Anyone else think this should be a no brainer in most circumstances? I mean, first of all most modern employers have policies in place that prevent them from doing anything but verify dates of employment, job titles, and possibly re-hire eligibility, thus a call to the human resource department would yield the same results (most of the time this is what the direct management would do anyway). Second, current employers are probably the worst reference possible, I have seen first hand employers give bad referrals to good employees (in an attempt to prevent them from leaving) and vice versa (good referral to an employee they just want gone).
I just lost out on an opportunity because I requested that the potential employer not contact my current management until some type of conditional job offer has been made. My feeling is that they saw this is I was hiding something, but in reality I just have too much financial responsibility to go off and risk it for a job that I might not possibly even get. When I say risk, I do not mean I'd most likely lose the job if they found out I was looking elsewhere, but promotability would go out the window and my status within the organization would be forever changed.
In the current economic climate I'd imagine the number of currently employed professional job applicants that do not take issue with their current employer being contacted would be quite low, is this incorrect?
I just lost out on an opportunity because I requested that the potential employer not contact my current management until some type of conditional job offer has been made. My feeling is that they saw this is I was hiding something, but in reality I just have too much financial responsibility to go off and risk it for a job that I might not possibly even get. When I say risk, I do not mean I'd most likely lose the job if they found out I was looking elsewhere, but promotability would go out the window and my status within the organization would be forever changed.
In the current economic climate I'd imagine the number of currently employed professional job applicants that do not take issue with their current employer being contacted would be quite low, is this incorrect?
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