How does Background Verification through NASSCOM work? [closed]

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Recently I got an offer from a multinational corporation and they want me to register in the National Skills Registry (NSR) and I registered. My first company registered in 2011. I worked there from 2010 and I quit in 2012. I am now worried this may be held against me



How is the NSR Verification done? If the verification fails, is there a standard process they follow?







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closed as unclear what you're asking by Draken, Chris E, Rory Alsop, scaaahu, Cronax Jan 26 at 9:56


Please clarify your specific problem or add additional details to highlight exactly what you need. As it's currently written, it’s hard to tell exactly what you're asking. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.










  • 11




    Hey ram and welcome to The Workplace. Most of us do not know what MNC, NSR, or NASCOM is, or what you are actually asking as a result. Could you please edit your question to explain clearly what you are asking? Thanks in advance!
    – jmac
    Feb 6 '14 at 4:15






  • 7




    According to Google, MNC "may refer to Media Nusantara Citra, Indonesian media company and owner of RCTI, MNC TV, Sun TV, and Indovision", NSR is the National Swine Registry and NASCOM is a company that makes magnetic switch gear. I frankly have no idea how an offer from an Indonesian media conglomerate would want you to register with the (American) national swine registry, or what either of those things have to do with magnetic security devices.
    – HopelessN00b
    Feb 6 '14 at 5:59







  • 1




    MNC would likely be Multi-National Corporation though the other acronyms I don't know so it would be useful to explain them and possibly consider links so we could understand the situation here as it isn't clear where in the world is this question coming?
    – JB King
    Feb 6 '14 at 6:47






  • 2




    Possible duplicate of How do background checks verify employment?
    – The Wandering Dev Manager
    Aug 10 '16 at 12:04






  • 1




    He's asking a specific question about NSR which the alleged duplicate doesn't address in the least.
    – Chris E
    Aug 10 '16 at 14:24
















up vote
0
down vote

favorite












Recently I got an offer from a multinational corporation and they want me to register in the National Skills Registry (NSR) and I registered. My first company registered in 2011. I worked there from 2010 and I quit in 2012. I am now worried this may be held against me



How is the NSR Verification done? If the verification fails, is there a standard process they follow?







share|improve this question














closed as unclear what you're asking by Draken, Chris E, Rory Alsop, scaaahu, Cronax Jan 26 at 9:56


Please clarify your specific problem or add additional details to highlight exactly what you need. As it's currently written, it’s hard to tell exactly what you're asking. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.










  • 11




    Hey ram and welcome to The Workplace. Most of us do not know what MNC, NSR, or NASCOM is, or what you are actually asking as a result. Could you please edit your question to explain clearly what you are asking? Thanks in advance!
    – jmac
    Feb 6 '14 at 4:15






  • 7




    According to Google, MNC "may refer to Media Nusantara Citra, Indonesian media company and owner of RCTI, MNC TV, Sun TV, and Indovision", NSR is the National Swine Registry and NASCOM is a company that makes magnetic switch gear. I frankly have no idea how an offer from an Indonesian media conglomerate would want you to register with the (American) national swine registry, or what either of those things have to do with magnetic security devices.
    – HopelessN00b
    Feb 6 '14 at 5:59







  • 1




    MNC would likely be Multi-National Corporation though the other acronyms I don't know so it would be useful to explain them and possibly consider links so we could understand the situation here as it isn't clear where in the world is this question coming?
    – JB King
    Feb 6 '14 at 6:47






  • 2




    Possible duplicate of How do background checks verify employment?
    – The Wandering Dev Manager
    Aug 10 '16 at 12:04






  • 1




    He's asking a specific question about NSR which the alleged duplicate doesn't address in the least.
    – Chris E
    Aug 10 '16 at 14:24












up vote
0
down vote

favorite









up vote
0
down vote

favorite











Recently I got an offer from a multinational corporation and they want me to register in the National Skills Registry (NSR) and I registered. My first company registered in 2011. I worked there from 2010 and I quit in 2012. I am now worried this may be held against me



How is the NSR Verification done? If the verification fails, is there a standard process they follow?







share|improve this question














Recently I got an offer from a multinational corporation and they want me to register in the National Skills Registry (NSR) and I registered. My first company registered in 2011. I worked there from 2010 and I quit in 2012. I am now worried this may be held against me



How is the NSR Verification done? If the verification fails, is there a standard process they follow?









share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Feb 6 '14 at 21:52









IDrinkandIKnowThings

43.9k1398188




43.9k1398188










asked Feb 6 '14 at 3:44









ram

30112




30112




closed as unclear what you're asking by Draken, Chris E, Rory Alsop, scaaahu, Cronax Jan 26 at 9:56


Please clarify your specific problem or add additional details to highlight exactly what you need. As it's currently written, it’s hard to tell exactly what you're asking. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.






closed as unclear what you're asking by Draken, Chris E, Rory Alsop, scaaahu, Cronax Jan 26 at 9:56


Please clarify your specific problem or add additional details to highlight exactly what you need. As it's currently written, it’s hard to tell exactly what you're asking. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.









  • 11




    Hey ram and welcome to The Workplace. Most of us do not know what MNC, NSR, or NASCOM is, or what you are actually asking as a result. Could you please edit your question to explain clearly what you are asking? Thanks in advance!
    – jmac
    Feb 6 '14 at 4:15






  • 7




    According to Google, MNC "may refer to Media Nusantara Citra, Indonesian media company and owner of RCTI, MNC TV, Sun TV, and Indovision", NSR is the National Swine Registry and NASCOM is a company that makes magnetic switch gear. I frankly have no idea how an offer from an Indonesian media conglomerate would want you to register with the (American) national swine registry, or what either of those things have to do with magnetic security devices.
    – HopelessN00b
    Feb 6 '14 at 5:59







  • 1




    MNC would likely be Multi-National Corporation though the other acronyms I don't know so it would be useful to explain them and possibly consider links so we could understand the situation here as it isn't clear where in the world is this question coming?
    – JB King
    Feb 6 '14 at 6:47






  • 2




    Possible duplicate of How do background checks verify employment?
    – The Wandering Dev Manager
    Aug 10 '16 at 12:04






  • 1




    He's asking a specific question about NSR which the alleged duplicate doesn't address in the least.
    – Chris E
    Aug 10 '16 at 14:24












  • 11




    Hey ram and welcome to The Workplace. Most of us do not know what MNC, NSR, or NASCOM is, or what you are actually asking as a result. Could you please edit your question to explain clearly what you are asking? Thanks in advance!
    – jmac
    Feb 6 '14 at 4:15






  • 7




    According to Google, MNC "may refer to Media Nusantara Citra, Indonesian media company and owner of RCTI, MNC TV, Sun TV, and Indovision", NSR is the National Swine Registry and NASCOM is a company that makes magnetic switch gear. I frankly have no idea how an offer from an Indonesian media conglomerate would want you to register with the (American) national swine registry, or what either of those things have to do with magnetic security devices.
    – HopelessN00b
    Feb 6 '14 at 5:59







  • 1




    MNC would likely be Multi-National Corporation though the other acronyms I don't know so it would be useful to explain them and possibly consider links so we could understand the situation here as it isn't clear where in the world is this question coming?
    – JB King
    Feb 6 '14 at 6:47






  • 2




    Possible duplicate of How do background checks verify employment?
    – The Wandering Dev Manager
    Aug 10 '16 at 12:04






  • 1




    He's asking a specific question about NSR which the alleged duplicate doesn't address in the least.
    – Chris E
    Aug 10 '16 at 14:24







11




11




Hey ram and welcome to The Workplace. Most of us do not know what MNC, NSR, or NASCOM is, or what you are actually asking as a result. Could you please edit your question to explain clearly what you are asking? Thanks in advance!
– jmac
Feb 6 '14 at 4:15




Hey ram and welcome to The Workplace. Most of us do not know what MNC, NSR, or NASCOM is, or what you are actually asking as a result. Could you please edit your question to explain clearly what you are asking? Thanks in advance!
– jmac
Feb 6 '14 at 4:15




7




7




According to Google, MNC "may refer to Media Nusantara Citra, Indonesian media company and owner of RCTI, MNC TV, Sun TV, and Indovision", NSR is the National Swine Registry and NASCOM is a company that makes magnetic switch gear. I frankly have no idea how an offer from an Indonesian media conglomerate would want you to register with the (American) national swine registry, or what either of those things have to do with magnetic security devices.
– HopelessN00b
Feb 6 '14 at 5:59





According to Google, MNC "may refer to Media Nusantara Citra, Indonesian media company and owner of RCTI, MNC TV, Sun TV, and Indovision", NSR is the National Swine Registry and NASCOM is a company that makes magnetic switch gear. I frankly have no idea how an offer from an Indonesian media conglomerate would want you to register with the (American) national swine registry, or what either of those things have to do with magnetic security devices.
– HopelessN00b
Feb 6 '14 at 5:59





1




1




MNC would likely be Multi-National Corporation though the other acronyms I don't know so it would be useful to explain them and possibly consider links so we could understand the situation here as it isn't clear where in the world is this question coming?
– JB King
Feb 6 '14 at 6:47




MNC would likely be Multi-National Corporation though the other acronyms I don't know so it would be useful to explain them and possibly consider links so we could understand the situation here as it isn't clear where in the world is this question coming?
– JB King
Feb 6 '14 at 6:47




2




2




Possible duplicate of How do background checks verify employment?
– The Wandering Dev Manager
Aug 10 '16 at 12:04




Possible duplicate of How do background checks verify employment?
– The Wandering Dev Manager
Aug 10 '16 at 12:04




1




1




He's asking a specific question about NSR which the alleged duplicate doesn't address in the least.
– Chris E
Aug 10 '16 at 14:24




He's asking a specific question about NSR which the alleged duplicate doesn't address in the least.
– Chris E
Aug 10 '16 at 14:24










1 Answer
1






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up vote
8
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I think it may be best to do some reading up on this website which will give you a overview of how it works and the practises it follows.



In short NASSCOM is a Database that stores records for all IT and BPO employees in India. Your potential Employer pays a figure to a NASSCOM Certified Background Checker who will check your professional employment history. And report back on the findings.



If your verification fails then it is entirley dependant on the company. I would advise having a look at the following site where you can see that "Infosys asking about 100 employees to leave due to discrepancies in their resumes". And that a "senior professional, boasting certificates from IIT Mumbai and IIM Ahmedabad and 20 years of corporate experience, being on the verge of receiving a job offer when background investigations revealed that the certificates from IIT and IIM were fake".






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  • 1




    Both links are broken now.
    – Brandin
    Jul 7 '17 at 6:24









protected by Community♦ Jan 19 at 8:52



Thank you for your interest in this question.
Because it has attracted low-quality or spam answers that had to be removed, posting an answer now requires 10 reputation on this site (the association bonus does not count).



Would you like to answer one of these unanswered questions instead?














1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes








1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes








up vote
8
down vote













I think it may be best to do some reading up on this website which will give you a overview of how it works and the practises it follows.



In short NASSCOM is a Database that stores records for all IT and BPO employees in India. Your potential Employer pays a figure to a NASSCOM Certified Background Checker who will check your professional employment history. And report back on the findings.



If your verification fails then it is entirley dependant on the company. I would advise having a look at the following site where you can see that "Infosys asking about 100 employees to leave due to discrepancies in their resumes". And that a "senior professional, boasting certificates from IIT Mumbai and IIM Ahmedabad and 20 years of corporate experience, being on the verge of receiving a job offer when background investigations revealed that the certificates from IIT and IIM were fake".






share|improve this answer
















  • 1




    Both links are broken now.
    – Brandin
    Jul 7 '17 at 6:24














up vote
8
down vote













I think it may be best to do some reading up on this website which will give you a overview of how it works and the practises it follows.



In short NASSCOM is a Database that stores records for all IT and BPO employees in India. Your potential Employer pays a figure to a NASSCOM Certified Background Checker who will check your professional employment history. And report back on the findings.



If your verification fails then it is entirley dependant on the company. I would advise having a look at the following site where you can see that "Infosys asking about 100 employees to leave due to discrepancies in their resumes". And that a "senior professional, boasting certificates from IIT Mumbai and IIM Ahmedabad and 20 years of corporate experience, being on the verge of receiving a job offer when background investigations revealed that the certificates from IIT and IIM were fake".






share|improve this answer
















  • 1




    Both links are broken now.
    – Brandin
    Jul 7 '17 at 6:24












up vote
8
down vote










up vote
8
down vote









I think it may be best to do some reading up on this website which will give you a overview of how it works and the practises it follows.



In short NASSCOM is a Database that stores records for all IT and BPO employees in India. Your potential Employer pays a figure to a NASSCOM Certified Background Checker who will check your professional employment history. And report back on the findings.



If your verification fails then it is entirley dependant on the company. I would advise having a look at the following site where you can see that "Infosys asking about 100 employees to leave due to discrepancies in their resumes". And that a "senior professional, boasting certificates from IIT Mumbai and IIM Ahmedabad and 20 years of corporate experience, being on the verge of receiving a job offer when background investigations revealed that the certificates from IIT and IIM were fake".






share|improve this answer












I think it may be best to do some reading up on this website which will give you a overview of how it works and the practises it follows.



In short NASSCOM is a Database that stores records for all IT and BPO employees in India. Your potential Employer pays a figure to a NASSCOM Certified Background Checker who will check your professional employment history. And report back on the findings.



If your verification fails then it is entirley dependant on the company. I would advise having a look at the following site where you can see that "Infosys asking about 100 employees to leave due to discrepancies in their resumes". And that a "senior professional, boasting certificates from IIT Mumbai and IIM Ahmedabad and 20 years of corporate experience, being on the verge of receiving a job offer when background investigations revealed that the certificates from IIT and IIM were fake".







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Feb 27 '14 at 16:04









Michael Grubey

4,20432252




4,20432252







  • 1




    Both links are broken now.
    – Brandin
    Jul 7 '17 at 6:24












  • 1




    Both links are broken now.
    – Brandin
    Jul 7 '17 at 6:24







1




1




Both links are broken now.
– Brandin
Jul 7 '17 at 6:24




Both links are broken now.
– Brandin
Jul 7 '17 at 6:24





protected by Community♦ Jan 19 at 8:52



Thank you for your interest in this question.
Because it has attracted low-quality or spam answers that had to be removed, posting an answer now requires 10 reputation on this site (the association bonus does not count).



Would you like to answer one of these unanswered questions instead?


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