Showing posts with label Job. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Job. Show all posts

Thursday, December 29, 2016

How to get the better of job scamsters


How to get the better of job scamsters


Michael Magness Jr. UPDATED: DECEMBER 08, 2016, THE HINDU

Empower

To be certain that an employment opportunity is genuine, it may be necessary, sometimes, to interview your interviewer

 It is a dark reality that for every real job advertisement, there could be hundreds of job scams. Job scamsters seem to be a growing tribe and they come up with new tactics, all the time, to dupe unsuspecting job seekers. Before going for that coveted job interview, how do you know that the job you are applying for is legitimate? How do you find out that the person isn't a fraudster out to get your money? Here are some tips on how not to get duped by job scamsters.

Are you being

asked for money?

If they're making you pay for giving you a job, that’s a fraud. Under no circumstances does a legitimate company charge anyone for giving him a job. Fraudsters may call it interview fees, an employment bond or a corporate kit, but beware. If a company thinks you have the potential, it will usually fit the cost of any expenses that might have been incurred as part of the recruitment process.

Besides providing for local transport costs, which includes hiring a taxi or an autorickshaw, getting interviewed is almost always free of any monetary exchange between you and the company where you have applied for a job. Even if you have to travel between states or countries, the company will usually fit the bill.

Watch the email domain

While communicating by email, one of the simplest ways to tell if the recruiter is genuine is to look at their email domain. As the act of employing you is part of recruiters’ official duties, any correspondence should come only from their official company email domain. Excuses such as "work email down", "I don't have remote access" and "we need to hire now" should not be accepted. Always ask for an email from their official email address.

A simple web search will reveal what are valid corporate domains. Most companies will have an employment portal on the web and will have information clarifying this. Do not accept any offers from people who primarily communicate via webmail portals like @yahoo.com, @icloud.com, @gmail.com or @hotmail.com unless they can prove who they are by sending you an email from their corporate domain. As a rule, be suspicious of any random email communication offering you employment. A good suggestion would be to do a web search on how to detect email spoofing, which will arm you with enough information to detect fake offers.

Scrutinise the job advertisement

While some of them may be “walk-ins”, any specific job role you’re applying for, at least at the larger MNCs, should have a job reference number. This job reference number can be linked back to a company’s external-facing employment web portal.

Where the interview is being held can often reveal a job’s authenticity. The majority of MNCs conduct their interviews at a meeting room in a facility belonging to them. The interviewer will always wear a corporate badge or swipe card which bears their name and identifiable photograph along with the name and logo of the company. If the interview is conducted at a coffee shop, the cafeteria or campus area, it is better to ask the recruiters to prove their identity.

Personal details

should stay out

Personal details, which include bank account details, are never sought during the interview process. Those details are required during the on-boarding phase of employment, which is after you’ve been hired. This never happens before hiring is completed. No additional personal information is required apart from what is mentioned in the CV.

Hiring takes time

The hiring process usually takes time and requires multiple rounds of interviews. More senior roles have been known to have seven interview rounds or more.

For seekers of online jobs

When applying for jobs online, stick with the major career portals. Most MNCs in India will have their own sub-portals within those sites. As it is in the public domain, social media can be used by scamsters to target job seekers. It helps to be suspicious of anyone approaching you with an employment opportunity through social media unless you can verify the source.

Additionally, while classified sites are a great place for bargains, also exercise extreme caution and confirm the authenticity of the job before applying. The old adage — "If it's too good to be true, it usually is" — applies. A simple web search will display the major job portals used in India.

Ask for their credentials

If they are not forthcoming and push back, it means they're trying to hide something. Legitimate employers or their representatives will happily furnish their credentials and show you how to validate the authenticity of the role you are applying for.

Finally, report it

Whether you’ve detected a scam or have been duped despite your research, report it to either the appropriate authorities or the companies the scamsters claim they are representing. All MNCs take fraud very seriously as this affects their brand reputation directly. A simple web search will reveal methods of contacting companies to report this. This is by no means an exhaustive list but it should put you in the frame of mind to decide for yourself whether the job is real or not. It cannot be stressed enough that being forewarned is being forearmed and the more research you do, the better you are at protecting yourself against fraud.

(Michael Magness Jr. is Senior Technical Security & Forensics Investigations Specialist at IBM Corporate Security)

Sunday, December 25, 2016

Beyond the lure of government jobs


Beyond the lure of government jobs 

Graduates need to know that jobs in the private sector can be lucrative, too.

Many college graduates dream of bagging a government job. Here are some statistics. In Uttar Pradesh, five lakh candidates, including several graduates and postgraduates, applied for 3,275 contractual sweeper vacancies. In another part of the country, our company recently conducted an exam for recruitment of an entry-level position for a central government department. 

There were only 374 vacancies. A recruitment advertisement was released in one State. More than 2.4 lakh people applied and 1.3 lakh were given hall tickets to write the exam!

On the other hand, we were also recruiting for a large private-sector bank. The position was business development executive. While the salary, including commissions, was comparable, the career progression would be faster compared to a government job. Yet, we had to put in an enormous effort to convince graduates to attend the interview.

Further, three out of ten graduates who receive offers from private companies do not take the job despite being unemployed. So the question is — why are graduates desperate for government jobs and totally disinterested in private sector jobs?

Myth 1: Private sector hires and fires

This is partly true. But the employer is not hiring to fire. After all, recruitment and training are expensive activities. Those who are fired are candidates with the wrong attitude — they do not take the job seriously, or, are misfits. Incidentally, government jobs are also demanding, especially in the early stages. One cannot expect to get confirmed unless one has the right attitude.

Myth 2: Private sector pays low

This is also partly true. Government jobs offer the best starting salaries. But after two to three years, government employees realise that increasingly, their counterparts in the private sector are earning more. In fact, across 30 years of professional life, a good employee can earn many times more in the private sector than in a government organisation.

Myth 3: Private jobs require migration, an expensive affair

This, again, is partly true. But one can easily live comfortably within his/her budget, even in cities such as Mumbai. The trick is to adjust one’s lifestyle according to the income.
College curriculum

Government cannot create jobs for everyone. On the other hand, private sector has the ability to create well-paid jobs. Youngsters need to accept this reality and prepare themselves. With myths on private jobs overshadowing the reality, candidates, especially freshers, are not keen on applying for them. Colleges should introduce job counselling for all graduates as part of the syllabus to mitigate this problem.

Job counselling is a learning technique wherein students are motivated to investigate and learn about themselves and the job market. This knowledge helps them understand which job would suit them best. It further equips them with the knowledge and skills they will require while searching for a job.

To provide job counselling, colleges should hire dedicated faculty and train them. Students need to be exposed to market trends, hiring practices, salary packages, cost of living in cities, roles in demand, job retention strategies, self assessment of personality, key skills required, corporate communication techniques, and so on. The idea is to replace the myths with realities and boost students’ confidence so that they can find the right first job.
College managements must make job counselling a key deliverable, in addition to placement and knowledge transfer. Only then will graduates learn to graduate in the real sense of the term. It will also reduce pressure on the college placement officer who would otherwise try to place students in any job to meet the numbers.

By T. Muralidharan ,  chairman, TMI Group

THE HINDU : 18.12.2016