That happens a lot in Brazil too. HR people, besides reading astrology
columns and applying graphology and Rorcharch tests, usually discard
unemployed candidates, even in economy downturns, where unemployement rates
soar.

HW


http://finance.yahoo.com/news/Outofwork-job-applicants-told-cnnm-3498252371.html;_ylt=AmfVe3Mxtf_R9m98NBnswbd0fNdF?x=0


 Out-of-work job applicants told unemployed need not apply[image:
cnnmoney]<http://us.rd.yahoo.com/finance/news/cnnm/SIG=10n9igp4d;_ylt=AoGCr4Dg6Glw72H_etDJiQzlba9_;_ylu=X3oDMTFlYjhjdDhzBHBvcwMxBHNlYwNuZXdzcHJvdmlkZXJjb250ZW50aW5mbwRzbGsDY25ubW9uZXk-/*http://money.cnn.com/>

   -  Buzz up! 7947
      - 
Print<http://finance.yahoo.com/news/Outofwork-job-applicants-told-cnnm-3498252371.html/print;_ylt=AowoXb_gGusm4SJcq_XhZs3lba9_;_ylu=X3oDMTBwNjZiaWw5BHBvcwMxBHNlYwN0b29scwRzbGsDcHJpbnQ-?x=0>

 Chris Isidore, senior writer, On Wednesday June 16, 2010, 4:26 am EDT

The last thing someone who is unemployed needs to be told is that they
shouldn't even apply for the limited number of job openings that are
available. But some companies and recruiters are doing just that.

Employment experts say they believe companies are increasingly interested
only in applicants who already have a job.

"I think it is more prevalent than it used to be," said Rich Thompson, vice
president of learning and performance for Adecco Group North America, the
world's largest staffing firm. "I don't have hard numbers, but three out of
the last four conversations I've had about openings, this requirement was
brought up."

Some job postings include restrictions such as "unemployed candidates will
not be considered" or "must be currently employed." Those explicit
limitations have occasionally been removed from listings when an employer or
recruiter is questioned by the media though.

That's what happened with numerous listings for grocery store managers
throughout the Southeast posted by a South Carolina recruiter, Latro
Consulting.

After CNNMoney called seeking comments on the listings last week, the
restriction against unemployed candidates being considered came down. Latro
Consulting refused to comment when contacted.

Sony Ericsson, a global phone manufacturer that was hiring for a new Georgia
facility, also removed a similar restriction after local reporters wrote
about it. According to reports, a Sony Ericsson spokesperson said that a
mistake had been made.

But even if companies don't spell out in a job listing that they won't
consider someone who currently doesn't have a job, experts said that
unemployed applicants are typically ruled out right off the bat.

"Most executive recruiters won't look at a candidate unless they have a job,
even if they don't like to admit to it," said Lisa Chenofsky Singer, a human
resources consultant from Millburn, NJ, specializing in media and publishing
jobs.

She said when she proposes candidates for openings, the first question she
is often asked by a recruiter is if they currently have a job. If the answer
is no, she's typically told the unemployed candidate won't be interviewed.

"They think you must have been laid off for performance issues," she said,
adding that this is a "myth" in a time of high unemployment.

It is not against the law for companies to exclude the unemployed when
trying to fill positions, but Judy Conti, a lobbyist for the National
Employment Law Project, said the practice is a bad one.

"Making that kind of automatic cut is senseless; you could be missing out on
the best person of all," she said. "There are millions of people who are
unemployed through no fault of their own. If an employer feels that the best
qualified are the ones already working, they have no appreciation of the
crisis we're in right now."

Conti added that firms that hire unemployed job seekers could also benefit
from a recently-passed tax break that essentially exempts them from paying
the 6.2% of the new hire's wages in Social Security taxes for the rest of
this year.

Thompson said he also thinks ruling out the unemployed is a bad idea. But he
said that part of the problem is that recruiters and human resource
departments are being overwhelmed with applications for any job opening that
is posted. So they're looking for any short-cuts to get the list of
applicants to consider down to a more manageable size.

"It's a tough process to determine which unemployed applicants were laid off
even though they brought value to their company and which ones had
performance issues," he said. "I understand the notion. But there's the top
x percent of unemployed candidates who are very viable and very valuable.
You just have to do the work to find them."

Have you had trouble even applying for a job because you are out of work? If
so e-mail us here to tell us your story.


-- 

"Our great democracies still tend to think that a stupid man is more likely
to be honest than a clever man."
Bertrand Russell


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