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So you want to look around for your
next career step but you are concerned that your current
employer will find out and give you an early exit?
Confidentiality in your job search is a reasonable
concern and makes the way you approach finding your next
position all the more important. Confidentiality and
privacy issues in today's hyper-informative world are
issues that should be taken seriously.
Keeping your intentions of
changing jobs a secret is a challenge but secrecy is in
your best interest. Case in point: Hilda was a highly
paid pharmacist working for an independent pharmacy in
Atlanta. She was approached by a new independent
pharmacy who was a direct competitor of her current
employer. The word leaked out that she was considering
taking a directly competing position and her employer
terminated her employment out of concern for operational
security. As pharmacist-in-charge, she had full access
to retail/wholesale pricing, future plans, insurance
reimbursement rates and customer information - all data
that would be highly desirable by the competitor.
Hilda's employer just could not take the chance that she
would leave and take all that information with her so
they terminated her. Unfortunately, the competitor did
not make an offer of employment to Hilda and she was
left out in the cold - not hired, and fired. If she had
taken greater pains to keep her options confidential,
she may not have ended up in the predicament of suddenly
being unemployed.
On the flip side, it may be
tempting to let slip to your current employer that you
are looking around for new opportunities to provide some
leverage for a raise or a promotion. Fishing for a
counter-offer is a no-win situation. In a survey by the
Wall Street Journal, 93 percent of employees who accept
counter-offers to remain with an employer leave anyway
after 18 months. If you are unhappy enough to spend
months hunting for a new position, dealing with
recruiters, and going on interviews, the true value of a
counter offer should be questioned. Employers make
counter-offers for their best interest - not the
employees'. Employers need to make sure projects are
completed, that deadlines are met, and that production
does not lag. An employee who accepts a counter-offer
has branded himself as disloyal and possibly a
gold-digger and will forever more be viewed as such by
superiors.
Common sense rules when going
about a confidential job search. Do not use your work
phone, email, or company cell phone to conduct any job
search activities. Do not surf the job sites during your
lunch hour or at anytime on your work PC. Be careful of
the conversations you have within earshot of other
co-workers. Do not leave your resume lying on your desk
at work. Keep your plans and intentions quiet, even from
close office friends whom you feel you can trust.
Request confidentiality from all potential employers
until an offer is made.
Beyond the obvious, consider the
following tips for keeping your job search hush-hush:
Remove identifying information
from your online resume. Replace your name with a
generic title such as "Senior Marketing Executive". Use
only your cell phone number and a web-based email
address that can be dropped after your job search. City
and state is sufficient for address - no need for street
address or zip code. Remove your current employer's name
and replace it with something that is descriptive, yet
unidentifiable such as "Major Manhattan-based Financial
Organization".
Be careful in your networking.
Networking is essential to an effective job search, but
indiscrete networking can breach your wish for
confidentiality. Networking carefully can be even more
difficult in closed industries or highly-specialized
fields. Ask more questions than you answer in group
settings; talk about possible employment options with
decision-makers only; and provide your resume only to
someone in a position to assist you confidentially.
Protect your references.
References should only be provided in an interview, and
preferably not at a first interview. You don't want your
colleagues getting wind of your intentions before an
offer is imminent.
Consider a confidential job search
agent. If you have an annual salary of greater than
$500,000 and/or you are well-known in your industry,
hiring an agent to conduct your job search might be a
good idea. The agent can extend inquiries without
breaching confidentiality. An agent is not a recruiter,
but rather someone who works for you individually to act
as your liaison with potential employers.
In addition to confidentiality in
a job search, everyone should be concerned about
protection of privacy. Never, ever give out your social
security number, driver's license number, or bank
account numbers to anyone during the job search process.
There are scam artists out there who will take advantage
of your vulnerability as a job seeker to steal your
identity, your money, and your reputation. Privacy
Rights Clearinghouse has some helpful tips for
protecting your privacy during your job search at
http://www.privacyrights.org/fs/fs25-JobSeekerPriv.htm.
The World Privacy Forum has an
excellent article about an Internet job scam that is a
must-read for anyone considering using the Internet for
their job search. This particular job scam involved 23
Internet job boards including Monster.com,
CareerBuilder.com, and PreferredJobs.com. The scam
involved a posting that required the new hire to
transfer money into their personal bank account and then
transfer it back out to an account overseas via Western
Union, keeping a percentage of the total amount for
their work. According to victims of the scam who
responded to the article, the interview and application
process for the position was extremely convincing and
they were totally taken in. The article can be found at
http://www.worldprivacyforum.org/jobscamreportpt1.html.
The bottom line is that
confidentiality starts with you. A secret shared is no
longer a secret and cannot be controlled. If you are
serious about keeping your career ladder climb quiet,
you must take the precautions that are necessary.
Employers have a great deal to lose when they lose
employees - human capital investment, corporate
information, competitive data - so keeping your
intentions to leave might well be in your best interests
until the time is right.
Published in 25 career books,
Alesia has been cited by Jist Publications as one of the
"best resume writers in North America" and quoted as a
Career Expert in the Wall Street Journal. Serving as the
Resume Expert for over 50+ organizations, she has
numerous media appearances to her credit and is a
frequent keynote speaker.
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