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Are Your References Ready?
By Bonnie Lowe

One of the most common forms of background check
performed by companies hiring new employees is the reference check. They
typically request that candidates provide them with three names of previous
bosses. If you don't have three former bosses, then provide co-workers,
teachers, college professors and/or professional colleagues as character
references.
The first thing you should do is develop your list of potential references
and then contact each one. Explain that you're applying for a job, describe
the type of work and the company, and ask if they would feel comfortable
giving you a good recommendation. If they have any hesitation, do not
include them as a reference. You goal is to have three strong references who
can help you land the job.
Be sure to verify their contact information.
Don't list these references on your resume, but have them handy during an
interview. Put the names, titles, phone numbers, mailing addresses and email
addresses of your references on a single sheet of paper and take it to your
interview.
After the interview, if this seems like a job you'd enjoy, go ahead and hand
them this list of references along with any other "leave-behind" materials
that are appropriate, such as a portfolio with samples of your work (this
depends on the type of job, of course).
Here's a step most people forget -- after you land the job, contact your
references, tell them what happened, and thank them for their help!
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Bonnie Lowe is author of the popular
Job Interview Success System and free information-packed ezine, "Career-Life Times." Find those and other powerful career-building resources and tips at her website:
http://www.best-interview-strategies.com.
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