I have a question for those ethical/HR types.
Obviously padding ones resume/CV with fake qualifications, fake experience is unethical and illegal depending on the circumstances.
However, what's the ethical view on withholding experience/qualifications, so as to not appear overqualified for a job?
This is strictly hypothetical btw... but with some factual basis behind it. For example, lets say I have 3 degrees (AA, BA, MA). I see a job that interests me, and it requires an AA + Experience or a BA. Should I leave out the MA out of fear of being overqualified, or leave it in there to further strengthen my qualifications over other candidates?
Or conversely, I previously held a director level job, and am now applying for a management job. Same scenario, do I withhold the job/experience, withold the word "director," or leave it all in?
What would you do in these scenarios?
Obviously with the job market as it is, a stronger resume is likely to be a better asset, unless employers won't hire you because they feel they can't afford you.
Obviously padding ones resume/CV with fake qualifications, fake experience is unethical and illegal depending on the circumstances.
However, what's the ethical view on withholding experience/qualifications, so as to not appear overqualified for a job?
This is strictly hypothetical btw... but with some factual basis behind it. For example, lets say I have 3 degrees (AA, BA, MA). I see a job that interests me, and it requires an AA + Experience or a BA. Should I leave out the MA out of fear of being overqualified, or leave it in there to further strengthen my qualifications over other candidates?
Or conversely, I previously held a director level job, and am now applying for a management job. Same scenario, do I withhold the job/experience, withold the word "director," or leave it all in?
What would you do in these scenarios?
Obviously with the job market as it is, a stronger resume is likely to be a better asset, unless employers won't hire you because they feel they can't afford you.