IT companies gear up to tackle fake interviews
Fake job interview letters and agents claiming to be working on
behalf of companies to hire people have become a menace again, and those
looking for jobs should watch out. It's expected to get particularly
bad this year with fewer jobs on offer and many more students passing
out of colleges.
Intel India has just filed a police complaint in Bangalore, after it
found that at least two people had received fraudulent letters calling
them for interviews at the company's office and asking them to make a
security deposit of Rs 7,850 prior to the interview.
Bosch, which perhaps has been the biggest victim of this in recent
weeks, has issued public messages warning people about fraudulent
interview calls. Maruti Suzuki, Hyundai, HCL Technologies are others
whose names have been used to send out such mails, as per complaints on
the online platform cybercrimecomplaints.com.
Preethi Madappa, director-HR in Intel South Asia, said the company was
using its Facebook page also to warn people about it. IBM said it has a
'fraud alert' section in its recruitment portal and Facebook page, and
since most of those who are duped are freshers, it has sent fraud alerts
to all registered engineering colleges.
Nasscom vice president K S Viswanathan, who is leading an initiative to
curb people-related malpractices in the IT industry, said these problems
peak at the beginning of the academic session (June-August), when
companies start making campus offers. He said the problem was grave, and
the IT industry body was set to launch a massive public campaign to
make everybody aware that the industry does not have a practice of
having an agent in between to collect money for employment.
The fraudsters' methods are the same in most cases. Mails are drafted on
what look like genuine letterheads with the company's logo. One such
letter purportedly from Bosch says, "Your resume has been selected from
one of the various job sites we hire for our plant. Bosch HRD selected
52 candidates...Designation and job location will be fixed byBosch HRD
at the time of final process."
The letters then invariably ask the candidate to make a refundable
security deposit, only in cash, into a certain HR manager's account. The
amounts that TOI has seen ranges from Rs 6,725 to Rs 15,890. The
amount, the letters say, will pay for the air ticket, accommodation and
food during the interview period, and will be refunded in full as soon
as the interview is over. It even provides an explanation for why the
money needs to be deposited into the HR manager's account and not a
company account: "because it will be easier to refund the money
immediately after the interview".
Many will immediately recognize the letter to be a fraud, considering
the quality of its language, and the effort to get the candidate to put
money into a non-company account. But many who are desperate for jobs do
succumb. One victim, Santosh Kumar Patel, who complained on
cybercrimecomplaints.com, said he deposited Rs 6,725 towards an " HCL
interview" only to find later when he went to HCL that there was no such
interview.
Intel's Madappa advices candidates to apply for jobs only through the company's own jobs website.
Nasscom's Viswanathan said he was glad companies were recognizing the
need to take the matter up strongly, noting that Tata Technologies in
Pune had previously filed an FIR on a similar issue. He said 10-15 IT
companies had recently come together to conduct an awareness campaign
among students and authorities of 10-15 colleges this academic year.
"It's a pilot project that we are leading," he said.
Source : TOI
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