Top excuses employees use to cover up going for an interview elsewhere
New SEEK research reveals the most common excuses employees use to attend a job interview.
Today’s workforce is more mobile than ever before, and with that mobility comes a complex range of issues relating to staff retention. The fact is that even the best and most loyal staff will occasionally scan the horizon for something new. They may be genuinely unhappy, or just curious about what else is out there. Either way, some will apply for other jobs and land an interview. But don’t expect them to fess up, because a new study by SEEK shows many will try to make sure their employers know nothing about it. The SEEK research, which surveys 4800 Australians that are representative of the workforce each year, found that one in four employees admit to lying about where they are when going for a job interview.
Top line survey results
As it turns out, most employees will not waste their talent inventing elaborate stories to explain their whereabouts. In fact, the fibs told are positively mundane – which is probably just as well at a time when they don’t want to attract attention. Below are the top 10, extremely boring, excuses Australians confess to using to cover their tracks.
I felt sick, I had an illness or I injured myself (28%).
I had a medical appointment (27%).
I had a family emergency (15%).
My pet was sick or hurt itself (5%).
I had a non-medical appointment (4%).
I had an external meeting away from the office (4%).
A relative or child was sick or injured (4%).
I had a maintenance issue at home, e.g. plumber or house inspection, etc. (3%).
The car broke down (2%).
Male vs female – when it comes to interview honesty, women are the fairer sex. The SEEK study found that male employees were more likely than female employees to lie about their whereabouts, with 28% of men doing so, compared with 23% of women.
Age – employees most likely to not tell the truth are aged between 18 and 34 years old, with 31% admitting they had told their employer a fib about a job interview. Those least likely to lie were in the 55–64 year-old age bracket, with just one in 10 (10%) feeling the need to conduct a story.
Pay bracket – interestingly, people in the lowest pay bracket were found to be the most honest when it came to not lying about attending an interview. Just 16% of people earning less than $42k said they had lied to their boss about attending a sneaky interview. In contrast, those in the $42–83k earnings bracket were the biggest fibbers, with 36% admitting to moral gymnastics while playing away from their current workplace.