How to list a reference contact that left the company we worked together at and where the company changed its name [duplicate]

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  • What to do when a professional reference from co-worker at previous company is no longer working there?

    2 answers



  • Listing a renamed company on a resume or in a cover letter

    3 answers



One of the persons I want to give as reference contact for my applications has left the company where we worked together and the company has changed its name since then. Since I still worked there after the rebranding, I will give only the new name in my resume (the rebranding is shortly explained in the letter of reference I have from that company).



Normally I would list my contacts as "name, position, company, contact information", and I could handle one of the two conditions above with sufficient clarity – for example by writing "Company (now at Other Company)" for the former case or "Company (former Old Company Name)" for the latter. However, I feel I cannot give both bits of information precisely without creating a lot of "former's" and "now's" and nonetheless t would be not sufficiently clear who was where and when.



Any ideas how I could communicate this in a short fashion without having to write a half novel about it or, if not possible, which of the two facts is less critical to omit?







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marked as duplicate by Jan Doggen, Lilienthal♦, gnat, mcknz, scaaahu Oct 17 '15 at 3:17


This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.














  • @Lilienthal Well, here in the German speaking countries employers are obliged by law to hand out an employee that is leaving the company a so called "Arbeitszeugnis" which basically describes what (s)he has done there and how satisfied the employer was with their work (for a more elaborate explanation see this answer). You add those documents to your application so the recruiting firms can get a good first overview about what you have done and how good you are. Hence there's no need for every hiring company to automatically call a ...
    – Benedikt Bauer
    Oct 17 '15 at 9:40










  • ...reference contact. Instead, it's a nice-to-have add-on that might give you the decisive step ahead of the other applicants if things get close. Many employers even don't contact the references at all, but take already the fact, that you are willing and able to name references as a sign of "This applicant has nothing to hide". So it is not expected that a reference contact is called from every potential employer I apply at, but only in cases where they need the last bit of additional information to make a decision between two evenly qualified candidates.
    – Benedikt Bauer
    Oct 17 '15 at 9:47
















up vote
1
down vote

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This question already has an answer here:



  • What to do when a professional reference from co-worker at previous company is no longer working there?

    2 answers



  • Listing a renamed company on a resume or in a cover letter

    3 answers



One of the persons I want to give as reference contact for my applications has left the company where we worked together and the company has changed its name since then. Since I still worked there after the rebranding, I will give only the new name in my resume (the rebranding is shortly explained in the letter of reference I have from that company).



Normally I would list my contacts as "name, position, company, contact information", and I could handle one of the two conditions above with sufficient clarity – for example by writing "Company (now at Other Company)" for the former case or "Company (former Old Company Name)" for the latter. However, I feel I cannot give both bits of information precisely without creating a lot of "former's" and "now's" and nonetheless t would be not sufficiently clear who was where and when.



Any ideas how I could communicate this in a short fashion without having to write a half novel about it or, if not possible, which of the two facts is less critical to omit?







share|improve this question












marked as duplicate by Jan Doggen, Lilienthal♦, gnat, mcknz, scaaahu Oct 17 '15 at 3:17


This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.














  • @Lilienthal Well, here in the German speaking countries employers are obliged by law to hand out an employee that is leaving the company a so called "Arbeitszeugnis" which basically describes what (s)he has done there and how satisfied the employer was with their work (for a more elaborate explanation see this answer). You add those documents to your application so the recruiting firms can get a good first overview about what you have done and how good you are. Hence there's no need for every hiring company to automatically call a ...
    – Benedikt Bauer
    Oct 17 '15 at 9:40










  • ...reference contact. Instead, it's a nice-to-have add-on that might give you the decisive step ahead of the other applicants if things get close. Many employers even don't contact the references at all, but take already the fact, that you are willing and able to name references as a sign of "This applicant has nothing to hide". So it is not expected that a reference contact is called from every potential employer I apply at, but only in cases where they need the last bit of additional information to make a decision between two evenly qualified candidates.
    – Benedikt Bauer
    Oct 17 '15 at 9:47












up vote
1
down vote

favorite









up vote
1
down vote

favorite












This question already has an answer here:



  • What to do when a professional reference from co-worker at previous company is no longer working there?

    2 answers



  • Listing a renamed company on a resume or in a cover letter

    3 answers



One of the persons I want to give as reference contact for my applications has left the company where we worked together and the company has changed its name since then. Since I still worked there after the rebranding, I will give only the new name in my resume (the rebranding is shortly explained in the letter of reference I have from that company).



Normally I would list my contacts as "name, position, company, contact information", and I could handle one of the two conditions above with sufficient clarity – for example by writing "Company (now at Other Company)" for the former case or "Company (former Old Company Name)" for the latter. However, I feel I cannot give both bits of information precisely without creating a lot of "former's" and "now's" and nonetheless t would be not sufficiently clear who was where and when.



Any ideas how I could communicate this in a short fashion without having to write a half novel about it or, if not possible, which of the two facts is less critical to omit?







share|improve this question













This question already has an answer here:



  • What to do when a professional reference from co-worker at previous company is no longer working there?

    2 answers



  • Listing a renamed company on a resume or in a cover letter

    3 answers



One of the persons I want to give as reference contact for my applications has left the company where we worked together and the company has changed its name since then. Since I still worked there after the rebranding, I will give only the new name in my resume (the rebranding is shortly explained in the letter of reference I have from that company).



Normally I would list my contacts as "name, position, company, contact information", and I could handle one of the two conditions above with sufficient clarity – for example by writing "Company (now at Other Company)" for the former case or "Company (former Old Company Name)" for the latter. However, I feel I cannot give both bits of information precisely without creating a lot of "former's" and "now's" and nonetheless t would be not sufficiently clear who was where and when.



Any ideas how I could communicate this in a short fashion without having to write a half novel about it or, if not possible, which of the two facts is less critical to omit?





This question already has an answer here:



  • What to do when a professional reference from co-worker at previous company is no longer working there?

    2 answers



  • Listing a renamed company on a resume or in a cover letter

    3 answers









share|improve this question











share|improve this question




share|improve this question










asked Oct 16 '15 at 14:44









Benedikt Bauer

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446515




marked as duplicate by Jan Doggen, Lilienthal♦, gnat, mcknz, scaaahu Oct 17 '15 at 3:17


This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.






marked as duplicate by Jan Doggen, Lilienthal♦, gnat, mcknz, scaaahu Oct 17 '15 at 3:17


This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.













  • @Lilienthal Well, here in the German speaking countries employers are obliged by law to hand out an employee that is leaving the company a so called "Arbeitszeugnis" which basically describes what (s)he has done there and how satisfied the employer was with their work (for a more elaborate explanation see this answer). You add those documents to your application so the recruiting firms can get a good first overview about what you have done and how good you are. Hence there's no need for every hiring company to automatically call a ...
    – Benedikt Bauer
    Oct 17 '15 at 9:40










  • ...reference contact. Instead, it's a nice-to-have add-on that might give you the decisive step ahead of the other applicants if things get close. Many employers even don't contact the references at all, but take already the fact, that you are willing and able to name references as a sign of "This applicant has nothing to hide". So it is not expected that a reference contact is called from every potential employer I apply at, but only in cases where they need the last bit of additional information to make a decision between two evenly qualified candidates.
    – Benedikt Bauer
    Oct 17 '15 at 9:47
















  • @Lilienthal Well, here in the German speaking countries employers are obliged by law to hand out an employee that is leaving the company a so called "Arbeitszeugnis" which basically describes what (s)he has done there and how satisfied the employer was with their work (for a more elaborate explanation see this answer). You add those documents to your application so the recruiting firms can get a good first overview about what you have done and how good you are. Hence there's no need for every hiring company to automatically call a ...
    – Benedikt Bauer
    Oct 17 '15 at 9:40










  • ...reference contact. Instead, it's a nice-to-have add-on that might give you the decisive step ahead of the other applicants if things get close. Many employers even don't contact the references at all, but take already the fact, that you are willing and able to name references as a sign of "This applicant has nothing to hide". So it is not expected that a reference contact is called from every potential employer I apply at, but only in cases where they need the last bit of additional information to make a decision between two evenly qualified candidates.
    – Benedikt Bauer
    Oct 17 '15 at 9:47















@Lilienthal Well, here in the German speaking countries employers are obliged by law to hand out an employee that is leaving the company a so called "Arbeitszeugnis" which basically describes what (s)he has done there and how satisfied the employer was with their work (for a more elaborate explanation see this answer). You add those documents to your application so the recruiting firms can get a good first overview about what you have done and how good you are. Hence there's no need for every hiring company to automatically call a ...
– Benedikt Bauer
Oct 17 '15 at 9:40




@Lilienthal Well, here in the German speaking countries employers are obliged by law to hand out an employee that is leaving the company a so called "Arbeitszeugnis" which basically describes what (s)he has done there and how satisfied the employer was with their work (for a more elaborate explanation see this answer). You add those documents to your application so the recruiting firms can get a good first overview about what you have done and how good you are. Hence there's no need for every hiring company to automatically call a ...
– Benedikt Bauer
Oct 17 '15 at 9:40












...reference contact. Instead, it's a nice-to-have add-on that might give you the decisive step ahead of the other applicants if things get close. Many employers even don't contact the references at all, but take already the fact, that you are willing and able to name references as a sign of "This applicant has nothing to hide". So it is not expected that a reference contact is called from every potential employer I apply at, but only in cases where they need the last bit of additional information to make a decision between two evenly qualified candidates.
– Benedikt Bauer
Oct 17 '15 at 9:47




...reference contact. Instead, it's a nice-to-have add-on that might give you the decisive step ahead of the other applicants if things get close. Many employers even don't contact the references at all, but take already the fact, that you are willing and able to name references as a sign of "This applicant has nothing to hide". So it is not expected that a reference contact is called from every potential employer I apply at, but only in cases where they need the last bit of additional information to make a decision between two evenly qualified candidates.
– Benedikt Bauer
Oct 17 '15 at 9:47















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