Home › Forums › Financial Markets/Economics › Employer’s increased use of credit check
- This topic has 300 replies, 21 voices, and was last updated 14 years, 4 months ago by paramount.
-
AuthorPosts
-
July 23, 2010 at 9:20 PM #583053July 23, 2010 at 9:38 PM #582025RealityParticipant
[quote=UCGal] Heck my company does background checks and checks GPAs and verifies degrees issued – and has for more than a decade… so screwing up your first year of college CAN follow you for a long time.
[/quote]How long? Verify degrees, but checking a GPA after someone has been in the work force awhile is a pointless, irrelevant exercise. What have they done with the degree is the relevant question.
I had good grades in college but there’s no mention of my GPA on my resume. Grades don’t mean a thing after years of experience. Anyone checking them on an experienced professional has too much time and too little common sense.
July 23, 2010 at 9:38 PM #582116RealityParticipant[quote=UCGal] Heck my company does background checks and checks GPAs and verifies degrees issued – and has for more than a decade… so screwing up your first year of college CAN follow you for a long time.
[/quote]How long? Verify degrees, but checking a GPA after someone has been in the work force awhile is a pointless, irrelevant exercise. What have they done with the degree is the relevant question.
I had good grades in college but there’s no mention of my GPA on my resume. Grades don’t mean a thing after years of experience. Anyone checking them on an experienced professional has too much time and too little common sense.
July 23, 2010 at 9:38 PM #582648RealityParticipant[quote=UCGal] Heck my company does background checks and checks GPAs and verifies degrees issued – and has for more than a decade… so screwing up your first year of college CAN follow you for a long time.
[/quote]How long? Verify degrees, but checking a GPA after someone has been in the work force awhile is a pointless, irrelevant exercise. What have they done with the degree is the relevant question.
I had good grades in college but there’s no mention of my GPA on my resume. Grades don’t mean a thing after years of experience. Anyone checking them on an experienced professional has too much time and too little common sense.
July 23, 2010 at 9:38 PM #582755RealityParticipant[quote=UCGal] Heck my company does background checks and checks GPAs and verifies degrees issued – and has for more than a decade… so screwing up your first year of college CAN follow you for a long time.
[/quote]How long? Verify degrees, but checking a GPA after someone has been in the work force awhile is a pointless, irrelevant exercise. What have they done with the degree is the relevant question.
I had good grades in college but there’s no mention of my GPA on my resume. Grades don’t mean a thing after years of experience. Anyone checking them on an experienced professional has too much time and too little common sense.
July 23, 2010 at 9:38 PM #583058RealityParticipant[quote=UCGal] Heck my company does background checks and checks GPAs and verifies degrees issued – and has for more than a decade… so screwing up your first year of college CAN follow you for a long time.
[/quote]How long? Verify degrees, but checking a GPA after someone has been in the work force awhile is a pointless, irrelevant exercise. What have they done with the degree is the relevant question.
I had good grades in college but there’s no mention of my GPA on my resume. Grades don’t mean a thing after years of experience. Anyone checking them on an experienced professional has too much time and too little common sense.
July 23, 2010 at 9:39 PM #582030scaredyclassicParticipantlaw school grades matter a while
July 23, 2010 at 9:39 PM #582121scaredyclassicParticipantlaw school grades matter a while
July 23, 2010 at 9:39 PM #582653scaredyclassicParticipantlaw school grades matter a while
July 23, 2010 at 9:39 PM #582760scaredyclassicParticipantlaw school grades matter a while
July 23, 2010 at 9:39 PM #583063scaredyclassicParticipantlaw school grades matter a while
July 24, 2010 at 1:04 AM #582059paramountParticipantI think many have been sold a bill of goods on retirement. In reality the fantasy retirement from Wall Street and Madison Avenue is a hustle and another way for them to harvest $$ from the masses.
In these tough times we need more empathy and less hard line judgments based on a credit report – which often contain errors anyway.
July 24, 2010 at 1:04 AM #582151paramountParticipantI think many have been sold a bill of goods on retirement. In reality the fantasy retirement from Wall Street and Madison Avenue is a hustle and another way for them to harvest $$ from the masses.
In these tough times we need more empathy and less hard line judgments based on a credit report – which often contain errors anyway.
July 24, 2010 at 1:04 AM #582683paramountParticipantI think many have been sold a bill of goods on retirement. In reality the fantasy retirement from Wall Street and Madison Avenue is a hustle and another way for them to harvest $$ from the masses.
In these tough times we need more empathy and less hard line judgments based on a credit report – which often contain errors anyway.
July 24, 2010 at 1:04 AM #582790paramountParticipantI think many have been sold a bill of goods on retirement. In reality the fantasy retirement from Wall Street and Madison Avenue is a hustle and another way for them to harvest $$ from the masses.
In these tough times we need more empathy and less hard line judgments based on a credit report – which often contain errors anyway.
-
AuthorPosts
- You must be logged in to reply to this topic.