Business jargon can be a bit of a running joke – pushing the envelope, blue sky thinking, running things up the flagpole. Mostly meaningless phrases which have a perfectly good alternative in plain English. However, there’s one jargon term which you do need to know. Safer recruitment is something a lot of employers are talking about. The term refers to a lot of different concepts, but you need to see it from both the employer’s, and candidate’s perspectives.  

What is Safer Recruitment anyway?

As the name implies, safer recruitment is about thorough checking on people who are applying for jobs. There are lots of reasons for doing this. In part, it’s about protecting your business from the risk of taking on an unsuitable employee. It could also mean weeding out people with a serious debt problem who want to work in a bank handling cash. On the other hand, it’s about looking after your customers or people using whatever service you provide. This is particularly the case when your work involves children, the elderly or other vulnerable groups.  

How do employers go about this?

Although there are several templates and guidelines for recruiting safely, there is no law around this. Employers have to come up with their own rules and processes for hiring staff. Each company will do something different. Some of the things an employer might do include:
  • Legal status checks – all employers have to make sure that their workers are legally allowed to live and work in the UK. The easiest way of doing this is by asking to see applicants’ passports.
  • Reference checking – employers might phone up all previous places of work to confirm that you did in fact work for them between the dates you’ve given. They might ask about job titles and responsibility. This is something to bear in mind if you’ve ever been tempted to “beef up” your CV by embellishing the facts.
  • Fact Checking – this won’t be done for all positions. If however you’re claiming a particular skill or academic qualification, employers might ask for proof. Hiring someone into a business who needs substantial training to get up to speed can be expensive.
  • Criminal records checks – many employers will want to do a check into your police record. They are allowed to do this, within limits. Employers can ask for a basic disclosure check, which looks into your current, unexpired police record only. They are only allowed to dig deeper into your past if the job requires an enhanced or standard disclosure
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What employers should be doing

Employers are free to do what works for them in terms of recruiting, within limits. They are not allowed to discriminate on basis of sex, race, sexual orientation or nationality. It would be illegal, for example to have a policy of in depth checking on black women only. So most accept an “all or nothing” approach. Most employers are happy to clearly communicate their recruitment policy and talk you through what they are doing at each stage. Don’t take a safe recruitment policy personally. Employers are not inferring that you are lying or that there is something to mistrust about your background.  

Advice for candidates on safer recruitment

If you’re thinking of applying for a job with an organisation which says it follows these procedures then you can expect a bot more checking that you might be used to. It’s also a bit of a heads-up that you really should clean up your CV. A high percentage of job applications contain embellishments or downright lies. If you’ve “enhanced” your CV in the hope of landing an interview, then there’s every possibility that you’ll be caught. Don’t risk it. As far as DBS certificates are concerned, you should be able to work out if an offence in your past, if you have any, will be disclosed. All the guidelines for disregarding offences after a set period of time are publicly available. Remember too that there are millions of people in the UK with a criminal record, most of whom are working. If you’re honest with employers about mistakes you’ve made in the past, and can demonstrate that you’re a reformed character, then you stand as much chance of landing a job as the next person.