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Lying on Your Resume: What Are the Consequences?

Lying on Your Resume: What Are the Consequences?

It is important to write your resume with character and confidence. But there is a clear-cut line where stretching goes too far.

Kim Isaacs | Monster.com Resume Expert

November 02, 2007

When a woman we’ll call Mary was offered a high-level student-services position at a prestigious college, she was thrilled to accept. But two years later, Mary was fired despite strong performance reviews and a reputation as a rising star at the college. The reason? She lied on her resume – and got caught.

An HR initiative requiring employees to furnish college transcripts revealed Mary lied about having a master’s degree. It wasn’t lack of a degree that cost Mary her job; it was her dishonesty. Unemployed and with a blown reference to boot, Mary demonstrates what can happen when you lie on your resume.

Companies are growing increasingly savvy in ferreting out resume cheaters through more comprehensive background checks conducted both pre- and post-hire. Why the latter? Subpar job performance can prompt a follow-up investigation into an employee’s past. If dishonesty is discovered, it is often grounds for termination and possibly legal action.

Yet Mary is hardly alone in falsifying information on a resume. Steven D. Levitt, coauthor of Freakonomics and a renowned economics professor at the University of Chicago, cites research suggesting that more than 50 percent of people lie on their resumes.

Given such repercussions as Mary’s fate, you might wonder why anyone would attempt to get away with lying on a resume in the first place. Levitt refers to a W.C. Fields quote in his explanation: “Anything worth winning is worth cheating for.”

Power – and Misery – Foster Temptation

In a kind of twist on the Peter Principle, which suggests that within corporate hierarchies, employees tend to be promoted until they reach their ultimate levels of incompetence, Levitt postulates that “the higher up in the organization a person rises, the more likely it is that he or she will cheat.”

His observation is certainly borne out by news headlines about executives resigning in the face of resume dishonesty. Common resume lies include falsifying academic credentials, padding dates to mask employment gaps, exaggerating job titles, embellishing job responsibilities and achievements, claiming sole responsibility for team efforts and even making up fictitious employers.

Levitt also found a correlation between mood and the temptation to cheat. The desperation felt when weeks of unemployment stretch into months, or the low morale experienced by someone employed but truly miserable in a job, appear to increase the incentive to lie.


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    rjmchugh

    1 day ago

    1 comment

    That does not sound encouraging, Erin. I had a baby in March 2007 and seven weeks after she was born, my husband was diagnosed with colon (pre)cancer. I had to spend the rest of the year, and part of this year, caring not just for a baby but also for him. I'm only now able to work again. I managed to pass my cerfication exam with flying colors back in August 2007 even with all of this personal chaos, and I hope to get my foot into the door somewhere.
  • Paris_max50

    ErinMitchell

    3 months ago

    1 comment

    Does anyone have advice on gaps in employment. I had a baby in May of 2007 and graduated from college in December of 2006. I did have a sales career before I decided to finish my degree. I have been looking since January and I feel like employers are not liking my gap in employment. I don't feel like I can tell them that I had a baby. It seems like employers are very turned off by that. I would like to tell a prospective employer the truth but a professional resume writer told me not to. Any advice??
  • Celtic_max50

    jeepgirl89

    3 months ago

    59 comments

    I don't understand lying on a resume, if you want the job, then just go through the process of obtaining the necessary requirements and some extra bonuses that make you the great catch. Lying isn't the way to go when your professional career is on the line.
  • Schnauzer_pup_fritz_max50

    lolawriter

    3 months ago

    25 comments

    Mary, by the way, was the head of admissions at MIT.
  • Alicia_photo_2_talking_stuff_max50

    AM_Morgan08

    3 months ago

    152 comments

    No lie is ever left uncovered.
  • Img_0993_max50

    dianabutterfly

    3 months ago

    1 comment

    I disagree. Some people have changed their names and their past is true under another name(s). Giving out an old name on a resume or an application could jeopardize getting hired due to unfair equality issues that yet need to be resolved in the united states. However I do agree with out right lying on your resume that could put you in a very bad position.

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