vamsi-krishna-karumanchi
Hi
I am a 2015 pass-out and I have been working for a company for the past 2 years. Before that I worked in a company in which I got selected on campus(as a fresher) for 11 months. I had to abscond from that company for some genuine personal reasons. 9 months after my absconding I got an opportunity in the company as a fresher again in which I am currently working. Now I am planning to switch my job but I am not knowing whether to add that absconding experience in the resume. If I add, that reason was genuine and I can explain to the HR. But need your suggestion if I can add. If not how can I cover that gap in my career when asked in the interview?

From Canada, Toronto
vmlakshminarayanan
948

Hi,
I would suggest better your present your first employment details in the resume. You claim that due to some genuine reasons you had absconded.
If you are not showing your first employment details then there will be a gap of 11 months + 9 months, total 1.8 years after your graduation.

From India, Madras
krrish-sedulous
1

Hi Lakshminarayanan,
Thank you for your information. I would like to add a point here. I would add my previous experience in my resume. In that case, can I claim my total experience as 2 years 11 months when applying for jobs and try for the same level jobs?


vmlakshminarayanan
948

Hi Yes you can.Experience gained is gained.
From India, Madras
krrish-sedulous
1

I Thank you so much for the information.

bangari-subhash
i think now a days Human resources managers have time to listen to reasons which does not bother at all for them. i think absconding from an employer will definitely effect your interview and might feel that you does not have stability. i suggest you not to show your company which you have been absconding
From India, Hyderabad
PRABHAT RANJAN MOHANTY
589

You can show your experience of past employer, if you have experience/relive letter. You will be in problem if the present employer asked you to submit the record.
From India, Mumbai
emiliastadford
1

I think it’s better to be honest, so feel free to add your experience. You can turn everything into an advantage, everything depends on you.
From India, Jalalpur
mansi-thakker1
5

Hi There,
Here are my views. You really should show your experience and let the HR know at the time of interview only. Nowadays all employments are subject to verification. If they find it later, you will be in trouble for sure.
HRs are humans only and they understand the genuine reasons. Go for it and tell the truth.
Thanks,
Mansi

From India, Ahmedabad
nelsonthomas9102
61

Hi,
If the reason for absconding is genuine, you have an option where you can appeal against the dismissal at your first organisation. In the inquiry that follows if it is established that the reason for genuine, by the company then they shall settle for a notice period recovery and release your relieving letter. This way you can put the experience as valid in your resume.
When an employee absconds, the company can only dismiss the employee, not terminate her/him because the exit decision has been taken ex-parte or in the absence of the employee in the company inquiry. So, at any point of time the employee can appeal for a reversal of the dismissal on the grounds that she/he was not part of the inquiry.
But this should be done only if you are fully convinced that your reason for absconding is totally justified. If not, it's better not to mention the experience in your resume. As the gap is right after your education you can always say that you were preparing to proceed for higher studies and therefore studying for entrance exams. Lots of students do this where they skip a year to write a series of entrance exams to prestigious universities. Later they change their minds and proceed for immediate employment.

From India, Bengaluru
Community Support and Knowledge-base on business, career and organisational prospects and issues - Register and Log In to CiteHR and post your query, download formats and be part of a fostered community of professionals.






Contact Us Privacy Policy Disclaimer Terms Of Service

All rights reserved @ 2024 CiteHR ®

All Copyright And Trademarks in Posts Held By Respective Owners.