Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Give them a range and don't lie about your compensation. Most big contractors will run a background check and as for proof of salary before they hire you. Normal practice with companies like SAIC, Raytheon, etc.
The background check won’t corroborate your salary. I agree, don’t lie. But the background check is there to make sure you have the degrees, the experience, and no criminal background. They’re not going to send the information on your paycheck stub to the person putting together your offer.
But definitely don’t lie about your degrees, experience, or criminal record.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
The background check won’t corroborate your salary. I agree, don’t lie. But the background check is there to make sure you have the degrees, the experience, and no criminal background. They’re not going to send the information on your paycheck stub to the person putting together your offer.
But definitely don’t lie about your degrees, experience, or criminal record.
Actually.... I don't know how much it is ordered by hiring companies, but Equifax does keep a record of historical comp and even divides it into base pay, commission, bonuses etc. They get the info from sources such as ADP. Mine shows Amex requested it twice in 2024.
You can download it for free to review your personal data, it's called The Work Number Employment Data Report.
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which is why I blocked TWN
Anonymous wrote:
The background check won’t corroborate your salary. I agree, don’t lie. But the background check is there to make sure you have the degrees, the experience, and no criminal background. They’re not going to send the information on your paycheck stub to the person putting together your offer.
But definitely don’t lie about your degrees, experience, or criminal record.
Anonymous wrote:Give them a range and don't lie about your compensation. Most big contractors will run a background check and as for proof of salary before they hire you. Normal practice with companies like SAIC, Raytheon, etc.
Anonymous wrote:You suggest slightly higher than you are willing to take. It's not legal to ask what you currently make, so places ask your expectation. If the job is publicly posted they often include a range. Put a number within that range if you want the job.
Anonymous wrote:Federal contractor--how on earth do I know what to tell them?