Showing posts with label employment scam. Show all posts
Showing posts with label employment scam. Show all posts

Monday, September 22, 2014

Taleo sells your personal information

Everyone these days is applying for positions. It seems that most of the alleged general recruitment sites have major issues providing genuine positions. In months of investigating positions on CareerBuilder, only one out of hundreds appeared to be genuine. The same pretty much goes for all of the jobs websites.

Today it was startling to find that Taleo has apparently been selling email addresses in some kind of spam campaign. The following email in all its dubious glory was received from a Taleo server. Case closed on Taleo.

Dear -removed-, my name is Rosa Neal and I am the Senior Manager of Talent Acquisition for Kool Smiles.  Kool Smiles General Dentistry is a growing group practice dedicated to providing access to quality dentistry for kids and adults across the country. 

We are currently seeking full-time and part-time Associate Dentists for our SC clinics. 

Please note that we will pay a referral fee up to $2500 for a Dentist that you refer who is subsequently hired.  So, even if you are not interested, but know of someone who might be I would love to speak with you! 

We currently have openings in the following offices:   

*Columbia
*Anderson
*Sumter
*Greenville
*Orangeburg
*Rock Hill
*Charleston

At Kool Smiles we offer: 
•    Sign-on bonus up to $20k and relocation benefits 
•    Competitive guaranteed daily rate
•    401K Plan with company match
•      Health, dental and vision insurance 
•      100% coverage of malpractice insurance 
•    Paid vacation days
•    Visa and permanent residency sponsorship with covered legal fees 
•    No buy-in required, no lab fees

If you are interested in hearing about this opportunity or know of someone who might be interested in this opportunity please feel free to contact me directly.  
I look forward to hearing back from you.

Best Regards,

Rosa Neal-Prillerman
Manager, Dental Staffing
NCDR, LLC/Kool Smiles, PC
1090 Northchase Parkway, SE
Suite 150
Atlanta, GA 30067
Phone: (404) 844-9816
Fax: (678) 247-7918
Email: rnealprillerman@ncdrllc.com
Website: www.koolsmilespc.com

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www.taleo.com
 In other similar news I've been on the mailing list for SCWorks for a long time. A few days ago, an interesting position was listed and the question was raised as to whether i was interested. A long farce then ensued.

SCWorks - Are you interested in this vacancy?
Me - Yes.
SCWorks - You must apply online via the link.
Me - The link leads off to a 3rd party website that says the job has gone.
SCWorks - Do a search on the SCWorks website.
Me - Sorry but I have just tried that and the search does not seem to work.
SCWorks - Here's a link to the job on the company website.
Me - That's a link to the splash page. There are several jobs listed with the same description. Which one was it.
SCWorks - Try this, tjis, tjis and this.

It just seems that all these general jobs websites and that includes government sites feed off each other and with each iteration lose accuracy.

Saturday, June 21, 2014

Fake photography job.

Somehow, a photography position came to my attention. It was discovered long enough ago to forget how it came to my attention. It was interesting enough to turn up to find out about though there were reservations about it. The office turned out to be one of the shoebox offices that seem to be rented by the hour. There are a lot of these in Columbia. While there may well be some genuine businesses there taking full advantage of the low rent, these are also the realm of the scammer. It's not really fair to say not to visit such places ever because that would harm the genuine businesses. Perhaps it's more a case of just taking extra caution.

The modus operandi is the same for pretty well all of the scam businesses. The office is rented and furnished with ready-provided Ikea furnishings. The lights are seldom switched on. Frequently advertisements for positions are listed via notices and flyers or online. Sometimes they are even posted on government employment agency websites. Usually the scam involves parting fools from their money or from personal information.

Two men in their 20s and 30s were involved. One was hiding behind a pair of women's sunglasses (in an office that had no lighting switched on). The other was sitting behind a desk, conducting the "interview". Neither had any interview or management skills. They advised that in order to work with them, it was important to pay $15 cash to join their "organisation" and then another $15 to obtain a permit of some kind that I'd never heard of before. It would be a total of $30 which had to be paid in cash, there and then. To cap all that off the two demonstrated some very fake looking permits.

Clearly that was a scam. It was not a well organized scam either. The scammers were opportunists and not professionals. It was also quite likely their very first scam. It had me in mind of a scam a few weeks ago where a "company" had broken into a disused bar after advertising on a jobs website. The phone had run early one morning with an invitation to an interview that afternoon. Turning up, the door lock on the bar had clearly been broken. Inside were a pair of men who did not look at all businesslike. There were no lights on and only plastic picnic tables and chairs set up to use. The application forms required to be completed were badly photocopied generic forms with no company name. Quickly finding an excuse that crime scene was quickly left behind. There was clearly no real job there.

Similarly, two more positions on jobs websites. Both were with a company that I did find a bad reports about online. That company did not actually appear to have anything more than a website and did not appear to be anything more than a trading name. Entering the office, the lights were on. The whole place had the feel of temporality. During the "interviews" I had a feeling that everything could be thrown into the trunk of a small car and gone within moments. Both were promises of management positions as long as a "trial" period was carried out. The first position turned out to be flogging cosmetics, door-to-door and the second was flogging car care products door-to-door.

The comment generally is that there are so many fake adverts out there, particularly on general jobs websites that it makes job applications very fraught. It doesn't matter whether it's a photographer looking for a position or anybody else. The chances of finding a scam are greater than the chances of finding a real position advertised. As I said a few days ago, avoiding the general jobs websites is the smart thing to do. I don't continue with an application if a 3rd party website is involved.