Other Sports1 min ago
Working history
5 Answers
I left school in 1997 and have had various Jobs. I have never been unemployed in this time but unfortunatley i have not documented all jobs because some were very short and sweet.I have done college courses and even been in the TA. I have now completely lost track of where i was when. I am now applying for my dream job and they need a full 10 year working history with no details missing and exact dates so there is no gaps. I do know some of the employers i worked for no longer exist e.g Going places ( no such thing anymore) Is there anyway i can find this information with exact dates included?
Answers
Best Answer
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.No there isn't. Suggest that you rely on your memory, then phone the recent ones that you can identify, ask to speak to Personnel and see if they will help you. But you can't really expect an employer to trawl out records more than 6 years or so old.
The NI Contributions people in Longbenton, Newcastle will have some details but the extent to which they will give you full records I really don't know. These people will know the number of weeks of NI paid from which employer, in each tax year going back to year dot.
Its a bit off topic but employers that want full information with no gaps are often involved in the security industry and may not take a candidate with loads of employment history too well. And depending on the job application, you are likely to be seen as a 'serial employee' - one who prefers to skip around. Fine for some jobs but not for anything of any seniority or stature. IMHO as one who has done a heck of a load of recruitment. Best to get at least 2 years with one employer under one's belt.
The NI Contributions people in Longbenton, Newcastle will have some details but the extent to which they will give you full records I really don't know. These people will know the number of weeks of NI paid from which employer, in each tax year going back to year dot.
Its a bit off topic but employers that want full information with no gaps are often involved in the security industry and may not take a candidate with loads of employment history too well. And depending on the job application, you are likely to be seen as a 'serial employee' - one who prefers to skip around. Fine for some jobs but not for anything of any seniority or stature. IMHO as one who has done a heck of a load of recruitment. Best to get at least 2 years with one employer under one's belt.