What is the accepted method of indicating a company being acquired on a resume?

The name of the pictureThe name of the pictureThe name of the pictureClash Royale CLAN TAG#URR8PPP





.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty margin-bottom:0;







up vote
20
down vote

favorite
4












For conditions where you are presently employed at a company that has been acquired and your job (title, responsibilities, assignment) has not changed because of the acquisition, what is the best way to indicate this on a resume?



When a company that you have previously worked at has been acquired (or otherwise changes names), what is the best way to indicate this on a resume? Should you continue to indicate the name of the organization as it was when you worked there or change it to match the current name of the organization?



Finally, does the format have a difference in how an acquisition is treated on a resume? Does a paper resume have different conventions than an electronic resume (such as Stack Overflow Careers or LinkedIn)?







share|improve this question




























    up vote
    20
    down vote

    favorite
    4












    For conditions where you are presently employed at a company that has been acquired and your job (title, responsibilities, assignment) has not changed because of the acquisition, what is the best way to indicate this on a resume?



    When a company that you have previously worked at has been acquired (or otherwise changes names), what is the best way to indicate this on a resume? Should you continue to indicate the name of the organization as it was when you worked there or change it to match the current name of the organization?



    Finally, does the format have a difference in how an acquisition is treated on a resume? Does a paper resume have different conventions than an electronic resume (such as Stack Overflow Careers or LinkedIn)?







    share|improve this question
























      up vote
      20
      down vote

      favorite
      4









      up vote
      20
      down vote

      favorite
      4






      4





      For conditions where you are presently employed at a company that has been acquired and your job (title, responsibilities, assignment) has not changed because of the acquisition, what is the best way to indicate this on a resume?



      When a company that you have previously worked at has been acquired (or otherwise changes names), what is the best way to indicate this on a resume? Should you continue to indicate the name of the organization as it was when you worked there or change it to match the current name of the organization?



      Finally, does the format have a difference in how an acquisition is treated on a resume? Does a paper resume have different conventions than an electronic resume (such as Stack Overflow Careers or LinkedIn)?







      share|improve this question














      For conditions where you are presently employed at a company that has been acquired and your job (title, responsibilities, assignment) has not changed because of the acquisition, what is the best way to indicate this on a resume?



      When a company that you have previously worked at has been acquired (or otherwise changes names), what is the best way to indicate this on a resume? Should you continue to indicate the name of the organization as it was when you worked there or change it to match the current name of the organization?



      Finally, does the format have a difference in how an acquisition is treated on a resume? Does a paper resume have different conventions than an electronic resume (such as Stack Overflow Careers or LinkedIn)?









      share|improve this question













      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question








      edited Aug 5 '14 at 21:11









      Rhys

      5,73623558




      5,73623558










      asked Jul 27 '12 at 22:34









      Thomas Owens

      13.4k45368




      13.4k45368




















          3 Answers
          3






          active

          oldest

          votes

















          up vote
          21
          down vote













          The broad rule is: Always use the same name in the title as is present on your job experience letter(or certificate). Use the newer/older name in brackets, preferably qualified with a small description.



          So if you joined OldCorp inc. and it was changed to NewCorp Inc. before you left(or, you are in the process of leaving), my preffered style would be:




          Company: NewCorp Inc. (previously known as OldCorp Inc.)



          Location: My City.




          If you left before the company before the name change:




          Company: OldCorp Inc. (now known as NewCorp Inc.)



          Location: My City.




          In case of mergers too the same rule applies. If LittleCorp was aquired by MegaCorp before you left:




          Company: MegaCorp Inc. (merged from LittleCorp Inc.)



          Location:



          Description: (mention your date of joining in LittleCorp and the date of merger in a brief history, along with any designation changes.)




          otherwise




          Company: LittleCorp Inc. (acquired by MegaCorp Inc.)




          In case of multiple name changes , you dont need to mention all of them in the title. You may do it in the description but it isn't really necessary. Just include the final name in the title.




          Company: LittleCorp Inc. (now part of MegaCorp Inc.)







          share|improve this answer






















          • This is how I handle it as well.
            – HLGEM
            Jul 30 '12 at 21:55






          • 1




            I'm not sure what a "job experience letter (or certificate)" is. I've never had or needed such a thing. Prospective employers might contact previous employers to verify my employment, but there's no formal "certificate" that I'm aware of. Perhaps it's a regional thing (I'm in the US).
            – Keith Thompson
            Apr 9 '14 at 16:04










          • "In case of multiple name changes , you dont need to mention all of them in the title." One exception would be if any of the previous names are highly recognized or reputable in your industry while the new name(s) may not be.
            – Lilienthal♦
            Sep 9 '15 at 11:24










          • What should you do if this happens more than once. Nested brackets or just more info.
            – Jeremy French
            Sep 22 '16 at 16:07

















          up vote
          12
          down vote













          I don't know if there's a standard format for this, but I just added a brief explanation after the name of the company (which had 4 different names while I worked there, and has a 5th name now):



          Name4 YYYY-YYYY
          City, State
          (Name4 was previously known as Name3, Name2, and Name1, and is now part of Name5.)





          share|improve this answer






















          • This appears to work for both paper and electronic resumes (and actually how I've done it so far), but it doesn't address the second question. If you are no longer employed at the company, do you still update the name? Or would it be more acceptable to leave the name as it was when you worked there and use a note to indicate it now has a new name?
            – Thomas Owens
            Jul 28 '12 at 8:57










          • The company was Name1 when I started, and Name4 when I left. I used Name4 as the primary name (on the top line). The note mentions all five names, including the one it acquired after I left. I wouldn't use Name5 as the primary name, because I never worked at Name5. (All four name changes were the result of mergers; perhaps my resume should make that clearer.)
            – Keith Thompson
            Jul 28 '12 at 9:10







          • 1




            @KeithThompson, If that company becomes name6, what would you do when you update your resume next time?
            – scaaahu
            Jul 28 '12 at 9:43







          • 3




            @ThomasOwens: In my case, the 5 names take up just 1-2 lines on my resume. I've never heard of a company going through so many mergers and/or name changes that it would be a problem. But if it does, I suppose you could limit it to (1) the name the company had when you started, (2) the name it had when you left, and (3) the name it has now, so prospective employers can check the company's current web site. But I really don't think there needs to be a general rule.
            – Keith Thompson
            Jul 29 '12 at 0:25






          • 1




            @Frustrated: I didn't bother documenting the years of the name changes; it didn't seem relevant.
            – Keith Thompson
            Jul 30 '12 at 18:16

















          up vote
          2
          down vote













          If I've survived an acquisition, I list both company names:




          Tiny Startup / Humongous Corporation




          (I don't list past employers' addresses on my resume.)



          If your title changed, you can list both:




          Coding God / Junior Ant Farm Engineer (Dilbert Comic)




          or the final one, or the less ridiculous one.



          Unlike DPD, I rarely list the new name of a past employer has changed its name. I just list the name of the company as it was when I worked there:




          Best Company Ever (now known as Defunct Hopeless Failure)



          Best Company Ever







          share|improve this answer






















            Your Answer







            StackExchange.ready(function()
            var channelOptions =
            tags: "".split(" "),
            id: "423"
            ;
            initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);

            StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function()
            // Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
            if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled)
            StackExchange.using("snippets", function()
            createEditor();
            );

            else
            createEditor();

            );

            function createEditor()
            StackExchange.prepareEditor(
            heartbeatType: 'answer',
            convertImagesToLinks: false,
            noModals: false,
            showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
            reputationToPostImages: null,
            bindNavPrevention: true,
            postfix: "",
            noCode: true, onDemand: false,
            discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
            ,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
            );



            );








             

            draft saved


            draft discarded


















            StackExchange.ready(
            function ()
            StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fworkplace.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f2884%2fwhat-is-the-accepted-method-of-indicating-a-company-being-acquired-on-a-resume%23new-answer', 'question_page');

            );

            Post as a guest

























            StackExchange.ready(function ()
            $("#show-editor-button input, #show-editor-button button").click(function ()
            var showEditor = function()
            $("#show-editor-button").hide();
            $("#post-form").removeClass("dno");
            StackExchange.editor.finallyInit();
            ;

            var useFancy = $(this).data('confirm-use-fancy');
            if(useFancy == 'True')
            var popupTitle = $(this).data('confirm-fancy-title');
            var popupBody = $(this).data('confirm-fancy-body');
            var popupAccept = $(this).data('confirm-fancy-accept-button');

            $(this).loadPopup(
            url: '/post/self-answer-popup',
            loaded: function(popup)
            var pTitle = $(popup).find('h2');
            var pBody = $(popup).find('.popup-body');
            var pSubmit = $(popup).find('.popup-submit');

            pTitle.text(popupTitle);
            pBody.html(popupBody);
            pSubmit.val(popupAccept).click(showEditor);

            )
            else
            var confirmText = $(this).data('confirm-text');
            if (confirmText ? confirm(confirmText) : true)
            showEditor();


            );
            );






            3 Answers
            3






            active

            oldest

            votes








            3 Answers
            3






            active

            oldest

            votes









            active

            oldest

            votes






            active

            oldest

            votes








            up vote
            21
            down vote













            The broad rule is: Always use the same name in the title as is present on your job experience letter(or certificate). Use the newer/older name in brackets, preferably qualified with a small description.



            So if you joined OldCorp inc. and it was changed to NewCorp Inc. before you left(or, you are in the process of leaving), my preffered style would be:




            Company: NewCorp Inc. (previously known as OldCorp Inc.)



            Location: My City.




            If you left before the company before the name change:




            Company: OldCorp Inc. (now known as NewCorp Inc.)



            Location: My City.




            In case of mergers too the same rule applies. If LittleCorp was aquired by MegaCorp before you left:




            Company: MegaCorp Inc. (merged from LittleCorp Inc.)



            Location:



            Description: (mention your date of joining in LittleCorp and the date of merger in a brief history, along with any designation changes.)




            otherwise




            Company: LittleCorp Inc. (acquired by MegaCorp Inc.)




            In case of multiple name changes , you dont need to mention all of them in the title. You may do it in the description but it isn't really necessary. Just include the final name in the title.




            Company: LittleCorp Inc. (now part of MegaCorp Inc.)







            share|improve this answer






















            • This is how I handle it as well.
              – HLGEM
              Jul 30 '12 at 21:55






            • 1




              I'm not sure what a "job experience letter (or certificate)" is. I've never had or needed such a thing. Prospective employers might contact previous employers to verify my employment, but there's no formal "certificate" that I'm aware of. Perhaps it's a regional thing (I'm in the US).
              – Keith Thompson
              Apr 9 '14 at 16:04










            • "In case of multiple name changes , you dont need to mention all of them in the title." One exception would be if any of the previous names are highly recognized or reputable in your industry while the new name(s) may not be.
              – Lilienthal♦
              Sep 9 '15 at 11:24










            • What should you do if this happens more than once. Nested brackets or just more info.
              – Jeremy French
              Sep 22 '16 at 16:07














            up vote
            21
            down vote













            The broad rule is: Always use the same name in the title as is present on your job experience letter(or certificate). Use the newer/older name in brackets, preferably qualified with a small description.



            So if you joined OldCorp inc. and it was changed to NewCorp Inc. before you left(or, you are in the process of leaving), my preffered style would be:




            Company: NewCorp Inc. (previously known as OldCorp Inc.)



            Location: My City.




            If you left before the company before the name change:




            Company: OldCorp Inc. (now known as NewCorp Inc.)



            Location: My City.




            In case of mergers too the same rule applies. If LittleCorp was aquired by MegaCorp before you left:




            Company: MegaCorp Inc. (merged from LittleCorp Inc.)



            Location:



            Description: (mention your date of joining in LittleCorp and the date of merger in a brief history, along with any designation changes.)




            otherwise




            Company: LittleCorp Inc. (acquired by MegaCorp Inc.)




            In case of multiple name changes , you dont need to mention all of them in the title. You may do it in the description but it isn't really necessary. Just include the final name in the title.




            Company: LittleCorp Inc. (now part of MegaCorp Inc.)







            share|improve this answer






















            • This is how I handle it as well.
              – HLGEM
              Jul 30 '12 at 21:55






            • 1




              I'm not sure what a "job experience letter (or certificate)" is. I've never had or needed such a thing. Prospective employers might contact previous employers to verify my employment, but there's no formal "certificate" that I'm aware of. Perhaps it's a regional thing (I'm in the US).
              – Keith Thompson
              Apr 9 '14 at 16:04










            • "In case of multiple name changes , you dont need to mention all of them in the title." One exception would be if any of the previous names are highly recognized or reputable in your industry while the new name(s) may not be.
              – Lilienthal♦
              Sep 9 '15 at 11:24










            • What should you do if this happens more than once. Nested brackets or just more info.
              – Jeremy French
              Sep 22 '16 at 16:07












            up vote
            21
            down vote










            up vote
            21
            down vote









            The broad rule is: Always use the same name in the title as is present on your job experience letter(or certificate). Use the newer/older name in brackets, preferably qualified with a small description.



            So if you joined OldCorp inc. and it was changed to NewCorp Inc. before you left(or, you are in the process of leaving), my preffered style would be:




            Company: NewCorp Inc. (previously known as OldCorp Inc.)



            Location: My City.




            If you left before the company before the name change:




            Company: OldCorp Inc. (now known as NewCorp Inc.)



            Location: My City.




            In case of mergers too the same rule applies. If LittleCorp was aquired by MegaCorp before you left:




            Company: MegaCorp Inc. (merged from LittleCorp Inc.)



            Location:



            Description: (mention your date of joining in LittleCorp and the date of merger in a brief history, along with any designation changes.)




            otherwise




            Company: LittleCorp Inc. (acquired by MegaCorp Inc.)




            In case of multiple name changes , you dont need to mention all of them in the title. You may do it in the description but it isn't really necessary. Just include the final name in the title.




            Company: LittleCorp Inc. (now part of MegaCorp Inc.)







            share|improve this answer














            The broad rule is: Always use the same name in the title as is present on your job experience letter(or certificate). Use the newer/older name in brackets, preferably qualified with a small description.



            So if you joined OldCorp inc. and it was changed to NewCorp Inc. before you left(or, you are in the process of leaving), my preffered style would be:




            Company: NewCorp Inc. (previously known as OldCorp Inc.)



            Location: My City.




            If you left before the company before the name change:




            Company: OldCorp Inc. (now known as NewCorp Inc.)



            Location: My City.




            In case of mergers too the same rule applies. If LittleCorp was aquired by MegaCorp before you left:




            Company: MegaCorp Inc. (merged from LittleCorp Inc.)



            Location:



            Description: (mention your date of joining in LittleCorp and the date of merger in a brief history, along with any designation changes.)




            otherwise




            Company: LittleCorp Inc. (acquired by MegaCorp Inc.)




            In case of multiple name changes , you dont need to mention all of them in the title. You may do it in the description but it isn't really necessary. Just include the final name in the title.




            Company: LittleCorp Inc. (now part of MegaCorp Inc.)








            share|improve this answer














            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer








            edited Jul 30 '12 at 15:04









            Community♦

            1




            1










            answered Jul 30 '12 at 6:54









            DPD

            53125




            53125











            • This is how I handle it as well.
              – HLGEM
              Jul 30 '12 at 21:55






            • 1




              I'm not sure what a "job experience letter (or certificate)" is. I've never had or needed such a thing. Prospective employers might contact previous employers to verify my employment, but there's no formal "certificate" that I'm aware of. Perhaps it's a regional thing (I'm in the US).
              – Keith Thompson
              Apr 9 '14 at 16:04










            • "In case of multiple name changes , you dont need to mention all of them in the title." One exception would be if any of the previous names are highly recognized or reputable in your industry while the new name(s) may not be.
              – Lilienthal♦
              Sep 9 '15 at 11:24










            • What should you do if this happens more than once. Nested brackets or just more info.
              – Jeremy French
              Sep 22 '16 at 16:07
















            • This is how I handle it as well.
              – HLGEM
              Jul 30 '12 at 21:55






            • 1




              I'm not sure what a "job experience letter (or certificate)" is. I've never had or needed such a thing. Prospective employers might contact previous employers to verify my employment, but there's no formal "certificate" that I'm aware of. Perhaps it's a regional thing (I'm in the US).
              – Keith Thompson
              Apr 9 '14 at 16:04










            • "In case of multiple name changes , you dont need to mention all of them in the title." One exception would be if any of the previous names are highly recognized or reputable in your industry while the new name(s) may not be.
              – Lilienthal♦
              Sep 9 '15 at 11:24










            • What should you do if this happens more than once. Nested brackets or just more info.
              – Jeremy French
              Sep 22 '16 at 16:07















            This is how I handle it as well.
            – HLGEM
            Jul 30 '12 at 21:55




            This is how I handle it as well.
            – HLGEM
            Jul 30 '12 at 21:55




            1




            1




            I'm not sure what a "job experience letter (or certificate)" is. I've never had or needed such a thing. Prospective employers might contact previous employers to verify my employment, but there's no formal "certificate" that I'm aware of. Perhaps it's a regional thing (I'm in the US).
            – Keith Thompson
            Apr 9 '14 at 16:04




            I'm not sure what a "job experience letter (or certificate)" is. I've never had or needed such a thing. Prospective employers might contact previous employers to verify my employment, but there's no formal "certificate" that I'm aware of. Perhaps it's a regional thing (I'm in the US).
            – Keith Thompson
            Apr 9 '14 at 16:04












            "In case of multiple name changes , you dont need to mention all of them in the title." One exception would be if any of the previous names are highly recognized or reputable in your industry while the new name(s) may not be.
            – Lilienthal♦
            Sep 9 '15 at 11:24




            "In case of multiple name changes , you dont need to mention all of them in the title." One exception would be if any of the previous names are highly recognized or reputable in your industry while the new name(s) may not be.
            – Lilienthal♦
            Sep 9 '15 at 11:24












            What should you do if this happens more than once. Nested brackets or just more info.
            – Jeremy French
            Sep 22 '16 at 16:07




            What should you do if this happens more than once. Nested brackets or just more info.
            – Jeremy French
            Sep 22 '16 at 16:07












            up vote
            12
            down vote













            I don't know if there's a standard format for this, but I just added a brief explanation after the name of the company (which had 4 different names while I worked there, and has a 5th name now):



            Name4 YYYY-YYYY
            City, State
            (Name4 was previously known as Name3, Name2, and Name1, and is now part of Name5.)





            share|improve this answer






















            • This appears to work for both paper and electronic resumes (and actually how I've done it so far), but it doesn't address the second question. If you are no longer employed at the company, do you still update the name? Or would it be more acceptable to leave the name as it was when you worked there and use a note to indicate it now has a new name?
              – Thomas Owens
              Jul 28 '12 at 8:57










            • The company was Name1 when I started, and Name4 when I left. I used Name4 as the primary name (on the top line). The note mentions all five names, including the one it acquired after I left. I wouldn't use Name5 as the primary name, because I never worked at Name5. (All four name changes were the result of mergers; perhaps my resume should make that clearer.)
              – Keith Thompson
              Jul 28 '12 at 9:10







            • 1




              @KeithThompson, If that company becomes name6, what would you do when you update your resume next time?
              – scaaahu
              Jul 28 '12 at 9:43







            • 3




              @ThomasOwens: In my case, the 5 names take up just 1-2 lines on my resume. I've never heard of a company going through so many mergers and/or name changes that it would be a problem. But if it does, I suppose you could limit it to (1) the name the company had when you started, (2) the name it had when you left, and (3) the name it has now, so prospective employers can check the company's current web site. But I really don't think there needs to be a general rule.
              – Keith Thompson
              Jul 29 '12 at 0:25






            • 1




              @Frustrated: I didn't bother documenting the years of the name changes; it didn't seem relevant.
              – Keith Thompson
              Jul 30 '12 at 18:16














            up vote
            12
            down vote













            I don't know if there's a standard format for this, but I just added a brief explanation after the name of the company (which had 4 different names while I worked there, and has a 5th name now):



            Name4 YYYY-YYYY
            City, State
            (Name4 was previously known as Name3, Name2, and Name1, and is now part of Name5.)





            share|improve this answer






















            • This appears to work for both paper and electronic resumes (and actually how I've done it so far), but it doesn't address the second question. If you are no longer employed at the company, do you still update the name? Or would it be more acceptable to leave the name as it was when you worked there and use a note to indicate it now has a new name?
              – Thomas Owens
              Jul 28 '12 at 8:57










            • The company was Name1 when I started, and Name4 when I left. I used Name4 as the primary name (on the top line). The note mentions all five names, including the one it acquired after I left. I wouldn't use Name5 as the primary name, because I never worked at Name5. (All four name changes were the result of mergers; perhaps my resume should make that clearer.)
              – Keith Thompson
              Jul 28 '12 at 9:10







            • 1




              @KeithThompson, If that company becomes name6, what would you do when you update your resume next time?
              – scaaahu
              Jul 28 '12 at 9:43







            • 3




              @ThomasOwens: In my case, the 5 names take up just 1-2 lines on my resume. I've never heard of a company going through so many mergers and/or name changes that it would be a problem. But if it does, I suppose you could limit it to (1) the name the company had when you started, (2) the name it had when you left, and (3) the name it has now, so prospective employers can check the company's current web site. But I really don't think there needs to be a general rule.
              – Keith Thompson
              Jul 29 '12 at 0:25






            • 1




              @Frustrated: I didn't bother documenting the years of the name changes; it didn't seem relevant.
              – Keith Thompson
              Jul 30 '12 at 18:16












            up vote
            12
            down vote










            up vote
            12
            down vote









            I don't know if there's a standard format for this, but I just added a brief explanation after the name of the company (which had 4 different names while I worked there, and has a 5th name now):



            Name4 YYYY-YYYY
            City, State
            (Name4 was previously known as Name3, Name2, and Name1, and is now part of Name5.)





            share|improve this answer














            I don't know if there's a standard format for this, but I just added a brief explanation after the name of the company (which had 4 different names while I worked there, and has a 5th name now):



            Name4 YYYY-YYYY
            City, State
            (Name4 was previously known as Name3, Name2, and Name1, and is now part of Name5.)






            share|improve this answer














            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer








            edited Jul 28 '12 at 9:11

























            answered Jul 27 '12 at 23:32









            Keith Thompson

            1,496918




            1,496918











            • This appears to work for both paper and electronic resumes (and actually how I've done it so far), but it doesn't address the second question. If you are no longer employed at the company, do you still update the name? Or would it be more acceptable to leave the name as it was when you worked there and use a note to indicate it now has a new name?
              – Thomas Owens
              Jul 28 '12 at 8:57










            • The company was Name1 when I started, and Name4 when I left. I used Name4 as the primary name (on the top line). The note mentions all five names, including the one it acquired after I left. I wouldn't use Name5 as the primary name, because I never worked at Name5. (All four name changes were the result of mergers; perhaps my resume should make that clearer.)
              – Keith Thompson
              Jul 28 '12 at 9:10







            • 1




              @KeithThompson, If that company becomes name6, what would you do when you update your resume next time?
              – scaaahu
              Jul 28 '12 at 9:43







            • 3




              @ThomasOwens: In my case, the 5 names take up just 1-2 lines on my resume. I've never heard of a company going through so many mergers and/or name changes that it would be a problem. But if it does, I suppose you could limit it to (1) the name the company had when you started, (2) the name it had when you left, and (3) the name it has now, so prospective employers can check the company's current web site. But I really don't think there needs to be a general rule.
              – Keith Thompson
              Jul 29 '12 at 0:25






            • 1




              @Frustrated: I didn't bother documenting the years of the name changes; it didn't seem relevant.
              – Keith Thompson
              Jul 30 '12 at 18:16
















            • This appears to work for both paper and electronic resumes (and actually how I've done it so far), but it doesn't address the second question. If you are no longer employed at the company, do you still update the name? Or would it be more acceptable to leave the name as it was when you worked there and use a note to indicate it now has a new name?
              – Thomas Owens
              Jul 28 '12 at 8:57










            • The company was Name1 when I started, and Name4 when I left. I used Name4 as the primary name (on the top line). The note mentions all five names, including the one it acquired after I left. I wouldn't use Name5 as the primary name, because I never worked at Name5. (All four name changes were the result of mergers; perhaps my resume should make that clearer.)
              – Keith Thompson
              Jul 28 '12 at 9:10







            • 1




              @KeithThompson, If that company becomes name6, what would you do when you update your resume next time?
              – scaaahu
              Jul 28 '12 at 9:43







            • 3




              @ThomasOwens: In my case, the 5 names take up just 1-2 lines on my resume. I've never heard of a company going through so many mergers and/or name changes that it would be a problem. But if it does, I suppose you could limit it to (1) the name the company had when you started, (2) the name it had when you left, and (3) the name it has now, so prospective employers can check the company's current web site. But I really don't think there needs to be a general rule.
              – Keith Thompson
              Jul 29 '12 at 0:25






            • 1




              @Frustrated: I didn't bother documenting the years of the name changes; it didn't seem relevant.
              – Keith Thompson
              Jul 30 '12 at 18:16















            This appears to work for both paper and electronic resumes (and actually how I've done it so far), but it doesn't address the second question. If you are no longer employed at the company, do you still update the name? Or would it be more acceptable to leave the name as it was when you worked there and use a note to indicate it now has a new name?
            – Thomas Owens
            Jul 28 '12 at 8:57




            This appears to work for both paper and electronic resumes (and actually how I've done it so far), but it doesn't address the second question. If you are no longer employed at the company, do you still update the name? Or would it be more acceptable to leave the name as it was when you worked there and use a note to indicate it now has a new name?
            – Thomas Owens
            Jul 28 '12 at 8:57












            The company was Name1 when I started, and Name4 when I left. I used Name4 as the primary name (on the top line). The note mentions all five names, including the one it acquired after I left. I wouldn't use Name5 as the primary name, because I never worked at Name5. (All four name changes were the result of mergers; perhaps my resume should make that clearer.)
            – Keith Thompson
            Jul 28 '12 at 9:10





            The company was Name1 when I started, and Name4 when I left. I used Name4 as the primary name (on the top line). The note mentions all five names, including the one it acquired after I left. I wouldn't use Name5 as the primary name, because I never worked at Name5. (All four name changes were the result of mergers; perhaps my resume should make that clearer.)
            – Keith Thompson
            Jul 28 '12 at 9:10





            1




            1




            @KeithThompson, If that company becomes name6, what would you do when you update your resume next time?
            – scaaahu
            Jul 28 '12 at 9:43





            @KeithThompson, If that company becomes name6, what would you do when you update your resume next time?
            – scaaahu
            Jul 28 '12 at 9:43





            3




            3




            @ThomasOwens: In my case, the 5 names take up just 1-2 lines on my resume. I've never heard of a company going through so many mergers and/or name changes that it would be a problem. But if it does, I suppose you could limit it to (1) the name the company had when you started, (2) the name it had when you left, and (3) the name it has now, so prospective employers can check the company's current web site. But I really don't think there needs to be a general rule.
            – Keith Thompson
            Jul 29 '12 at 0:25




            @ThomasOwens: In my case, the 5 names take up just 1-2 lines on my resume. I've never heard of a company going through so many mergers and/or name changes that it would be a problem. But if it does, I suppose you could limit it to (1) the name the company had when you started, (2) the name it had when you left, and (3) the name it has now, so prospective employers can check the company's current web site. But I really don't think there needs to be a general rule.
            – Keith Thompson
            Jul 29 '12 at 0:25




            1




            1




            @Frustrated: I didn't bother documenting the years of the name changes; it didn't seem relevant.
            – Keith Thompson
            Jul 30 '12 at 18:16




            @Frustrated: I didn't bother documenting the years of the name changes; it didn't seem relevant.
            – Keith Thompson
            Jul 30 '12 at 18:16










            up vote
            2
            down vote













            If I've survived an acquisition, I list both company names:




            Tiny Startup / Humongous Corporation




            (I don't list past employers' addresses on my resume.)



            If your title changed, you can list both:




            Coding God / Junior Ant Farm Engineer (Dilbert Comic)




            or the final one, or the less ridiculous one.



            Unlike DPD, I rarely list the new name of a past employer has changed its name. I just list the name of the company as it was when I worked there:




            Best Company Ever (now known as Defunct Hopeless Failure)



            Best Company Ever







            share|improve this answer


























              up vote
              2
              down vote













              If I've survived an acquisition, I list both company names:




              Tiny Startup / Humongous Corporation




              (I don't list past employers' addresses on my resume.)



              If your title changed, you can list both:




              Coding God / Junior Ant Farm Engineer (Dilbert Comic)




              or the final one, or the less ridiculous one.



              Unlike DPD, I rarely list the new name of a past employer has changed its name. I just list the name of the company as it was when I worked there:




              Best Company Ever (now known as Defunct Hopeless Failure)



              Best Company Ever







              share|improve this answer
























                up vote
                2
                down vote










                up vote
                2
                down vote









                If I've survived an acquisition, I list both company names:




                Tiny Startup / Humongous Corporation




                (I don't list past employers' addresses on my resume.)



                If your title changed, you can list both:




                Coding God / Junior Ant Farm Engineer (Dilbert Comic)




                or the final one, or the less ridiculous one.



                Unlike DPD, I rarely list the new name of a past employer has changed its name. I just list the name of the company as it was when I worked there:




                Best Company Ever (now known as Defunct Hopeless Failure)



                Best Company Ever







                share|improve this answer














                If I've survived an acquisition, I list both company names:




                Tiny Startup / Humongous Corporation




                (I don't list past employers' addresses on my resume.)



                If your title changed, you can list both:




                Coding God / Junior Ant Farm Engineer (Dilbert Comic)




                or the final one, or the less ridiculous one.



                Unlike DPD, I rarely list the new name of a past employer has changed its name. I just list the name of the company as it was when I worked there:




                Best Company Ever (now known as Defunct Hopeless Failure)



                Best Company Ever








                share|improve this answer














                share|improve this answer



                share|improve this answer








                edited Sep 22 '16 at 14:35









                Richard U

                78.1k57202311




                78.1k57202311










                answered Sep 9 '15 at 1:50









                user10543

                492




                492






















                     

                    draft saved


                    draft discarded


























                     


                    draft saved


                    draft discarded














                    StackExchange.ready(
                    function ()
                    StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fworkplace.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f2884%2fwhat-is-the-accepted-method-of-indicating-a-company-being-acquired-on-a-resume%23new-answer', 'question_page');

                    );

                    Post as a guest

















































































                    Comments

                    Popular posts from this blog

                    What does second last employer means? [closed]

                    List of Gilmore Girls characters

                    Confectionery