visit
Rapid exposure of real competencies in practice:
And this issue leads to a second, even more significant concern:
Decreased motivation, confidence, and disillusionment with the profession: Imagine that someone who dreamed of working in testing managed to "slip through" into a large company thanks to IT school advice and a fake resume. After a month or two, the company uncovers the deception and decides to fire the employee. During this time, the worker may have made several embarrassing mistakes or failed to complete tasks, and, moreover, it all ends in dismissal. This will inevitably leave a mark on their confidence and motivation to move forward. In trying to cheat the system, such a person misses the chance to learn, grow, and achieve something because motivation and self-confidence are the fuel for self-improvement.
Vulnerability in the job market: Such deception at the start of a career can affect your reputation as a professional, which may come back to haunt you even when you’ve gained real experience. Information spreads quickly in professional circles these days, and negative reviews or mentions on internal company lists can limit future career opportunities. As the problem of "embellishment" in resumes becomes more prevalent, companies are increasingly introducing practical tasks in interviews and thoroughly assessing actual skills based on candidates' descriptions of their experience. When such candidates are caught in a lie, they risk ruining their career in the industry for good.
Personal realization of mismatched qualifications: Even if the employer doesn’t uncover the deception and the candidate holds the position for a long time, the ease with which they achieved results won’t foster a real understanding of the effort required to gain the skills needed for the job. Over time, this dishonest approach to getting a job decreases motivation for real learning and professional growth, which won’t allow the person to develop in the long run. After all, they once managed to cheat the system and achieve results they didn’t deserve.
Here’s my recommendation for interviewers to identify candidates with false experience:
Testing practical skills during interviews: Interactive coding tasks are an effective way to assess candidates' real knowledge and skills. I don’t like live coding, but I think offering candidates a pre-prepared code with errors and asking them to explain and fix it is an optimal solution.
Technical questions about real experience: An experienced candidate can detail how they used a specific tool, on which projects, and what challenges they faced. Don’t hesitate to ask many questions about the candidate's personal contributions; people love to talk about their successes and solutions they’ve come up with. Based on their answers, you can definitely determine their actual involvement in the project.