How do I handle informing a potential employer that I was fired from my last job?

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So, I applied to a company, but only listed years in my resume. I was fired from my last job (which I was at for slightly less than 6 months) about 8 months ago.



I organised an overseas trip and I was away for a few months. I haven't done anything related to my career apart from two small projects.



One of their HR people asked me before about the months, which I emailed to them. I didn't hear back from then, but two months later I learned that my application had been submitted to another position. I then had a phone interview, where I surprisingly wasn't. I then had a phone conversation with HR talking about arranging an on-site interview, where they asked me for dates that I am free and also to send information about the months and any gap greater than 3 months. Apparently, they hadn't been forwarded the months.



  1. Any advice about what I should say for this gap?

  2. Should I just send the dates, or should I pre-emptively let them know that I was fired and why? Obviously, I'd prefer to be asked during an interview, rather than over email, but when they run on-site interviews, it's typically about half-a-day. That is a big time commitment, so they may ask over email.






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  • It depends what they asked about the Months/gaps. Always be honest, but be positive. Expect to be asked about being fired and how you used this time; think hard about good reasons to give. Explain why your choices of what to do show you're a good candidate for the new job.
    – AndrewC
    Nov 6 '12 at 12:15










  • also to send information about the months and any gap greater than 3 months. Apparently, they hadn't been forwarded the months. this doesn't make sense. If they knew to ask about the time, they clearly were forwarded the months (or at least knew enough to ask).
    – Elysian Fields♦
    Nov 6 '12 at 13:04











  • @enderland - This is a standard background check. What they are mostly looking for is time spent in jail, or jobs you worked but did not declare. These are red flags in back ground checks.
    – IDrinkandIKnowThings
    Nov 6 '12 at 14:53
















up vote
7
down vote

favorite
1












So, I applied to a company, but only listed years in my resume. I was fired from my last job (which I was at for slightly less than 6 months) about 8 months ago.



I organised an overseas trip and I was away for a few months. I haven't done anything related to my career apart from two small projects.



One of their HR people asked me before about the months, which I emailed to them. I didn't hear back from then, but two months later I learned that my application had been submitted to another position. I then had a phone interview, where I surprisingly wasn't. I then had a phone conversation with HR talking about arranging an on-site interview, where they asked me for dates that I am free and also to send information about the months and any gap greater than 3 months. Apparently, they hadn't been forwarded the months.



  1. Any advice about what I should say for this gap?

  2. Should I just send the dates, or should I pre-emptively let them know that I was fired and why? Obviously, I'd prefer to be asked during an interview, rather than over email, but when they run on-site interviews, it's typically about half-a-day. That is a big time commitment, so they may ask over email.






share|improve this question






















  • It depends what they asked about the Months/gaps. Always be honest, but be positive. Expect to be asked about being fired and how you used this time; think hard about good reasons to give. Explain why your choices of what to do show you're a good candidate for the new job.
    – AndrewC
    Nov 6 '12 at 12:15










  • also to send information about the months and any gap greater than 3 months. Apparently, they hadn't been forwarded the months. this doesn't make sense. If they knew to ask about the time, they clearly were forwarded the months (or at least knew enough to ask).
    – Elysian Fields♦
    Nov 6 '12 at 13:04











  • @enderland - This is a standard background check. What they are mostly looking for is time spent in jail, or jobs you worked but did not declare. These are red flags in back ground checks.
    – IDrinkandIKnowThings
    Nov 6 '12 at 14:53












up vote
7
down vote

favorite
1









up vote
7
down vote

favorite
1






1





So, I applied to a company, but only listed years in my resume. I was fired from my last job (which I was at for slightly less than 6 months) about 8 months ago.



I organised an overseas trip and I was away for a few months. I haven't done anything related to my career apart from two small projects.



One of their HR people asked me before about the months, which I emailed to them. I didn't hear back from then, but two months later I learned that my application had been submitted to another position. I then had a phone interview, where I surprisingly wasn't. I then had a phone conversation with HR talking about arranging an on-site interview, where they asked me for dates that I am free and also to send information about the months and any gap greater than 3 months. Apparently, they hadn't been forwarded the months.



  1. Any advice about what I should say for this gap?

  2. Should I just send the dates, or should I pre-emptively let them know that I was fired and why? Obviously, I'd prefer to be asked during an interview, rather than over email, but when they run on-site interviews, it's typically about half-a-day. That is a big time commitment, so they may ask over email.






share|improve this question














So, I applied to a company, but only listed years in my resume. I was fired from my last job (which I was at for slightly less than 6 months) about 8 months ago.



I organised an overseas trip and I was away for a few months. I haven't done anything related to my career apart from two small projects.



One of their HR people asked me before about the months, which I emailed to them. I didn't hear back from then, but two months later I learned that my application had been submitted to another position. I then had a phone interview, where I surprisingly wasn't. I then had a phone conversation with HR talking about arranging an on-site interview, where they asked me for dates that I am free and also to send information about the months and any gap greater than 3 months. Apparently, they hadn't been forwarded the months.



  1. Any advice about what I should say for this gap?

  2. Should I just send the dates, or should I pre-emptively let them know that I was fired and why? Obviously, I'd prefer to be asked during an interview, rather than over email, but when they run on-site interviews, it's typically about half-a-day. That is a big time commitment, so they may ask over email.








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edited Nov 21 '12 at 13:14

























asked Nov 6 '12 at 2:00









user4796

363




363











  • It depends what they asked about the Months/gaps. Always be honest, but be positive. Expect to be asked about being fired and how you used this time; think hard about good reasons to give. Explain why your choices of what to do show you're a good candidate for the new job.
    – AndrewC
    Nov 6 '12 at 12:15










  • also to send information about the months and any gap greater than 3 months. Apparently, they hadn't been forwarded the months. this doesn't make sense. If they knew to ask about the time, they clearly were forwarded the months (or at least knew enough to ask).
    – Elysian Fields♦
    Nov 6 '12 at 13:04











  • @enderland - This is a standard background check. What they are mostly looking for is time spent in jail, or jobs you worked but did not declare. These are red flags in back ground checks.
    – IDrinkandIKnowThings
    Nov 6 '12 at 14:53
















  • It depends what they asked about the Months/gaps. Always be honest, but be positive. Expect to be asked about being fired and how you used this time; think hard about good reasons to give. Explain why your choices of what to do show you're a good candidate for the new job.
    – AndrewC
    Nov 6 '12 at 12:15










  • also to send information about the months and any gap greater than 3 months. Apparently, they hadn't been forwarded the months. this doesn't make sense. If they knew to ask about the time, they clearly were forwarded the months (or at least knew enough to ask).
    – Elysian Fields♦
    Nov 6 '12 at 13:04











  • @enderland - This is a standard background check. What they are mostly looking for is time spent in jail, or jobs you worked but did not declare. These are red flags in back ground checks.
    – IDrinkandIKnowThings
    Nov 6 '12 at 14:53















It depends what they asked about the Months/gaps. Always be honest, but be positive. Expect to be asked about being fired and how you used this time; think hard about good reasons to give. Explain why your choices of what to do show you're a good candidate for the new job.
– AndrewC
Nov 6 '12 at 12:15




It depends what they asked about the Months/gaps. Always be honest, but be positive. Expect to be asked about being fired and how you used this time; think hard about good reasons to give. Explain why your choices of what to do show you're a good candidate for the new job.
– AndrewC
Nov 6 '12 at 12:15












also to send information about the months and any gap greater than 3 months. Apparently, they hadn't been forwarded the months. this doesn't make sense. If they knew to ask about the time, they clearly were forwarded the months (or at least knew enough to ask).
– Elysian Fields♦
Nov 6 '12 at 13:04





also to send information about the months and any gap greater than 3 months. Apparently, they hadn't been forwarded the months. this doesn't make sense. If they knew to ask about the time, they clearly were forwarded the months (or at least knew enough to ask).
– Elysian Fields♦
Nov 6 '12 at 13:04













@enderland - This is a standard background check. What they are mostly looking for is time spent in jail, or jobs you worked but did not declare. These are red flags in back ground checks.
– IDrinkandIKnowThings
Nov 6 '12 at 14:53




@enderland - This is a standard background check. What they are mostly looking for is time spent in jail, or jobs you worked but did not declare. These are red flags in back ground checks.
– IDrinkandIKnowThings
Nov 6 '12 at 14:53










1 Answer
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12
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I think the way to approach this is to honestly answer the question you've been asked. That answer could be along the lines of "after leaving my last position, I took the opportunity for some travel, and then did some volunteer work for a couple of non-profits." How that gap will be perceived may also depend on your employment history before your last gig - if you have one 8-month gig after a series of longer stints, it may get written off as an outlier.



They may or may not get around to asking why you left your previous position, and you'll want to make sure you have a good response to that. But they haven't asked you yet, and unless you think the answer makes you look really good, you don't need to answer that question yet.






share|improve this answer
















  • 1




    Why does everyone mention volunteer work as part of a gap period? Seriously, it's as if is the only thing worth doing, just because it looks good on your resume
    – Maria Ines Parnisari
    Apr 12 '14 at 23:33










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1 Answer
1






active

oldest

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1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes








up vote
12
down vote













I think the way to approach this is to honestly answer the question you've been asked. That answer could be along the lines of "after leaving my last position, I took the opportunity for some travel, and then did some volunteer work for a couple of non-profits." How that gap will be perceived may also depend on your employment history before your last gig - if you have one 8-month gig after a series of longer stints, it may get written off as an outlier.



They may or may not get around to asking why you left your previous position, and you'll want to make sure you have a good response to that. But they haven't asked you yet, and unless you think the answer makes you look really good, you don't need to answer that question yet.






share|improve this answer
















  • 1




    Why does everyone mention volunteer work as part of a gap period? Seriously, it's as if is the only thing worth doing, just because it looks good on your resume
    – Maria Ines Parnisari
    Apr 12 '14 at 23:33














up vote
12
down vote













I think the way to approach this is to honestly answer the question you've been asked. That answer could be along the lines of "after leaving my last position, I took the opportunity for some travel, and then did some volunteer work for a couple of non-profits." How that gap will be perceived may also depend on your employment history before your last gig - if you have one 8-month gig after a series of longer stints, it may get written off as an outlier.



They may or may not get around to asking why you left your previous position, and you'll want to make sure you have a good response to that. But they haven't asked you yet, and unless you think the answer makes you look really good, you don't need to answer that question yet.






share|improve this answer
















  • 1




    Why does everyone mention volunteer work as part of a gap period? Seriously, it's as if is the only thing worth doing, just because it looks good on your resume
    – Maria Ines Parnisari
    Apr 12 '14 at 23:33












up vote
12
down vote










up vote
12
down vote









I think the way to approach this is to honestly answer the question you've been asked. That answer could be along the lines of "after leaving my last position, I took the opportunity for some travel, and then did some volunteer work for a couple of non-profits." How that gap will be perceived may also depend on your employment history before your last gig - if you have one 8-month gig after a series of longer stints, it may get written off as an outlier.



They may or may not get around to asking why you left your previous position, and you'll want to make sure you have a good response to that. But they haven't asked you yet, and unless you think the answer makes you look really good, you don't need to answer that question yet.






share|improve this answer












I think the way to approach this is to honestly answer the question you've been asked. That answer could be along the lines of "after leaving my last position, I took the opportunity for some travel, and then did some volunteer work for a couple of non-profits." How that gap will be perceived may also depend on your employment history before your last gig - if you have one 8-month gig after a series of longer stints, it may get written off as an outlier.



They may or may not get around to asking why you left your previous position, and you'll want to make sure you have a good response to that. But they haven't asked you yet, and unless you think the answer makes you look really good, you don't need to answer that question yet.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Nov 6 '12 at 2:24









dpassage

33015




33015







  • 1




    Why does everyone mention volunteer work as part of a gap period? Seriously, it's as if is the only thing worth doing, just because it looks good on your resume
    – Maria Ines Parnisari
    Apr 12 '14 at 23:33












  • 1




    Why does everyone mention volunteer work as part of a gap period? Seriously, it's as if is the only thing worth doing, just because it looks good on your resume
    – Maria Ines Parnisari
    Apr 12 '14 at 23:33







1




1




Why does everyone mention volunteer work as part of a gap period? Seriously, it's as if is the only thing worth doing, just because it looks good on your resume
– Maria Ines Parnisari
Apr 12 '14 at 23:33




Why does everyone mention volunteer work as part of a gap period? Seriously, it's as if is the only thing worth doing, just because it looks good on your resume
– Maria Ines Parnisari
Apr 12 '14 at 23:33












 

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