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Envy Pushes Job Seekers to Fake Their Résumés


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Credit: aprav.org

Job seekers who stay in the search longer or see their peers getting hired may falsify their résumés, according to a study from the University at Buffalo School of Management.

"Green by Comparison: Deviant and Normative Transmutations of Job Search Envy in a Temporal Context," published in the Academy of Management Journal, analyzes how the length of a job search and a person's career situation may lead to unethical behavior.

"Envy can be a destructive emotion that makes you cut corners to get the same outcomes that others have," says study co-author KiYoung Lee, assistant professor of organization and human resources in the UB School of Management. "But it can also be a motivator that encourages you to make constructive efforts."

The researchers conducted two studies to measure job search envy at two different career points. The first study analyzed survey responses from 335 unemployed job seekers from an Internet job board serving the Southeastern United States.

The second study tracked a cohort of 77 graduate students enrolled in a master's of human resources program at a large U.S. university. The researchers surveyed participants over the course of two years, tracking job search envy during both internship and job searches.

Lee says that hiring managers and career counselors should take note of job seekers' situation to help identify and prevent résumé fraud.

"If you're a hiring manager and applicants are coming from a very close cohort where they may feel very competitive to each other, be aware of the possibility that envy may impact what's on their résumés," says Lee. "Also, if you're a career counselor and you know someone who is very competitive and may be experiencing envy, you can try to help them affirm their self worth to channel that envy into more constructive efforts in résumé and interview preparation."

Lee co-authored the Academy of Management Journal article and collaborated on the project with Brian Dineen, associate professor of management, Purdue University Krannert School of Management; Michelle Duffy, Board of Overseers Professor of Work and Organizations, University of Minnesota Carlson School of Management; and Christine Henle, associate professor of management, Colorado State University College of Business. 


 

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