Relieving letter [duplicate]
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How can I explain to potential employers that I am unable to provide a relieving letter?
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I worked for an IT company for 2 years and was very loyal in 2014. During my tenure at the company, the CEO did not prove my incentives. I thought this was the first time and I let it go. But the incentives were not paid for the last 11 months. Because of this, I left the company breaking the bond which was due in 1 month.
Now I am applying for another job for which I require a relieving letter from the previous company, but they do not answer my requests for this. What should I do?
I have copies of incentives here the company have cheated me on.
I do not want to get into legal things, and want to get my relieving letter happily.
new-job work-experience india relieving-letter
marked as duplicate by David K, Chris E, IDrinkandIKnowThings, Dawny33, mhoran_psprep Apr 9 '16 at 12:01
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.
suggest improvements |Â
up vote
-1
down vote
favorite
This question already has an answer here:
How can I explain to potential employers that I am unable to provide a relieving letter?
2 answers
I worked for an IT company for 2 years and was very loyal in 2014. During my tenure at the company, the CEO did not prove my incentives. I thought this was the first time and I let it go. But the incentives were not paid for the last 11 months. Because of this, I left the company breaking the bond which was due in 1 month.
Now I am applying for another job for which I require a relieving letter from the previous company, but they do not answer my requests for this. What should I do?
I have copies of incentives here the company have cheated me on.
I do not want to get into legal things, and want to get my relieving letter happily.
new-job work-experience india relieving-letter
marked as duplicate by David K, Chris E, IDrinkandIKnowThings, Dawny33, mhoran_psprep Apr 9 '16 at 12:01
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.
3
You walked away from the company, "breaking the bond" - why would the company issue you a relieving letter in those circumstances? And I am talking regardless of the reasons you left - those are your reasons, not the companies, so you haven't been "relieved", you simply left. You need to get a lawyer involved to sort this out, as having read around I think that is the only way to force a company to issue a relieving letter.
– Moo
Apr 7 '16 at 8:11
1
If they also owe you money from 11 months, plus you'll need a relieving letter, isn't this a good reason to get a lawyer involved? You said you don't want to get into legal things, but...
– Brandin
Apr 7 '16 at 8:34
1
On second look, that particular question isn't that great, but there are a large number of questions relating to not having a relieving letter. One of them should certainly help answer your question.
– David K
Apr 7 '16 at 13:33
suggest improvements |Â
up vote
-1
down vote
favorite
up vote
-1
down vote
favorite
This question already has an answer here:
How can I explain to potential employers that I am unable to provide a relieving letter?
2 answers
I worked for an IT company for 2 years and was very loyal in 2014. During my tenure at the company, the CEO did not prove my incentives. I thought this was the first time and I let it go. But the incentives were not paid for the last 11 months. Because of this, I left the company breaking the bond which was due in 1 month.
Now I am applying for another job for which I require a relieving letter from the previous company, but they do not answer my requests for this. What should I do?
I have copies of incentives here the company have cheated me on.
I do not want to get into legal things, and want to get my relieving letter happily.
new-job work-experience india relieving-letter
This question already has an answer here:
How can I explain to potential employers that I am unable to provide a relieving letter?
2 answers
I worked for an IT company for 2 years and was very loyal in 2014. During my tenure at the company, the CEO did not prove my incentives. I thought this was the first time and I let it go. But the incentives were not paid for the last 11 months. Because of this, I left the company breaking the bond which was due in 1 month.
Now I am applying for another job for which I require a relieving letter from the previous company, but they do not answer my requests for this. What should I do?
I have copies of incentives here the company have cheated me on.
I do not want to get into legal things, and want to get my relieving letter happily.
This question already has an answer here:
How can I explain to potential employers that I am unable to provide a relieving letter?
2 answers
new-job work-experience india relieving-letter
edited Apr 7 '16 at 9:50
Stephan Kolassa
8,35532850
8,35532850
asked Apr 7 '16 at 7:57
mb1234
11
11
marked as duplicate by David K, Chris E, IDrinkandIKnowThings, Dawny33, mhoran_psprep Apr 9 '16 at 12:01
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 David K, Chris E, IDrinkandIKnowThings, Dawny33, mhoran_psprep Apr 9 '16 at 12:01
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.
3
You walked away from the company, "breaking the bond" - why would the company issue you a relieving letter in those circumstances? And I am talking regardless of the reasons you left - those are your reasons, not the companies, so you haven't been "relieved", you simply left. You need to get a lawyer involved to sort this out, as having read around I think that is the only way to force a company to issue a relieving letter.
– Moo
Apr 7 '16 at 8:11
1
If they also owe you money from 11 months, plus you'll need a relieving letter, isn't this a good reason to get a lawyer involved? You said you don't want to get into legal things, but...
– Brandin
Apr 7 '16 at 8:34
1
On second look, that particular question isn't that great, but there are a large number of questions relating to not having a relieving letter. One of them should certainly help answer your question.
– David K
Apr 7 '16 at 13:33
suggest improvements |Â
3
You walked away from the company, "breaking the bond" - why would the company issue you a relieving letter in those circumstances? And I am talking regardless of the reasons you left - those are your reasons, not the companies, so you haven't been "relieved", you simply left. You need to get a lawyer involved to sort this out, as having read around I think that is the only way to force a company to issue a relieving letter.
– Moo
Apr 7 '16 at 8:11
1
If they also owe you money from 11 months, plus you'll need a relieving letter, isn't this a good reason to get a lawyer involved? You said you don't want to get into legal things, but...
– Brandin
Apr 7 '16 at 8:34
1
On second look, that particular question isn't that great, but there are a large number of questions relating to not having a relieving letter. One of them should certainly help answer your question.
– David K
Apr 7 '16 at 13:33
3
3
You walked away from the company, "breaking the bond" - why would the company issue you a relieving letter in those circumstances? And I am talking regardless of the reasons you left - those are your reasons, not the companies, so you haven't been "relieved", you simply left. You need to get a lawyer involved to sort this out, as having read around I think that is the only way to force a company to issue a relieving letter.
– Moo
Apr 7 '16 at 8:11
You walked away from the company, "breaking the bond" - why would the company issue you a relieving letter in those circumstances? And I am talking regardless of the reasons you left - those are your reasons, not the companies, so you haven't been "relieved", you simply left. You need to get a lawyer involved to sort this out, as having read around I think that is the only way to force a company to issue a relieving letter.
– Moo
Apr 7 '16 at 8:11
1
1
If they also owe you money from 11 months, plus you'll need a relieving letter, isn't this a good reason to get a lawyer involved? You said you don't want to get into legal things, but...
– Brandin
Apr 7 '16 at 8:34
If they also owe you money from 11 months, plus you'll need a relieving letter, isn't this a good reason to get a lawyer involved? You said you don't want to get into legal things, but...
– Brandin
Apr 7 '16 at 8:34
1
1
On second look, that particular question isn't that great, but there are a large number of questions relating to not having a relieving letter. One of them should certainly help answer your question.
– David K
Apr 7 '16 at 13:33
On second look, that particular question isn't that great, but there are a large number of questions relating to not having a relieving letter. One of them should certainly help answer your question.
– David K
Apr 7 '16 at 13:33
suggest improvements |Â
2 Answers
2
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up vote
4
down vote
I left the company breaking the bond which was due in 1 month.
This is where you made the mistake. As mentioned by @Moo, in the comments, the company is not obliged to issue you anything let alone relieving or experience letters.
Now I am applying for another job and were I require relieving letter of that company, but they are not answering me on the same.
In India, IT companies generally ask for relieving letters, not because they want to a maintain a file containing all the documents of each employee. It is generally for the BGC(Background Verification Check) purposes. Even if you submit a letter, they would go back to the company and verify your claims with them.
I have copies of incentives here the company have cheated on me...
You have some documentary proof that you worked in that company, that's good! Assuming you also have your old salary slips, you could use these documents to prove your association(& experience) with your old organization.
I do not want to get into legal things
Although legal advice is off-topic here and considering the legal system in India, I would say that you won't stand a chance if you went to court. They could easily prove that they would have paid you at the end of your probation, but you broke the bond and absconded!
In conclusion you have the following options:
1) Talk to the old employer and ask whether it would be possible for them to issue the letter after you paid the bond amount. This would work if you are in a position to pay the amount. You could also ask this amount as sign-on bonus from your next employer(if they agree).
2) Let the HR of the next organization know what really happened. As mentioned before, they don't want to maintain a file of your documents, they need it for BGC. Maybe other documents like your salary slips for that period can suffice.
Wouldn't offering to pay the bond amount after the company withheld incentives be rewarding bad behavior?
– jcm
Apr 7 '16 at 11:18
@jcm I agree but at this point, moving on ahead in his career is more important to the OP. It would be difficult to convince large organizations to offer employment without relieving letter. Sadly this is the established norm in in India
– Vin
Apr 7 '16 at 12:03
suggest improvements |Â
up vote
2
down vote
I do not want to get into legal things, and want to get my relieving
letter happily.
Well thats not going to work for you, since you've essentially broken the bond and walked away from them. It may very well be that they owe you nothing, and that you won't get a relieving letter from them.
Maybe you can use old payslips or documentation that you worked there to prove that you in fact did?
suggest improvements |Â
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
up vote
4
down vote
I left the company breaking the bond which was due in 1 month.
This is where you made the mistake. As mentioned by @Moo, in the comments, the company is not obliged to issue you anything let alone relieving or experience letters.
Now I am applying for another job and were I require relieving letter of that company, but they are not answering me on the same.
In India, IT companies generally ask for relieving letters, not because they want to a maintain a file containing all the documents of each employee. It is generally for the BGC(Background Verification Check) purposes. Even if you submit a letter, they would go back to the company and verify your claims with them.
I have copies of incentives here the company have cheated on me...
You have some documentary proof that you worked in that company, that's good! Assuming you also have your old salary slips, you could use these documents to prove your association(& experience) with your old organization.
I do not want to get into legal things
Although legal advice is off-topic here and considering the legal system in India, I would say that you won't stand a chance if you went to court. They could easily prove that they would have paid you at the end of your probation, but you broke the bond and absconded!
In conclusion you have the following options:
1) Talk to the old employer and ask whether it would be possible for them to issue the letter after you paid the bond amount. This would work if you are in a position to pay the amount. You could also ask this amount as sign-on bonus from your next employer(if they agree).
2) Let the HR of the next organization know what really happened. As mentioned before, they don't want to maintain a file of your documents, they need it for BGC. Maybe other documents like your salary slips for that period can suffice.
Wouldn't offering to pay the bond amount after the company withheld incentives be rewarding bad behavior?
– jcm
Apr 7 '16 at 11:18
@jcm I agree but at this point, moving on ahead in his career is more important to the OP. It would be difficult to convince large organizations to offer employment without relieving letter. Sadly this is the established norm in in India
– Vin
Apr 7 '16 at 12:03
suggest improvements |Â
up vote
4
down vote
I left the company breaking the bond which was due in 1 month.
This is where you made the mistake. As mentioned by @Moo, in the comments, the company is not obliged to issue you anything let alone relieving or experience letters.
Now I am applying for another job and were I require relieving letter of that company, but they are not answering me on the same.
In India, IT companies generally ask for relieving letters, not because they want to a maintain a file containing all the documents of each employee. It is generally for the BGC(Background Verification Check) purposes. Even if you submit a letter, they would go back to the company and verify your claims with them.
I have copies of incentives here the company have cheated on me...
You have some documentary proof that you worked in that company, that's good! Assuming you also have your old salary slips, you could use these documents to prove your association(& experience) with your old organization.
I do not want to get into legal things
Although legal advice is off-topic here and considering the legal system in India, I would say that you won't stand a chance if you went to court. They could easily prove that they would have paid you at the end of your probation, but you broke the bond and absconded!
In conclusion you have the following options:
1) Talk to the old employer and ask whether it would be possible for them to issue the letter after you paid the bond amount. This would work if you are in a position to pay the amount. You could also ask this amount as sign-on bonus from your next employer(if they agree).
2) Let the HR of the next organization know what really happened. As mentioned before, they don't want to maintain a file of your documents, they need it for BGC. Maybe other documents like your salary slips for that period can suffice.
Wouldn't offering to pay the bond amount after the company withheld incentives be rewarding bad behavior?
– jcm
Apr 7 '16 at 11:18
@jcm I agree but at this point, moving on ahead in his career is more important to the OP. It would be difficult to convince large organizations to offer employment without relieving letter. Sadly this is the established norm in in India
– Vin
Apr 7 '16 at 12:03
suggest improvements |Â
up vote
4
down vote
up vote
4
down vote
I left the company breaking the bond which was due in 1 month.
This is where you made the mistake. As mentioned by @Moo, in the comments, the company is not obliged to issue you anything let alone relieving or experience letters.
Now I am applying for another job and were I require relieving letter of that company, but they are not answering me on the same.
In India, IT companies generally ask for relieving letters, not because they want to a maintain a file containing all the documents of each employee. It is generally for the BGC(Background Verification Check) purposes. Even if you submit a letter, they would go back to the company and verify your claims with them.
I have copies of incentives here the company have cheated on me...
You have some documentary proof that you worked in that company, that's good! Assuming you also have your old salary slips, you could use these documents to prove your association(& experience) with your old organization.
I do not want to get into legal things
Although legal advice is off-topic here and considering the legal system in India, I would say that you won't stand a chance if you went to court. They could easily prove that they would have paid you at the end of your probation, but you broke the bond and absconded!
In conclusion you have the following options:
1) Talk to the old employer and ask whether it would be possible for them to issue the letter after you paid the bond amount. This would work if you are in a position to pay the amount. You could also ask this amount as sign-on bonus from your next employer(if they agree).
2) Let the HR of the next organization know what really happened. As mentioned before, they don't want to maintain a file of your documents, they need it for BGC. Maybe other documents like your salary slips for that period can suffice.
I left the company breaking the bond which was due in 1 month.
This is where you made the mistake. As mentioned by @Moo, in the comments, the company is not obliged to issue you anything let alone relieving or experience letters.
Now I am applying for another job and were I require relieving letter of that company, but they are not answering me on the same.
In India, IT companies generally ask for relieving letters, not because they want to a maintain a file containing all the documents of each employee. It is generally for the BGC(Background Verification Check) purposes. Even if you submit a letter, they would go back to the company and verify your claims with them.
I have copies of incentives here the company have cheated on me...
You have some documentary proof that you worked in that company, that's good! Assuming you also have your old salary slips, you could use these documents to prove your association(& experience) with your old organization.
I do not want to get into legal things
Although legal advice is off-topic here and considering the legal system in India, I would say that you won't stand a chance if you went to court. They could easily prove that they would have paid you at the end of your probation, but you broke the bond and absconded!
In conclusion you have the following options:
1) Talk to the old employer and ask whether it would be possible for them to issue the letter after you paid the bond amount. This would work if you are in a position to pay the amount. You could also ask this amount as sign-on bonus from your next employer(if they agree).
2) Let the HR of the next organization know what really happened. As mentioned before, they don't want to maintain a file of your documents, they need it for BGC. Maybe other documents like your salary slips for that period can suffice.
answered Apr 7 '16 at 8:53
Vin
17116
17116
Wouldn't offering to pay the bond amount after the company withheld incentives be rewarding bad behavior?
– jcm
Apr 7 '16 at 11:18
@jcm I agree but at this point, moving on ahead in his career is more important to the OP. It would be difficult to convince large organizations to offer employment without relieving letter. Sadly this is the established norm in in India
– Vin
Apr 7 '16 at 12:03
suggest improvements |Â
Wouldn't offering to pay the bond amount after the company withheld incentives be rewarding bad behavior?
– jcm
Apr 7 '16 at 11:18
@jcm I agree but at this point, moving on ahead in his career is more important to the OP. It would be difficult to convince large organizations to offer employment without relieving letter. Sadly this is the established norm in in India
– Vin
Apr 7 '16 at 12:03
Wouldn't offering to pay the bond amount after the company withheld incentives be rewarding bad behavior?
– jcm
Apr 7 '16 at 11:18
Wouldn't offering to pay the bond amount after the company withheld incentives be rewarding bad behavior?
– jcm
Apr 7 '16 at 11:18
@jcm I agree but at this point, moving on ahead in his career is more important to the OP. It would be difficult to convince large organizations to offer employment without relieving letter. Sadly this is the established norm in in India
– Vin
Apr 7 '16 at 12:03
@jcm I agree but at this point, moving on ahead in his career is more important to the OP. It would be difficult to convince large organizations to offer employment without relieving letter. Sadly this is the established norm in in India
– Vin
Apr 7 '16 at 12:03
suggest improvements |Â
up vote
2
down vote
I do not want to get into legal things, and want to get my relieving
letter happily.
Well thats not going to work for you, since you've essentially broken the bond and walked away from them. It may very well be that they owe you nothing, and that you won't get a relieving letter from them.
Maybe you can use old payslips or documentation that you worked there to prove that you in fact did?
suggest improvements |Â
up vote
2
down vote
I do not want to get into legal things, and want to get my relieving
letter happily.
Well thats not going to work for you, since you've essentially broken the bond and walked away from them. It may very well be that they owe you nothing, and that you won't get a relieving letter from them.
Maybe you can use old payslips or documentation that you worked there to prove that you in fact did?
suggest improvements |Â
up vote
2
down vote
up vote
2
down vote
I do not want to get into legal things, and want to get my relieving
letter happily.
Well thats not going to work for you, since you've essentially broken the bond and walked away from them. It may very well be that they owe you nothing, and that you won't get a relieving letter from them.
Maybe you can use old payslips or documentation that you worked there to prove that you in fact did?
I do not want to get into legal things, and want to get my relieving
letter happily.
Well thats not going to work for you, since you've essentially broken the bond and walked away from them. It may very well be that they owe you nothing, and that you won't get a relieving letter from them.
Maybe you can use old payslips or documentation that you worked there to prove that you in fact did?
answered Apr 7 '16 at 8:58


Magisch
16.5k134776
16.5k134776
suggest improvements |Â
suggest improvements |Â
3
You walked away from the company, "breaking the bond" - why would the company issue you a relieving letter in those circumstances? And I am talking regardless of the reasons you left - those are your reasons, not the companies, so you haven't been "relieved", you simply left. You need to get a lawyer involved to sort this out, as having read around I think that is the only way to force a company to issue a relieving letter.
– Moo
Apr 7 '16 at 8:11
1
If they also owe you money from 11 months, plus you'll need a relieving letter, isn't this a good reason to get a lawyer involved? You said you don't want to get into legal things, but...
– Brandin
Apr 7 '16 at 8:34
1
On second look, that particular question isn't that great, but there are a large number of questions relating to not having a relieving letter. One of them should certainly help answer your question.
– David K
Apr 7 '16 at 13:33