Removing fake experience from my resume

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I was searching for jobs for 6 months after I graduated. I signed a contract with a consulting company for 12 months. But after joining, the company faked my resume and submitted me to clients. Now they have sent me to provide services for a client who believes I have more experience than I actually do. All is perfect with the client but the thought of fake resume is killing me. I want to get rid of it and move to another job.



Now when I apply to new jobs I have removed all the entries my company added to my resume. But if the new company does a background check, will I face a problem? Should I explain my situation to the new recruiter?







share|improve this question


















  • 5




    Hey Crusher, welcome to The Workplace. If I were you, I'd strongly consider rewording your question title, as you don't want people to get the wrong idea before they even read your post. Good luck!
    – jmort253♦
    Dec 3 '13 at 20:50










  • Are you still working with the consulting company or did you leave? If you've left how long did you work there? These are details that may matter for those trying to answer this question.
    – JB King
    Dec 3 '13 at 21:13










  • I am still working with the client of the consulting company for the past 6 months and I still have 6 months of contract left with the consulting company.
    – Crusher
    Dec 3 '13 at 21:19






  • 5




    So the consulting company padded your resume with fake experience?
    – Dan Pichelman
    Dec 3 '13 at 21:22






  • 1




    I am not certian how a company makes you go to work for someone else against your will. Did they send some goons to pick you up for work every day while threatening your family should you refuse?
    – IDrinkandIKnowThings
    Dec 4 '13 at 3:44
















up vote
16
down vote

favorite
1












I was searching for jobs for 6 months after I graduated. I signed a contract with a consulting company for 12 months. But after joining, the company faked my resume and submitted me to clients. Now they have sent me to provide services for a client who believes I have more experience than I actually do. All is perfect with the client but the thought of fake resume is killing me. I want to get rid of it and move to another job.



Now when I apply to new jobs I have removed all the entries my company added to my resume. But if the new company does a background check, will I face a problem? Should I explain my situation to the new recruiter?







share|improve this question


















  • 5




    Hey Crusher, welcome to The Workplace. If I were you, I'd strongly consider rewording your question title, as you don't want people to get the wrong idea before they even read your post. Good luck!
    – jmort253♦
    Dec 3 '13 at 20:50










  • Are you still working with the consulting company or did you leave? If you've left how long did you work there? These are details that may matter for those trying to answer this question.
    – JB King
    Dec 3 '13 at 21:13










  • I am still working with the client of the consulting company for the past 6 months and I still have 6 months of contract left with the consulting company.
    – Crusher
    Dec 3 '13 at 21:19






  • 5




    So the consulting company padded your resume with fake experience?
    – Dan Pichelman
    Dec 3 '13 at 21:22






  • 1




    I am not certian how a company makes you go to work for someone else against your will. Did they send some goons to pick you up for work every day while threatening your family should you refuse?
    – IDrinkandIKnowThings
    Dec 4 '13 at 3:44












up vote
16
down vote

favorite
1









up vote
16
down vote

favorite
1






1





I was searching for jobs for 6 months after I graduated. I signed a contract with a consulting company for 12 months. But after joining, the company faked my resume and submitted me to clients. Now they have sent me to provide services for a client who believes I have more experience than I actually do. All is perfect with the client but the thought of fake resume is killing me. I want to get rid of it and move to another job.



Now when I apply to new jobs I have removed all the entries my company added to my resume. But if the new company does a background check, will I face a problem? Should I explain my situation to the new recruiter?







share|improve this question














I was searching for jobs for 6 months after I graduated. I signed a contract with a consulting company for 12 months. But after joining, the company faked my resume and submitted me to clients. Now they have sent me to provide services for a client who believes I have more experience than I actually do. All is perfect with the client but the thought of fake resume is killing me. I want to get rid of it and move to another job.



Now when I apply to new jobs I have removed all the entries my company added to my resume. But if the new company does a background check, will I face a problem? Should I explain my situation to the new recruiter?









share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Dec 5 '13 at 14:43









IDrinkandIKnowThings

43.9k1398188




43.9k1398188










asked Dec 3 '13 at 20:27









Crusher

191128




191128







  • 5




    Hey Crusher, welcome to The Workplace. If I were you, I'd strongly consider rewording your question title, as you don't want people to get the wrong idea before they even read your post. Good luck!
    – jmort253♦
    Dec 3 '13 at 20:50










  • Are you still working with the consulting company or did you leave? If you've left how long did you work there? These are details that may matter for those trying to answer this question.
    – JB King
    Dec 3 '13 at 21:13










  • I am still working with the client of the consulting company for the past 6 months and I still have 6 months of contract left with the consulting company.
    – Crusher
    Dec 3 '13 at 21:19






  • 5




    So the consulting company padded your resume with fake experience?
    – Dan Pichelman
    Dec 3 '13 at 21:22






  • 1




    I am not certian how a company makes you go to work for someone else against your will. Did they send some goons to pick you up for work every day while threatening your family should you refuse?
    – IDrinkandIKnowThings
    Dec 4 '13 at 3:44












  • 5




    Hey Crusher, welcome to The Workplace. If I were you, I'd strongly consider rewording your question title, as you don't want people to get the wrong idea before they even read your post. Good luck!
    – jmort253♦
    Dec 3 '13 at 20:50










  • Are you still working with the consulting company or did you leave? If you've left how long did you work there? These are details that may matter for those trying to answer this question.
    – JB King
    Dec 3 '13 at 21:13










  • I am still working with the client of the consulting company for the past 6 months and I still have 6 months of contract left with the consulting company.
    – Crusher
    Dec 3 '13 at 21:19






  • 5




    So the consulting company padded your resume with fake experience?
    – Dan Pichelman
    Dec 3 '13 at 21:22






  • 1




    I am not certian how a company makes you go to work for someone else against your will. Did they send some goons to pick you up for work every day while threatening your family should you refuse?
    – IDrinkandIKnowThings
    Dec 4 '13 at 3:44







5




5




Hey Crusher, welcome to The Workplace. If I were you, I'd strongly consider rewording your question title, as you don't want people to get the wrong idea before they even read your post. Good luck!
– jmort253♦
Dec 3 '13 at 20:50




Hey Crusher, welcome to The Workplace. If I were you, I'd strongly consider rewording your question title, as you don't want people to get the wrong idea before they even read your post. Good luck!
– jmort253♦
Dec 3 '13 at 20:50












Are you still working with the consulting company or did you leave? If you've left how long did you work there? These are details that may matter for those trying to answer this question.
– JB King
Dec 3 '13 at 21:13




Are you still working with the consulting company or did you leave? If you've left how long did you work there? These are details that may matter for those trying to answer this question.
– JB King
Dec 3 '13 at 21:13












I am still working with the client of the consulting company for the past 6 months and I still have 6 months of contract left with the consulting company.
– Crusher
Dec 3 '13 at 21:19




I am still working with the client of the consulting company for the past 6 months and I still have 6 months of contract left with the consulting company.
– Crusher
Dec 3 '13 at 21:19




5




5




So the consulting company padded your resume with fake experience?
– Dan Pichelman
Dec 3 '13 at 21:22




So the consulting company padded your resume with fake experience?
– Dan Pichelman
Dec 3 '13 at 21:22




1




1




I am not certian how a company makes you go to work for someone else against your will. Did they send some goons to pick you up for work every day while threatening your family should you refuse?
– IDrinkandIKnowThings
Dec 4 '13 at 3:44




I am not certian how a company makes you go to work for someone else against your will. Did they send some goons to pick you up for work every day while threatening your family should you refuse?
– IDrinkandIKnowThings
Dec 4 '13 at 3:44










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
20
down vote



accepted










I would make sure that any new resume you send out (and do not use that consulting company again) is correct with your real experience. In general when people check backgrounds, they care about whether you were employed by who you said on their application you were employed by, doing the job you said you did, during the days you said you were there.



They might also check things like if you really had the degree you claimed and your credit history. They would not see any previous resumes you sent out in the past and would not be likely to ask any questions about them.



If by chance anyone does ever know (perhaps they saw your old resume), then explain that the current resume is correct and the other was changed without your permission and is inaccurate. Most of us have seen how unethical some recruiters are and would understand that.






share|improve this answer






















  • Thanks! My real concern would be how the new HR would think of me saying it frankly. There might be chance that he/she might take it in a negative way.
    – Crusher
    Dec 3 '13 at 22:06






  • 1




    And you may get hit by a bus when you're crossing the street @Crusher, that isn't a good reason to worry about it excessively since you can't control it. HLGEM is spot on -- send out correct information, and if it does come up, be honest and tell them that it was changed without your permission. There aren't really any other options.
    – jmac
    Dec 4 '13 at 0:01

















up vote
7
down vote













When a company does a back ground check they are going to check with your company about the type of employee you were and the type of work you performed at most, and more likely just did you actually work there and the dates. They are not going to compare the resume you give them with the one you gave your previous employer.



It is even possible that your resume is not even on file at your current employer. Once you passed your probation period, there is no value in retaining that information. Many companies destroy the resume as soon as the on-boarding paper work is completed, and some even before.



What ever you do, do not bad mouth the consulting firm that placed you or the company you were placed with. And that includes mentioning that the consulting firm doctored your resume. It just makes you look bad. Be cordial and stick to the good parts of your relationship with both.






share|improve this answer




















  • Good points - the OP is the victim of a strange set of circumstances so there's no reason to dig a deep hole.
    – user8365
    Dec 4 '13 at 18:32










  • @JeffO - It is not as uncommon as it should be. There are many consulting companies that use those types of tactics. At least the doctored resume, and high pressure tactics to accept the offer.
    – IDrinkandIKnowThings
    Dec 5 '13 at 4:52










  • This may be partially conflicting with the answer above: saying that your résumé was changed without your permission, and also not bad-mouthing the consulting firm. I guess the only difference is the first is saying when asked and the second is doing so on your own...
    – cst1992
    Feb 6 at 13:31










  • @cst1992 - That is exactly my point. You can not say that they doctored your resume. It is bad mouthing them, and it will be taken against you. Honestly if you are in a position where you have to justify your resume being doctored you have already lost any chance at the position anyway.
    – IDrinkandIKnowThings
    Feb 6 at 13:57










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2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes








2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes








up vote
20
down vote



accepted










I would make sure that any new resume you send out (and do not use that consulting company again) is correct with your real experience. In general when people check backgrounds, they care about whether you were employed by who you said on their application you were employed by, doing the job you said you did, during the days you said you were there.



They might also check things like if you really had the degree you claimed and your credit history. They would not see any previous resumes you sent out in the past and would not be likely to ask any questions about them.



If by chance anyone does ever know (perhaps they saw your old resume), then explain that the current resume is correct and the other was changed without your permission and is inaccurate. Most of us have seen how unethical some recruiters are and would understand that.






share|improve this answer






















  • Thanks! My real concern would be how the new HR would think of me saying it frankly. There might be chance that he/she might take it in a negative way.
    – Crusher
    Dec 3 '13 at 22:06






  • 1




    And you may get hit by a bus when you're crossing the street @Crusher, that isn't a good reason to worry about it excessively since you can't control it. HLGEM is spot on -- send out correct information, and if it does come up, be honest and tell them that it was changed without your permission. There aren't really any other options.
    – jmac
    Dec 4 '13 at 0:01














up vote
20
down vote



accepted










I would make sure that any new resume you send out (and do not use that consulting company again) is correct with your real experience. In general when people check backgrounds, they care about whether you were employed by who you said on their application you were employed by, doing the job you said you did, during the days you said you were there.



They might also check things like if you really had the degree you claimed and your credit history. They would not see any previous resumes you sent out in the past and would not be likely to ask any questions about them.



If by chance anyone does ever know (perhaps they saw your old resume), then explain that the current resume is correct and the other was changed without your permission and is inaccurate. Most of us have seen how unethical some recruiters are and would understand that.






share|improve this answer






















  • Thanks! My real concern would be how the new HR would think of me saying it frankly. There might be chance that he/she might take it in a negative way.
    – Crusher
    Dec 3 '13 at 22:06






  • 1




    And you may get hit by a bus when you're crossing the street @Crusher, that isn't a good reason to worry about it excessively since you can't control it. HLGEM is spot on -- send out correct information, and if it does come up, be honest and tell them that it was changed without your permission. There aren't really any other options.
    – jmac
    Dec 4 '13 at 0:01












up vote
20
down vote



accepted







up vote
20
down vote



accepted






I would make sure that any new resume you send out (and do not use that consulting company again) is correct with your real experience. In general when people check backgrounds, they care about whether you were employed by who you said on their application you were employed by, doing the job you said you did, during the days you said you were there.



They might also check things like if you really had the degree you claimed and your credit history. They would not see any previous resumes you sent out in the past and would not be likely to ask any questions about them.



If by chance anyone does ever know (perhaps they saw your old resume), then explain that the current resume is correct and the other was changed without your permission and is inaccurate. Most of us have seen how unethical some recruiters are and would understand that.






share|improve this answer














I would make sure that any new resume you send out (and do not use that consulting company again) is correct with your real experience. In general when people check backgrounds, they care about whether you were employed by who you said on their application you were employed by, doing the job you said you did, during the days you said you were there.



They might also check things like if you really had the degree you claimed and your credit history. They would not see any previous resumes you sent out in the past and would not be likely to ask any questions about them.



If by chance anyone does ever know (perhaps they saw your old resume), then explain that the current resume is correct and the other was changed without your permission and is inaccurate. Most of us have seen how unethical some recruiters are and would understand that.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Dec 4 '13 at 8:24









gnat

3,23373066




3,23373066










answered Dec 3 '13 at 21:30









HLGEM

133k25227489




133k25227489











  • Thanks! My real concern would be how the new HR would think of me saying it frankly. There might be chance that he/she might take it in a negative way.
    – Crusher
    Dec 3 '13 at 22:06






  • 1




    And you may get hit by a bus when you're crossing the street @Crusher, that isn't a good reason to worry about it excessively since you can't control it. HLGEM is spot on -- send out correct information, and if it does come up, be honest and tell them that it was changed without your permission. There aren't really any other options.
    – jmac
    Dec 4 '13 at 0:01
















  • Thanks! My real concern would be how the new HR would think of me saying it frankly. There might be chance that he/she might take it in a negative way.
    – Crusher
    Dec 3 '13 at 22:06






  • 1




    And you may get hit by a bus when you're crossing the street @Crusher, that isn't a good reason to worry about it excessively since you can't control it. HLGEM is spot on -- send out correct information, and if it does come up, be honest and tell them that it was changed without your permission. There aren't really any other options.
    – jmac
    Dec 4 '13 at 0:01















Thanks! My real concern would be how the new HR would think of me saying it frankly. There might be chance that he/she might take it in a negative way.
– Crusher
Dec 3 '13 at 22:06




Thanks! My real concern would be how the new HR would think of me saying it frankly. There might be chance that he/she might take it in a negative way.
– Crusher
Dec 3 '13 at 22:06




1




1




And you may get hit by a bus when you're crossing the street @Crusher, that isn't a good reason to worry about it excessively since you can't control it. HLGEM is spot on -- send out correct information, and if it does come up, be honest and tell them that it was changed without your permission. There aren't really any other options.
– jmac
Dec 4 '13 at 0:01




And you may get hit by a bus when you're crossing the street @Crusher, that isn't a good reason to worry about it excessively since you can't control it. HLGEM is spot on -- send out correct information, and if it does come up, be honest and tell them that it was changed without your permission. There aren't really any other options.
– jmac
Dec 4 '13 at 0:01












up vote
7
down vote













When a company does a back ground check they are going to check with your company about the type of employee you were and the type of work you performed at most, and more likely just did you actually work there and the dates. They are not going to compare the resume you give them with the one you gave your previous employer.



It is even possible that your resume is not even on file at your current employer. Once you passed your probation period, there is no value in retaining that information. Many companies destroy the resume as soon as the on-boarding paper work is completed, and some even before.



What ever you do, do not bad mouth the consulting firm that placed you or the company you were placed with. And that includes mentioning that the consulting firm doctored your resume. It just makes you look bad. Be cordial and stick to the good parts of your relationship with both.






share|improve this answer




















  • Good points - the OP is the victim of a strange set of circumstances so there's no reason to dig a deep hole.
    – user8365
    Dec 4 '13 at 18:32










  • @JeffO - It is not as uncommon as it should be. There are many consulting companies that use those types of tactics. At least the doctored resume, and high pressure tactics to accept the offer.
    – IDrinkandIKnowThings
    Dec 5 '13 at 4:52










  • This may be partially conflicting with the answer above: saying that your résumé was changed without your permission, and also not bad-mouthing the consulting firm. I guess the only difference is the first is saying when asked and the second is doing so on your own...
    – cst1992
    Feb 6 at 13:31










  • @cst1992 - That is exactly my point. You can not say that they doctored your resume. It is bad mouthing them, and it will be taken against you. Honestly if you are in a position where you have to justify your resume being doctored you have already lost any chance at the position anyway.
    – IDrinkandIKnowThings
    Feb 6 at 13:57














up vote
7
down vote













When a company does a back ground check they are going to check with your company about the type of employee you were and the type of work you performed at most, and more likely just did you actually work there and the dates. They are not going to compare the resume you give them with the one you gave your previous employer.



It is even possible that your resume is not even on file at your current employer. Once you passed your probation period, there is no value in retaining that information. Many companies destroy the resume as soon as the on-boarding paper work is completed, and some even before.



What ever you do, do not bad mouth the consulting firm that placed you or the company you were placed with. And that includes mentioning that the consulting firm doctored your resume. It just makes you look bad. Be cordial and stick to the good parts of your relationship with both.






share|improve this answer




















  • Good points - the OP is the victim of a strange set of circumstances so there's no reason to dig a deep hole.
    – user8365
    Dec 4 '13 at 18:32










  • @JeffO - It is not as uncommon as it should be. There are many consulting companies that use those types of tactics. At least the doctored resume, and high pressure tactics to accept the offer.
    – IDrinkandIKnowThings
    Dec 5 '13 at 4:52










  • This may be partially conflicting with the answer above: saying that your résumé was changed without your permission, and also not bad-mouthing the consulting firm. I guess the only difference is the first is saying when asked and the second is doing so on your own...
    – cst1992
    Feb 6 at 13:31










  • @cst1992 - That is exactly my point. You can not say that they doctored your resume. It is bad mouthing them, and it will be taken against you. Honestly if you are in a position where you have to justify your resume being doctored you have already lost any chance at the position anyway.
    – IDrinkandIKnowThings
    Feb 6 at 13:57












up vote
7
down vote










up vote
7
down vote









When a company does a back ground check they are going to check with your company about the type of employee you were and the type of work you performed at most, and more likely just did you actually work there and the dates. They are not going to compare the resume you give them with the one you gave your previous employer.



It is even possible that your resume is not even on file at your current employer. Once you passed your probation period, there is no value in retaining that information. Many companies destroy the resume as soon as the on-boarding paper work is completed, and some even before.



What ever you do, do not bad mouth the consulting firm that placed you or the company you were placed with. And that includes mentioning that the consulting firm doctored your resume. It just makes you look bad. Be cordial and stick to the good parts of your relationship with both.






share|improve this answer












When a company does a back ground check they are going to check with your company about the type of employee you were and the type of work you performed at most, and more likely just did you actually work there and the dates. They are not going to compare the resume you give them with the one you gave your previous employer.



It is even possible that your resume is not even on file at your current employer. Once you passed your probation period, there is no value in retaining that information. Many companies destroy the resume as soon as the on-boarding paper work is completed, and some even before.



What ever you do, do not bad mouth the consulting firm that placed you or the company you were placed with. And that includes mentioning that the consulting firm doctored your resume. It just makes you look bad. Be cordial and stick to the good parts of your relationship with both.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Dec 4 '13 at 3:52









IDrinkandIKnowThings

43.9k1398188




43.9k1398188











  • Good points - the OP is the victim of a strange set of circumstances so there's no reason to dig a deep hole.
    – user8365
    Dec 4 '13 at 18:32










  • @JeffO - It is not as uncommon as it should be. There are many consulting companies that use those types of tactics. At least the doctored resume, and high pressure tactics to accept the offer.
    – IDrinkandIKnowThings
    Dec 5 '13 at 4:52










  • This may be partially conflicting with the answer above: saying that your résumé was changed without your permission, and also not bad-mouthing the consulting firm. I guess the only difference is the first is saying when asked and the second is doing so on your own...
    – cst1992
    Feb 6 at 13:31










  • @cst1992 - That is exactly my point. You can not say that they doctored your resume. It is bad mouthing them, and it will be taken against you. Honestly if you are in a position where you have to justify your resume being doctored you have already lost any chance at the position anyway.
    – IDrinkandIKnowThings
    Feb 6 at 13:57
















  • Good points - the OP is the victim of a strange set of circumstances so there's no reason to dig a deep hole.
    – user8365
    Dec 4 '13 at 18:32










  • @JeffO - It is not as uncommon as it should be. There are many consulting companies that use those types of tactics. At least the doctored resume, and high pressure tactics to accept the offer.
    – IDrinkandIKnowThings
    Dec 5 '13 at 4:52










  • This may be partially conflicting with the answer above: saying that your résumé was changed without your permission, and also not bad-mouthing the consulting firm. I guess the only difference is the first is saying when asked and the second is doing so on your own...
    – cst1992
    Feb 6 at 13:31










  • @cst1992 - That is exactly my point. You can not say that they doctored your resume. It is bad mouthing them, and it will be taken against you. Honestly if you are in a position where you have to justify your resume being doctored you have already lost any chance at the position anyway.
    – IDrinkandIKnowThings
    Feb 6 at 13:57















Good points - the OP is the victim of a strange set of circumstances so there's no reason to dig a deep hole.
– user8365
Dec 4 '13 at 18:32




Good points - the OP is the victim of a strange set of circumstances so there's no reason to dig a deep hole.
– user8365
Dec 4 '13 at 18:32












@JeffO - It is not as uncommon as it should be. There are many consulting companies that use those types of tactics. At least the doctored resume, and high pressure tactics to accept the offer.
– IDrinkandIKnowThings
Dec 5 '13 at 4:52




@JeffO - It is not as uncommon as it should be. There are many consulting companies that use those types of tactics. At least the doctored resume, and high pressure tactics to accept the offer.
– IDrinkandIKnowThings
Dec 5 '13 at 4:52












This may be partially conflicting with the answer above: saying that your résumé was changed without your permission, and also not bad-mouthing the consulting firm. I guess the only difference is the first is saying when asked and the second is doing so on your own...
– cst1992
Feb 6 at 13:31




This may be partially conflicting with the answer above: saying that your résumé was changed without your permission, and also not bad-mouthing the consulting firm. I guess the only difference is the first is saying when asked and the second is doing so on your own...
– cst1992
Feb 6 at 13:31












@cst1992 - That is exactly my point. You can not say that they doctored your resume. It is bad mouthing them, and it will be taken against you. Honestly if you are in a position where you have to justify your resume being doctored you have already lost any chance at the position anyway.
– IDrinkandIKnowThings
Feb 6 at 13:57




@cst1992 - That is exactly my point. You can not say that they doctored your resume. It is bad mouthing them, and it will be taken against you. Honestly if you are in a position where you have to justify your resume being doctored you have already lost any chance at the position anyway.
– IDrinkandIKnowThings
Feb 6 at 13:57












 

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