I referred a candidate and got difference in our words

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I referred a friend to a position in my company. When HR asked me how I know him, I told them that he was my co-worker in a previous company. However, I later came to know that during the interview, he(my friend) told them that he was my friend during college.



Note:



  1. We worked for same company but in his resume he didn't mention that company but some other company name he worked later.

  2. He is not my college friend this can be identified by checking our resumes

  3. My present company accepted him.

Will this contradiction affect my career in the company, and how do I handle this situation?







share|improve this question


















  • 2




    Did you know him during your graduation?
    – scaaahu
    Dec 23 '14 at 7:06










  • No that is what bothering me now .
    – dh47
    Dec 23 '14 at 7:19










  • Was he your co-worker in a previous company; or did both of you lie?
    – Dan Neely
    Dec 23 '14 at 20:22










  • Based on the current and the previous versions of your question, I assume you worked with him in a previous company. If this is not the case, please let us know so that you can get better answers.
    – scaaahu
    Dec 24 '14 at 5:17










  • We worked together for the same company but the thing is he didn't mention the company name(Which we both worked for) in his resume but mentioned another company name(this company is not in my list) which he worked later.
    – dh47
    Dec 24 '14 at 5:38
















up vote
2
down vote

favorite












I referred a friend to a position in my company. When HR asked me how I know him, I told them that he was my co-worker in a previous company. However, I later came to know that during the interview, he(my friend) told them that he was my friend during college.



Note:



  1. We worked for same company but in his resume he didn't mention that company but some other company name he worked later.

  2. He is not my college friend this can be identified by checking our resumes

  3. My present company accepted him.

Will this contradiction affect my career in the company, and how do I handle this situation?







share|improve this question


















  • 2




    Did you know him during your graduation?
    – scaaahu
    Dec 23 '14 at 7:06










  • No that is what bothering me now .
    – dh47
    Dec 23 '14 at 7:19










  • Was he your co-worker in a previous company; or did both of you lie?
    – Dan Neely
    Dec 23 '14 at 20:22










  • Based on the current and the previous versions of your question, I assume you worked with him in a previous company. If this is not the case, please let us know so that you can get better answers.
    – scaaahu
    Dec 24 '14 at 5:17










  • We worked together for the same company but the thing is he didn't mention the company name(Which we both worked for) in his resume but mentioned another company name(this company is not in my list) which he worked later.
    – dh47
    Dec 24 '14 at 5:38












up vote
2
down vote

favorite









up vote
2
down vote

favorite











I referred a friend to a position in my company. When HR asked me how I know him, I told them that he was my co-worker in a previous company. However, I later came to know that during the interview, he(my friend) told them that he was my friend during college.



Note:



  1. We worked for same company but in his resume he didn't mention that company but some other company name he worked later.

  2. He is not my college friend this can be identified by checking our resumes

  3. My present company accepted him.

Will this contradiction affect my career in the company, and how do I handle this situation?







share|improve this question














I referred a friend to a position in my company. When HR asked me how I know him, I told them that he was my co-worker in a previous company. However, I later came to know that during the interview, he(my friend) told them that he was my friend during college.



Note:



  1. We worked for same company but in his resume he didn't mention that company but some other company name he worked later.

  2. He is not my college friend this can be identified by checking our resumes

  3. My present company accepted him.

Will this contradiction affect my career in the company, and how do I handle this situation?









share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited May 1 '15 at 13:41









Elysian Fields♦

96.9k46292449




96.9k46292449










asked Dec 23 '14 at 6:43









dh47

2912621




2912621







  • 2




    Did you know him during your graduation?
    – scaaahu
    Dec 23 '14 at 7:06










  • No that is what bothering me now .
    – dh47
    Dec 23 '14 at 7:19










  • Was he your co-worker in a previous company; or did both of you lie?
    – Dan Neely
    Dec 23 '14 at 20:22










  • Based on the current and the previous versions of your question, I assume you worked with him in a previous company. If this is not the case, please let us know so that you can get better answers.
    – scaaahu
    Dec 24 '14 at 5:17










  • We worked together for the same company but the thing is he didn't mention the company name(Which we both worked for) in his resume but mentioned another company name(this company is not in my list) which he worked later.
    – dh47
    Dec 24 '14 at 5:38












  • 2




    Did you know him during your graduation?
    – scaaahu
    Dec 23 '14 at 7:06










  • No that is what bothering me now .
    – dh47
    Dec 23 '14 at 7:19










  • Was he your co-worker in a previous company; or did both of you lie?
    – Dan Neely
    Dec 23 '14 at 20:22










  • Based on the current and the previous versions of your question, I assume you worked with him in a previous company. If this is not the case, please let us know so that you can get better answers.
    – scaaahu
    Dec 24 '14 at 5:17










  • We worked together for the same company but the thing is he didn't mention the company name(Which we both worked for) in his resume but mentioned another company name(this company is not in my list) which he worked later.
    – dh47
    Dec 24 '14 at 5:38







2




2




Did you know him during your graduation?
– scaaahu
Dec 23 '14 at 7:06




Did you know him during your graduation?
– scaaahu
Dec 23 '14 at 7:06












No that is what bothering me now .
– dh47
Dec 23 '14 at 7:19




No that is what bothering me now .
– dh47
Dec 23 '14 at 7:19












Was he your co-worker in a previous company; or did both of you lie?
– Dan Neely
Dec 23 '14 at 20:22




Was he your co-worker in a previous company; or did both of you lie?
– Dan Neely
Dec 23 '14 at 20:22












Based on the current and the previous versions of your question, I assume you worked with him in a previous company. If this is not the case, please let us know so that you can get better answers.
– scaaahu
Dec 24 '14 at 5:17




Based on the current and the previous versions of your question, I assume you worked with him in a previous company. If this is not the case, please let us know so that you can get better answers.
– scaaahu
Dec 24 '14 at 5:17












We worked together for the same company but the thing is he didn't mention the company name(Which we both worked for) in his resume but mentioned another company name(this company is not in my list) which he worked later.
– dh47
Dec 24 '14 at 5:38




We worked together for the same company but the thing is he didn't mention the company name(Which we both worked for) in his resume but mentioned another company name(this company is not in my list) which he worked later.
– dh47
Dec 24 '14 at 5:38










4 Answers
4






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
19
down vote



accepted










You worked with him in a previous company. You told HR the truth. Whether or not he listed that company in his resume is his problem, not yours.



He is not your college friend and this can be identified by checking your resumes, both his and yours. Again, this is his problem, not yours.



It is his responsibility to explain to the HR how he knew you in college if the HR ever questions the inconsistency between your story and his. Until then, focus on your work.



In response to the the question : Will this contradiction affect my career in the company, and how do I handle this situation?? You already have an established position in your company. You cannot be held responsible for lies told by others. As long as you have told your company the truth, no one would take action against you. If no one questions you the inconsistency, keep quiet. If anyone questions the contradiction, tell the truth again. And tell them you don't know why he would lie. I think this incident would hurt your creditability a little bit. But, it's not fatal by any means. Next time, be careful when you refer a friend.






share|improve this answer


















  • 1




    I think the concern is that he recommended someone who lies. But, since he was unaware of that aspect of his character, his recommendation was based on what he knew at the time, and your answer of what to do is fine.
    – thursdaysgeek
    Dec 23 '14 at 16:42










  • @dh47 I updated my answer in response to your updated question.
    – scaaahu
    Dec 24 '14 at 6:34

















up vote
7
down vote














Will this contradiction affect my career in the company, and how do I
handle this situation?




As long as the incorrect information was supplied by your friend, and not by you, this almost certainly won't affect your career in the company.



If you are asked why you and your friend had different answers, you can simply say "I don't know. Perhaps he was just nervous or confused."



You should probably have a quick chat with your friend and make sure you are both on the same page with future referrals.






share|improve this answer





























    up vote
    2
    down vote













    In many companies they offer incentives to current employees to recommend candidates for positions. They are looking for resumes of people that have not recently applied for positions in the company. They do hope that the recommendation is truthful and based on qualities and skills you have seen in either a previous work environment or in a non-work situation.



    They are less interested in your actual words, and are more interested in being able to get a person that was otherwise unknown to them to apply for a position. They want to expand the pool of qualified candidates.



    In a small company it is possible that the disconnect in your stories may seem weird, and somebody involved in the hiring process could talk to you. In the larger company the hiring team may not even be aware that a candidate was recommended by someone, nor would they see the nature of the recommendation.






    share|improve this answer





























      up vote
      0
      down vote













      Offering a slightly different opinion:



      There is clearly a discrepancy in the two stories and that needs to be resolved. HR may not care but you should. If you are correct this means that your friend is either very sloppy or outright dishonest. If he gets hired and he behaves badly, than this will reflect badly on you since you referred him, you knew about the problem and you didn't do anything about it.



      I would first talk to your friend. Find out why his story is different from yours. If the answer is bad, than you should go to HR or the hiring manager and tell them "I referred the guy since I knew him, but I can't really recommend him". Than you have done due diligence and rest is up to the hiring manager.






      share|improve this answer




















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        4 Answers
        4






        active

        oldest

        votes








        4 Answers
        4






        active

        oldest

        votes









        active

        oldest

        votes






        active

        oldest

        votes








        up vote
        19
        down vote



        accepted










        You worked with him in a previous company. You told HR the truth. Whether or not he listed that company in his resume is his problem, not yours.



        He is not your college friend and this can be identified by checking your resumes, both his and yours. Again, this is his problem, not yours.



        It is his responsibility to explain to the HR how he knew you in college if the HR ever questions the inconsistency between your story and his. Until then, focus on your work.



        In response to the the question : Will this contradiction affect my career in the company, and how do I handle this situation?? You already have an established position in your company. You cannot be held responsible for lies told by others. As long as you have told your company the truth, no one would take action against you. If no one questions you the inconsistency, keep quiet. If anyone questions the contradiction, tell the truth again. And tell them you don't know why he would lie. I think this incident would hurt your creditability a little bit. But, it's not fatal by any means. Next time, be careful when you refer a friend.






        share|improve this answer


















        • 1




          I think the concern is that he recommended someone who lies. But, since he was unaware of that aspect of his character, his recommendation was based on what he knew at the time, and your answer of what to do is fine.
          – thursdaysgeek
          Dec 23 '14 at 16:42










        • @dh47 I updated my answer in response to your updated question.
          – scaaahu
          Dec 24 '14 at 6:34














        up vote
        19
        down vote



        accepted










        You worked with him in a previous company. You told HR the truth. Whether or not he listed that company in his resume is his problem, not yours.



        He is not your college friend and this can be identified by checking your resumes, both his and yours. Again, this is his problem, not yours.



        It is his responsibility to explain to the HR how he knew you in college if the HR ever questions the inconsistency between your story and his. Until then, focus on your work.



        In response to the the question : Will this contradiction affect my career in the company, and how do I handle this situation?? You already have an established position in your company. You cannot be held responsible for lies told by others. As long as you have told your company the truth, no one would take action against you. If no one questions you the inconsistency, keep quiet. If anyone questions the contradiction, tell the truth again. And tell them you don't know why he would lie. I think this incident would hurt your creditability a little bit. But, it's not fatal by any means. Next time, be careful when you refer a friend.






        share|improve this answer


















        • 1




          I think the concern is that he recommended someone who lies. But, since he was unaware of that aspect of his character, his recommendation was based on what he knew at the time, and your answer of what to do is fine.
          – thursdaysgeek
          Dec 23 '14 at 16:42










        • @dh47 I updated my answer in response to your updated question.
          – scaaahu
          Dec 24 '14 at 6:34












        up vote
        19
        down vote



        accepted







        up vote
        19
        down vote



        accepted






        You worked with him in a previous company. You told HR the truth. Whether or not he listed that company in his resume is his problem, not yours.



        He is not your college friend and this can be identified by checking your resumes, both his and yours. Again, this is his problem, not yours.



        It is his responsibility to explain to the HR how he knew you in college if the HR ever questions the inconsistency between your story and his. Until then, focus on your work.



        In response to the the question : Will this contradiction affect my career in the company, and how do I handle this situation?? You already have an established position in your company. You cannot be held responsible for lies told by others. As long as you have told your company the truth, no one would take action against you. If no one questions you the inconsistency, keep quiet. If anyone questions the contradiction, tell the truth again. And tell them you don't know why he would lie. I think this incident would hurt your creditability a little bit. But, it's not fatal by any means. Next time, be careful when you refer a friend.






        share|improve this answer














        You worked with him in a previous company. You told HR the truth. Whether or not he listed that company in his resume is his problem, not yours.



        He is not your college friend and this can be identified by checking your resumes, both his and yours. Again, this is his problem, not yours.



        It is his responsibility to explain to the HR how he knew you in college if the HR ever questions the inconsistency between your story and his. Until then, focus on your work.



        In response to the the question : Will this contradiction affect my career in the company, and how do I handle this situation?? You already have an established position in your company. You cannot be held responsible for lies told by others. As long as you have told your company the truth, no one would take action against you. If no one questions you the inconsistency, keep quiet. If anyone questions the contradiction, tell the truth again. And tell them you don't know why he would lie. I think this incident would hurt your creditability a little bit. But, it's not fatal by any means. Next time, be careful when you refer a friend.







        share|improve this answer














        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer








        edited Dec 24 '14 at 6:33

























        answered Dec 23 '14 at 8:38









        scaaahu

        6,60953144




        6,60953144







        • 1




          I think the concern is that he recommended someone who lies. But, since he was unaware of that aspect of his character, his recommendation was based on what he knew at the time, and your answer of what to do is fine.
          – thursdaysgeek
          Dec 23 '14 at 16:42










        • @dh47 I updated my answer in response to your updated question.
          – scaaahu
          Dec 24 '14 at 6:34












        • 1




          I think the concern is that he recommended someone who lies. But, since he was unaware of that aspect of his character, his recommendation was based on what he knew at the time, and your answer of what to do is fine.
          – thursdaysgeek
          Dec 23 '14 at 16:42










        • @dh47 I updated my answer in response to your updated question.
          – scaaahu
          Dec 24 '14 at 6:34







        1




        1




        I think the concern is that he recommended someone who lies. But, since he was unaware of that aspect of his character, his recommendation was based on what he knew at the time, and your answer of what to do is fine.
        – thursdaysgeek
        Dec 23 '14 at 16:42




        I think the concern is that he recommended someone who lies. But, since he was unaware of that aspect of his character, his recommendation was based on what he knew at the time, and your answer of what to do is fine.
        – thursdaysgeek
        Dec 23 '14 at 16:42












        @dh47 I updated my answer in response to your updated question.
        – scaaahu
        Dec 24 '14 at 6:34




        @dh47 I updated my answer in response to your updated question.
        – scaaahu
        Dec 24 '14 at 6:34












        up vote
        7
        down vote














        Will this contradiction affect my career in the company, and how do I
        handle this situation?




        As long as the incorrect information was supplied by your friend, and not by you, this almost certainly won't affect your career in the company.



        If you are asked why you and your friend had different answers, you can simply say "I don't know. Perhaps he was just nervous or confused."



        You should probably have a quick chat with your friend and make sure you are both on the same page with future referrals.






        share|improve this answer


























          up vote
          7
          down vote














          Will this contradiction affect my career in the company, and how do I
          handle this situation?




          As long as the incorrect information was supplied by your friend, and not by you, this almost certainly won't affect your career in the company.



          If you are asked why you and your friend had different answers, you can simply say "I don't know. Perhaps he was just nervous or confused."



          You should probably have a quick chat with your friend and make sure you are both on the same page with future referrals.






          share|improve this answer
























            up vote
            7
            down vote










            up vote
            7
            down vote










            Will this contradiction affect my career in the company, and how do I
            handle this situation?




            As long as the incorrect information was supplied by your friend, and not by you, this almost certainly won't affect your career in the company.



            If you are asked why you and your friend had different answers, you can simply say "I don't know. Perhaps he was just nervous or confused."



            You should probably have a quick chat with your friend and make sure you are both on the same page with future referrals.






            share|improve this answer















            Will this contradiction affect my career in the company, and how do I
            handle this situation?




            As long as the incorrect information was supplied by your friend, and not by you, this almost certainly won't affect your career in the company.



            If you are asked why you and your friend had different answers, you can simply say "I don't know. Perhaps he was just nervous or confused."



            You should probably have a quick chat with your friend and make sure you are both on the same page with future referrals.







            share|improve this answer














            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer








            edited Dec 30 '14 at 13:02

























            answered Dec 23 '14 at 13:14









            Joe Strazzere

            223k106656922




            223k106656922




















                up vote
                2
                down vote













                In many companies they offer incentives to current employees to recommend candidates for positions. They are looking for resumes of people that have not recently applied for positions in the company. They do hope that the recommendation is truthful and based on qualities and skills you have seen in either a previous work environment or in a non-work situation.



                They are less interested in your actual words, and are more interested in being able to get a person that was otherwise unknown to them to apply for a position. They want to expand the pool of qualified candidates.



                In a small company it is possible that the disconnect in your stories may seem weird, and somebody involved in the hiring process could talk to you. In the larger company the hiring team may not even be aware that a candidate was recommended by someone, nor would they see the nature of the recommendation.






                share|improve this answer


























                  up vote
                  2
                  down vote













                  In many companies they offer incentives to current employees to recommend candidates for positions. They are looking for resumes of people that have not recently applied for positions in the company. They do hope that the recommendation is truthful and based on qualities and skills you have seen in either a previous work environment or in a non-work situation.



                  They are less interested in your actual words, and are more interested in being able to get a person that was otherwise unknown to them to apply for a position. They want to expand the pool of qualified candidates.



                  In a small company it is possible that the disconnect in your stories may seem weird, and somebody involved in the hiring process could talk to you. In the larger company the hiring team may not even be aware that a candidate was recommended by someone, nor would they see the nature of the recommendation.






                  share|improve this answer
























                    up vote
                    2
                    down vote










                    up vote
                    2
                    down vote









                    In many companies they offer incentives to current employees to recommend candidates for positions. They are looking for resumes of people that have not recently applied for positions in the company. They do hope that the recommendation is truthful and based on qualities and skills you have seen in either a previous work environment or in a non-work situation.



                    They are less interested in your actual words, and are more interested in being able to get a person that was otherwise unknown to them to apply for a position. They want to expand the pool of qualified candidates.



                    In a small company it is possible that the disconnect in your stories may seem weird, and somebody involved in the hiring process could talk to you. In the larger company the hiring team may not even be aware that a candidate was recommended by someone, nor would they see the nature of the recommendation.






                    share|improve this answer














                    In many companies they offer incentives to current employees to recommend candidates for positions. They are looking for resumes of people that have not recently applied for positions in the company. They do hope that the recommendation is truthful and based on qualities and skills you have seen in either a previous work environment or in a non-work situation.



                    They are less interested in your actual words, and are more interested in being able to get a person that was otherwise unknown to them to apply for a position. They want to expand the pool of qualified candidates.



                    In a small company it is possible that the disconnect in your stories may seem weird, and somebody involved in the hiring process could talk to you. In the larger company the hiring team may not even be aware that a candidate was recommended by someone, nor would they see the nature of the recommendation.







                    share|improve this answer














                    share|improve this answer



                    share|improve this answer








                    edited Dec 23 '14 at 14:29









                    Tim B

                    3,1421022




                    3,1421022










                    answered Dec 23 '14 at 12:58









                    mhoran_psprep

                    40.3k462144




                    40.3k462144




















                        up vote
                        0
                        down vote













                        Offering a slightly different opinion:



                        There is clearly a discrepancy in the two stories and that needs to be resolved. HR may not care but you should. If you are correct this means that your friend is either very sloppy or outright dishonest. If he gets hired and he behaves badly, than this will reflect badly on you since you referred him, you knew about the problem and you didn't do anything about it.



                        I would first talk to your friend. Find out why his story is different from yours. If the answer is bad, than you should go to HR or the hiring manager and tell them "I referred the guy since I knew him, but I can't really recommend him". Than you have done due diligence and rest is up to the hiring manager.






                        share|improve this answer
























                          up vote
                          0
                          down vote













                          Offering a slightly different opinion:



                          There is clearly a discrepancy in the two stories and that needs to be resolved. HR may not care but you should. If you are correct this means that your friend is either very sloppy or outright dishonest. If he gets hired and he behaves badly, than this will reflect badly on you since you referred him, you knew about the problem and you didn't do anything about it.



                          I would first talk to your friend. Find out why his story is different from yours. If the answer is bad, than you should go to HR or the hiring manager and tell them "I referred the guy since I knew him, but I can't really recommend him". Than you have done due diligence and rest is up to the hiring manager.






                          share|improve this answer






















                            up vote
                            0
                            down vote










                            up vote
                            0
                            down vote









                            Offering a slightly different opinion:



                            There is clearly a discrepancy in the two stories and that needs to be resolved. HR may not care but you should. If you are correct this means that your friend is either very sloppy or outright dishonest. If he gets hired and he behaves badly, than this will reflect badly on you since you referred him, you knew about the problem and you didn't do anything about it.



                            I would first talk to your friend. Find out why his story is different from yours. If the answer is bad, than you should go to HR or the hiring manager and tell them "I referred the guy since I knew him, but I can't really recommend him". Than you have done due diligence and rest is up to the hiring manager.






                            share|improve this answer












                            Offering a slightly different opinion:



                            There is clearly a discrepancy in the two stories and that needs to be resolved. HR may not care but you should. If you are correct this means that your friend is either very sloppy or outright dishonest. If he gets hired and he behaves badly, than this will reflect badly on you since you referred him, you knew about the problem and you didn't do anything about it.



                            I would first talk to your friend. Find out why his story is different from yours. If the answer is bad, than you should go to HR or the hiring manager and tell them "I referred the guy since I knew him, but I can't really recommend him". Than you have done due diligence and rest is up to the hiring manager.







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                            answered May 1 '15 at 12:39









                            Hilmar

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