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WSJ Article Explores How Candidates Lie

candidates lie

A recent Wall Street Journal article entitled “The Lies We Tell During Job Interviews” begins with: “Is a job interview really an exercise in deception? Experts who study falsehoods say “yes.”

The article has research showing:

  • About 85% of interviewees, if asked a direct question, would hide “skeletons in their closet,” such as problems they had on a job.
  • In a 15-minute job interview most interviewees lie 2 or 3 times. For an hour-long interview… you do the math.
  • Over 20% of job candidates would “invent a degree.”

The author advises candidates to not fudge their resumes or interview responses for one obvious reason: because they might get a job they fail in. Another reason – not mentioned in the article – is that while putting one’s best foot forward is ethical, outright lies are wrong. Research over the years shows that low performers are most likely to stretch the truth, and high performers tend to be honest and deliver the best results.

 

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