective recommendation." If they agree to that, make the recommendation. Those that think you will have to say something negative, will probably decline.
If you have any concerns about how to approach it, you should say something. Maybe someone is applying for a management position, but you don't feel they ever asserted themselves or were ever in charge of any projects. You may have a concern that you either can't form an opinion or your "gut feeling" just doesn't think they can do it.
answered Feb 28 '14 at 19:23
user8365
add a comment |Â
add a comment |Â
up vote
-1
down vote
I have a reputation for being strict and holding friends to higher standards. When someone asks me for a recommendation, I bring this up, remind them that recommendations will involve people calling me to ask about them, and that I won't pull any punches. Usually they decide that my reference could work against them. Those who are fine with it often deserve a strong recommendation.
If someone asks for a reference, tell them you're not going to pull any punches when the person asking for a recommendation calls you. You're politely discouraging them without directly declining.
1
as far as I can tell, this does not even attempt to answer the question asked
– gnat
Feb 28 '14 at 18:42
How does it not answer the question? tldr version: If someone asks for a reference, tell them you're not going to pull any punches when the person asking for a recommendation calls you. You're politely discouraging them without directly declining.
– Muz
Mar 1 '14 at 9:39
2
@Muz - It doesn't answer the question because you're just telling us what you do. But what should the asker do, and most importantly, why should the asker do that? Hint: Editing in everything after "tldr version" in your last comment is a good start, but you might also include any positives and potential negatives of taking this stance. Tell us why is this the right answer? For more guidance, see Good Subjective, Bad Subjective. Hope this helps.
– jmort253♦
Mar 1 '14 at 19:07
3
I edited this to get the ball rolling. Although it's negatively scored, it does answer the question. I think some more editing would help improve the score though, if interested. Good luck and hope this helps.
– jmort253♦
Mar 5 '14 at 5:42
add a comment |Â
up vote
-1
down vote
I have a reputation for being strict and holding friends to higher standards. When someone asks me for a recommendation, I bring this up, remind them that recommendations will involve people calling me to ask about them, and that I won't pull any punches. Usually they decide that my reference could work against them. Those who are fine with it often deserve a strong recommendation.
If someone asks for a reference, tell them you're not going to pull any punches when the person asking for a recommendation calls you. You're politely discouraging them without directly declining.
1
as far as I can tell, this does not even attempt to answer the question asked
– gnat
Feb 28 '14 at 18:42
How does it not answer the question? tldr version: If someone asks for a reference, tell them you're not going to pull any punches when the person asking for a recommendation calls you. You're politely discouraging them without directly declining.
– Muz
Mar 1 '14 at 9:39
2
@Muz - It doesn't answer the question because you're just telling us what you do. But what should the asker do, and most importantly, why should the asker do that? Hint: Editing in everything after "tldr version" in your last comment is a good start, but you might also include any positives and potential negatives of taking this stance. Tell us why is this the right answer? For more guidance, see Good Subjective, Bad Subjective. Hope this helps.
– jmort253♦
Mar 1 '14 at 19:07
3
I edited this to get the ball rolling. Although it's negatively scored, it does answer the question. I think some more editing would help improve the score though, if interested. Good luck and hope this helps.
– jmort253♦
Mar 5 '14 at 5:42
add a comment |Â
up vote
-1
down vote
up vote
-1
down vote
I have a reputation for being strict and holding friends to higher standards. When someone asks me for a recommendation, I bring this up, remind them that recommendations will involve people calling me to ask about them, and that I won't pull any punches. Usually they decide that my reference could work against them. Those who are fine with it often deserve a strong recommendation.
If someone asks for a reference, tell them you're not going to pull any punches when the person asking for a recommendation calls you. You're politely discouraging them without directly declining.
I have a reputation for being strict and holding friends to higher standards. When someone asks me for a recommendation, I bring this up, remind them that recommendations will involve people calling me to ask about them, and that I won't pull any punches. Usually they decide that my reference could work against them. Those who are fine with it often deserve a strong recommendation.
If someone asks for a reference, tell them you're not going to pull any punches when the person asking for a recommendation calls you. You're politely discouraging them without directly declining.
edited Mar 5 '14 at 5:39
jmort253♦
10.4k54376
10.4k54376
answered Feb 28 '14 at 18:09
Muz
752312
752312
1
as far as I can tell, this does not even attempt to answer the question asked
– gnat
Feb 28 '14 at 18:42
How does it not answer the question? tldr version: If someone asks for a reference, tell them you're not going to pull any punches when the person asking for a recommendation calls you. You're politely discouraging them without directly declining.
– Muz
Mar 1 '14 at 9:39
2
@Muz - It doesn't answer the question because you're just telling us what you do. But what should the asker do, and most importantly, why should the asker do that? Hint: Editing in everything after "tldr version" in your last comment is a good start, but you might also include any positives and potential negatives of taking this stance. Tell us why is this the right answer? For more guidance, see Good Subjective, Bad Subjective. Hope this helps.
– jmort253♦
Mar 1 '14 at 19:07
3
I edited this to get the ball rolling. Although it's negatively scored, it does answer the question. I think some more editing would help improve the score though, if interested. Good luck and hope this helps.
– jmort253♦
Mar 5 '14 at 5:42
add a comment |Â
1
as far as I can tell, this does not even attempt to answer the question asked
– gnat
Feb 28 '14 at 18:42
How does it not answer the question? tldr version: If someone asks for a reference, tell them you're not going to pull any punches when the person asking for a recommendation calls you. You're politely discouraging them without directly declining.
– Muz
Mar 1 '14 at 9:39
2
@Muz - It doesn't answer the question because you're just telling us what you do. But what should the asker do, and most importantly, why should the asker do that? Hint: Editing in everything after "tldr version" in your last comment is a good start, but you might also include any positives and potential negatives of taking this stance. Tell us why is this the right answer? For more guidance, see Good Subjective, Bad Subjective. Hope this helps.
– jmort253♦
Mar 1 '14 at 19:07
3
I edited this to get the ball rolling. Although it's negatively scored, it does answer the question. I think some more editing would help improve the score though, if interested. Good luck and hope this helps.
– jmort253♦
Mar 5 '14 at 5:42
1
1
as far as I can tell, this does not even attempt to answer the question asked
– gnat
Feb 28 '14 at 18:42
as far as I can tell, this does not even attempt to answer the question asked
– gnat
Feb 28 '14 at 18:42
How does it not answer the question? tldr version: If someone asks for a reference, tell them you're not going to pull any punches when the person asking for a recommendation calls you. You're politely discouraging them without directly declining.
– Muz
Mar 1 '14 at 9:39
How does it not answer the question? tldr version: If someone asks for a reference, tell them you're not going to pull any punches when the person asking for a recommendation calls you. You're politely discouraging them without directly declining.
– Muz
Mar 1 '14 at 9:39
2
2
@Muz - It doesn't answer the question because you're just telling us what you do. But what should the asker do, and most importantly, why should the asker do that? Hint: Editing in everything after "tldr version" in your last comment is a good start, but you might also include any positives and potential negatives of taking this stance. Tell us why is this the right answer? For more guidance, see Good Subjective, Bad Subjective. Hope this helps.
– jmort253♦
Mar 1 '14 at 19:07
@Muz - It doesn't answer the question because you're just telling us what you do. But what should the asker do, and most importantly, why should the asker do that? Hint: Editing in everything after "tldr version" in your last comment is a good start, but you might also include any positives and potential negatives of taking this stance. Tell us why is this the right answer? For more guidance, see Good Subjective, Bad Subjective. Hope this helps.
– jmort253♦
Mar 1 '14 at 19:07
3
3
I edited this to get the ball rolling. Although it's negatively scored, it does answer the question. I think some more editing would help improve the score though, if interested. Good luck and hope this helps.
– jmort253♦
Mar 5 '14 at 5:42
I edited this to get the ball rolling. Although it's negatively scored, it does answer the question. I think some more editing would help improve the score though, if interested. Good luck and hope this helps.
– jmort253♦
Mar 5 '14 at 5:42
add a comment |Â
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If you are a manager at a company then the old standby is "It is against company policy that managers provide references or recommendations for former employees."
– Dunk
Mar 5 '14 at 18:42
This is not true in any of the companies I've worked at. Also, while I want to decline the request, I'd rather not make up a reason - rather I was asking for a polite and professional way of declining the request
– Vivek Kodira
Mar 15 '14 at 6:52
:If you are in the USA then I would be shocked that you haven't run into this. Every company I've worked for has this policy because the company can be sued for managers saying even slightly negative things about a previous employee.
– Dunk
Mar 17 '14 at 22:19
Ah! OK. No, am not in the USA. There are no laws in my country that could be used to sue the company or the individual for a negative recommendation.
– Vivek Kodira
Apr 2 '14 at 4:10