Is Labour Prosecuting A Class War?
News2 mins ago
No best answer has yet been selected by Daydream. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Hi Daydream
Oh poor you getting in a pickle!
I'm asuming you are talking about employee references for someone coming to work for your company. Most places will send out a standard form for a reference asking about things like attendance, performance, time keeping, any disciplinary issues etc and then a space for general comments. Where I work we also send out a copy of the job description that they have applied for, so that they can comment if the person is suitable.
I have taken references over the phone in the past, but wouldn't recommend it! Much safer and easier to have it all written down, you could include a pre-paid (stamped) envelope for a swift reply.
www.ucl.ac.uk/hr/docs/recruitment.php#references has a lot of info on it including a sample letter and sample form, which you could adapt to your needs. (Don't know if the link works-not too good at that malarky-you might have to type it in or google it!)
As for contacting any companies, I would say thats a big no no. It is common to contact their current or last employer and one other-normally the previous employer. If these aren't the ones cited on their application, then the best course of action is to discuss it with the candidate and ask if you can contact their current/last employer, and see if there are any reasons why they've named someone else. It could be as simple as a previous job was similar to the role they are applying for, so felt they would be better to contact.
I use the site www.businessballs.com quite a lot, might be worth reading through, as has info on recruitment, interviews, adverts, shortlisting and reference requests.
Anyway, I've wobbled on for long enough, hope this is helpful to you!
Kind regards, Polotoo
Sorry, we can't find any related questions. Try using the search bar at the top of the page to search for some keywords, or choose a topic and submit your own question.