Gulf News

A scandal on your resume can cost you dearly

EXECUTIVES IN FINANCIAL SERVICES FIRMS SUFFER THE MOST FROM GUILT BY ASSOCIATIO­N

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ou could get dinged on compensati­on, or even knocked out of contention for a job, by a corporate scandal you had nothing to do with.

The Enrons and Worldcoms and Wells Fargos hurt the careers of innocent bystanders. It’s a nasty and persistent reputation­al ripple effect that can be incredibly hard, and sometimes impossible, to counteract.

Wells Fargo & Co., where bank employees tried to meet quotas and earn bonuses by opening sham accounts for customers without their knowledge, is the scandal of the hour. And it is executives in financial services firms that suffer the most from guilt by associatio­n, an article in the September Harvard Business Review suggests.

Initial compensati­on at these executives’ next job is about 10 per cent lower than that for their untainted counterpar­ts, the authors found. Across industries, job functions, levels of seniority, and regions, executives with such companies on their CVs took a cut of 4 per cent in total compensati­on. Women were dinged 7 per cent to men’s 3 per cent.

The hiring manager may like you and understand that you weren’t implicated, but there is that blemish on your resume, so “we’re going to pay you what we think you’ll take, and you’re lucky we’re hiring you,” said Jeanne Branthover, a partner at executive-search company DHR Internatio­nal, explaining the thinking.

The article’s authors speculate that “women from scandal firms, especially those in a male-dominated industry, may feel that they approach the negotiatin­g table To measure the stigma, the authors used proprietar­y data from an unnamed global executive placement firm to analyse 2,034 executive job moves from 2004 to 2011. About half the moves were for C-level, president, or vice president jobs.

They found that a remarkable 18 per cent of the executives had worked for companies marked by financial scandal, defined as earnings misstateme­nts captured in either a database that flags enforcemen­t actions by the Securities and Exchange Commission or in a Government Accountabi­lity Office database. with two strikes against them and thus don’t push on compensati­on as hard as they otherwise might, or as their similarly stigmatise­d male peers do.”

The 10 per cent hit to financial executives’ compensati­on echoes some of the results in a study published earlier this year by business school professors at the University of Chicago and University of Minnesota, only this time the employees were implicated. The study found that 44 per cent of financial advisers who left a job as a result of actual misconduct, rather than guilt by associatio­n, were hired by another firm within a year but “tended to take pay cuts of 10 per cent and land at companies considered less desirable places to work.”

“Even though our article is called The Scandal Effect, what we’re really talking about are innocent bystanders,” said Boris Groysberg, a professor of business administra­tion at Harvard Business School and one of the article’s co-authors. “What upset me most about what we found were the thousands of people who will have bad labour market outcomes — in compensati­on being lower or in getting offers from outside firms being negatively affected — who had nothing to do with the scandals.”

Deep impact

Branthover is struck by how far down in the ranks stigma can reach. She works with senior executives, but when trying to help friends or relatives with job-hunting she has found even midlevel people with a blemished company on their resume “directly impacted by having to explain it in an interview, having to defend themselves in an interview, and being rejected for it” when the person literally had nothing to do with it,” she said. “It’s a huge amount of people.”

Employees in this uncomforta­ble position have to be strategic in addressing the lingering stench of scandal. Don’t remove the company from your CV, Branthover advises. Bring the topic up with a prospectiv­e employer before the question is raised, doing so in a way you’re clearly comfortabl­e with. “Get the point across quickly and concisely, and don’t dwell on it,” she said. “Be prepared for tough questions, ready to answer them without sounding defensive. That can make you come across as a strong profession­al who can handle any situation,” Branthover said.

In trying to escape a previous employer’s bad reputation, job seekers may want to target companies outside the big banks, said Branthover. “You’re looking for the right company that will take the risk,” she said, and that may be a more entreprene­urial one. One recruiter the authors of the Harvard study spoke with told them “the private equity guys are more forgiving than anyone else,” and “will go deep, deep, deep to understand the particular­s of what that person did vs. what the institutio­n did, the inside politics of it.”

Sometimes executives just can’t get past being wrongly associated with a scandal companies don’t want to take the risk or be tainted by the associatio­n. Among the flood of e-mails Groysberg and his co-authors got after the article came out were stories from senior executives who had become successful entreprene­urs because they had to.

That’s something Branthover has seen as well but says isn’t the norm. More likely, an executive who faces these hurdles will have to take a lateral move, a pay cut, or a “rehab job” at a company that’s less of a brand name.

Tainting the innocent. It’s a scandal.

 ??  ?? The hiring manager may like the candidate and understand that the person was not implicated, but there is that blemish on the resume, so the compensati­on offered is likely to be less. Picture for illustrati­ve purposes only.
The hiring manager may like the candidate and understand that the person was not implicated, but there is that blemish on the resume, so the compensati­on offered is likely to be less. Picture for illustrati­ve purposes only.

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