Friend wants my recommendation but I don't want to give it to himHow do you tell a friend they are not...

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Friend wants my recommendation but I don't want to give it to him


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38















I met my friend in my first year of college (Computer Science), so I can tell that I know how well he works and how knowledgeable he is.



He's a good friend, we chat occasionally, meet up to have coffee sometimes and he just told me that he was fired from his company. From what he told me, they didn’t give him that much work and accused him of bad performance, coincidence or not he didn’t like what he was doing and the company itself. He also told me that he didn’t get along with any of his co-workers and missed every single event that the company had organised, for instance the very own kick-off, team building, and more, simply because he didn’t want to go. I think that those events are very important to make a presence and people to know you.



Since he is now sending several CV he told me, a couple of times, that if he's desperate he is counting on me to send his CV to my current company, although I don’t really want to do it. I know he is not very good, from a technical POV, and has some issues getting along with new people. I don’t want to be a terrible friend, but I don’t want to be responsible if he gets the job in my company and fails as my manager would probably blame me and would likely jeopardise my position here.



How should I respond so that I don't hurt my job or my friendship?



Edit: My company currently has an open website with the current job openings listed. Most applicants can use to send their resume but my friend wants me to send it directly










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  • 6





    Do your company have any current openings? Can you refer him to the public portal, if your company have one?

    – Sourav Ghosh
    17 hours ago








  • 2





    @SouravGhosh, yes we have a website that you can apply to the open offers.

    – Bino
    15 hours ago






  • 2





    In case you decide to NOT recommend him (which is what i'd suggest), you may want to ask on interpersonal.stackexchange.com on how to best tell it to your friend.

    – Scrontch
    12 hours ago






  • 2





    When I was in college, we all groaned at the prospect of group projects. They told us that soft skills are the most important thing employers look for. I thought that was ridiculous, people can get along enough to get work done contribute to a team, right?? Your friend is the exact example of why soft skills are so valued: He is surely, doesn't participate in anything, doesn't get along with others, and wonders why he is not given work, and then fired? The lack of self-awareness is astounding.

    – Issel
    9 hours ago






  • 1





    Related: workplace.stackexchange.com/questions/18484/…

    – That Brazilian Guy
    9 hours ago
















38















I met my friend in my first year of college (Computer Science), so I can tell that I know how well he works and how knowledgeable he is.



He's a good friend, we chat occasionally, meet up to have coffee sometimes and he just told me that he was fired from his company. From what he told me, they didn’t give him that much work and accused him of bad performance, coincidence or not he didn’t like what he was doing and the company itself. He also told me that he didn’t get along with any of his co-workers and missed every single event that the company had organised, for instance the very own kick-off, team building, and more, simply because he didn’t want to go. I think that those events are very important to make a presence and people to know you.



Since he is now sending several CV he told me, a couple of times, that if he's desperate he is counting on me to send his CV to my current company, although I don’t really want to do it. I know he is not very good, from a technical POV, and has some issues getting along with new people. I don’t want to be a terrible friend, but I don’t want to be responsible if he gets the job in my company and fails as my manager would probably blame me and would likely jeopardise my position here.



How should I respond so that I don't hurt my job or my friendship?



Edit: My company currently has an open website with the current job openings listed. Most applicants can use to send their resume but my friend wants me to send it directly










share|improve this question









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Check out our Code of Conduct.
















  • 6





    Do your company have any current openings? Can you refer him to the public portal, if your company have one?

    – Sourav Ghosh
    17 hours ago








  • 2





    @SouravGhosh, yes we have a website that you can apply to the open offers.

    – Bino
    15 hours ago






  • 2





    In case you decide to NOT recommend him (which is what i'd suggest), you may want to ask on interpersonal.stackexchange.com on how to best tell it to your friend.

    – Scrontch
    12 hours ago






  • 2





    When I was in college, we all groaned at the prospect of group projects. They told us that soft skills are the most important thing employers look for. I thought that was ridiculous, people can get along enough to get work done contribute to a team, right?? Your friend is the exact example of why soft skills are so valued: He is surely, doesn't participate in anything, doesn't get along with others, and wonders why he is not given work, and then fired? The lack of self-awareness is astounding.

    – Issel
    9 hours ago






  • 1





    Related: workplace.stackexchange.com/questions/18484/…

    – That Brazilian Guy
    9 hours ago














38












38








38


2






I met my friend in my first year of college (Computer Science), so I can tell that I know how well he works and how knowledgeable he is.



He's a good friend, we chat occasionally, meet up to have coffee sometimes and he just told me that he was fired from his company. From what he told me, they didn’t give him that much work and accused him of bad performance, coincidence or not he didn’t like what he was doing and the company itself. He also told me that he didn’t get along with any of his co-workers and missed every single event that the company had organised, for instance the very own kick-off, team building, and more, simply because he didn’t want to go. I think that those events are very important to make a presence and people to know you.



Since he is now sending several CV he told me, a couple of times, that if he's desperate he is counting on me to send his CV to my current company, although I don’t really want to do it. I know he is not very good, from a technical POV, and has some issues getting along with new people. I don’t want to be a terrible friend, but I don’t want to be responsible if he gets the job in my company and fails as my manager would probably blame me and would likely jeopardise my position here.



How should I respond so that I don't hurt my job or my friendship?



Edit: My company currently has an open website with the current job openings listed. Most applicants can use to send their resume but my friend wants me to send it directly










share|improve this question









New contributor




Bino is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.












I met my friend in my first year of college (Computer Science), so I can tell that I know how well he works and how knowledgeable he is.



He's a good friend, we chat occasionally, meet up to have coffee sometimes and he just told me that he was fired from his company. From what he told me, they didn’t give him that much work and accused him of bad performance, coincidence or not he didn’t like what he was doing and the company itself. He also told me that he didn’t get along with any of his co-workers and missed every single event that the company had organised, for instance the very own kick-off, team building, and more, simply because he didn’t want to go. I think that those events are very important to make a presence and people to know you.



Since he is now sending several CV he told me, a couple of times, that if he's desperate he is counting on me to send his CV to my current company, although I don’t really want to do it. I know he is not very good, from a technical POV, and has some issues getting along with new people. I don’t want to be a terrible friend, but I don’t want to be responsible if he gets the job in my company and fails as my manager would probably blame me and would likely jeopardise my position here.



How should I respond so that I don't hurt my job or my friendship?



Edit: My company currently has an open website with the current job openings listed. Most applicants can use to send their resume but my friend wants me to send it directly







resume relationships employees recommendation-letter referral






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edited 26 mins ago









Peter Chikov

31




31






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asked 17 hours ago









BinoBino

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  • 6





    Do your company have any current openings? Can you refer him to the public portal, if your company have one?

    – Sourav Ghosh
    17 hours ago








  • 2





    @SouravGhosh, yes we have a website that you can apply to the open offers.

    – Bino
    15 hours ago






  • 2





    In case you decide to NOT recommend him (which is what i'd suggest), you may want to ask on interpersonal.stackexchange.com on how to best tell it to your friend.

    – Scrontch
    12 hours ago






  • 2





    When I was in college, we all groaned at the prospect of group projects. They told us that soft skills are the most important thing employers look for. I thought that was ridiculous, people can get along enough to get work done contribute to a team, right?? Your friend is the exact example of why soft skills are so valued: He is surely, doesn't participate in anything, doesn't get along with others, and wonders why he is not given work, and then fired? The lack of self-awareness is astounding.

    – Issel
    9 hours ago






  • 1





    Related: workplace.stackexchange.com/questions/18484/…

    – That Brazilian Guy
    9 hours ago














  • 6





    Do your company have any current openings? Can you refer him to the public portal, if your company have one?

    – Sourav Ghosh
    17 hours ago








  • 2





    @SouravGhosh, yes we have a website that you can apply to the open offers.

    – Bino
    15 hours ago






  • 2





    In case you decide to NOT recommend him (which is what i'd suggest), you may want to ask on interpersonal.stackexchange.com on how to best tell it to your friend.

    – Scrontch
    12 hours ago






  • 2





    When I was in college, we all groaned at the prospect of group projects. They told us that soft skills are the most important thing employers look for. I thought that was ridiculous, people can get along enough to get work done contribute to a team, right?? Your friend is the exact example of why soft skills are so valued: He is surely, doesn't participate in anything, doesn't get along with others, and wonders why he is not given work, and then fired? The lack of self-awareness is astounding.

    – Issel
    9 hours ago






  • 1





    Related: workplace.stackexchange.com/questions/18484/…

    – That Brazilian Guy
    9 hours ago








6




6





Do your company have any current openings? Can you refer him to the public portal, if your company have one?

– Sourav Ghosh
17 hours ago







Do your company have any current openings? Can you refer him to the public portal, if your company have one?

– Sourav Ghosh
17 hours ago






2




2





@SouravGhosh, yes we have a website that you can apply to the open offers.

– Bino
15 hours ago





@SouravGhosh, yes we have a website that you can apply to the open offers.

– Bino
15 hours ago




2




2





In case you decide to NOT recommend him (which is what i'd suggest), you may want to ask on interpersonal.stackexchange.com on how to best tell it to your friend.

– Scrontch
12 hours ago





In case you decide to NOT recommend him (which is what i'd suggest), you may want to ask on interpersonal.stackexchange.com on how to best tell it to your friend.

– Scrontch
12 hours ago




2




2





When I was in college, we all groaned at the prospect of group projects. They told us that soft skills are the most important thing employers look for. I thought that was ridiculous, people can get along enough to get work done contribute to a team, right?? Your friend is the exact example of why soft skills are so valued: He is surely, doesn't participate in anything, doesn't get along with others, and wonders why he is not given work, and then fired? The lack of self-awareness is astounding.

– Issel
9 hours ago





When I was in college, we all groaned at the prospect of group projects. They told us that soft skills are the most important thing employers look for. I thought that was ridiculous, people can get along enough to get work done contribute to a team, right?? Your friend is the exact example of why soft skills are so valued: He is surely, doesn't participate in anything, doesn't get along with others, and wonders why he is not given work, and then fired? The lack of self-awareness is astounding.

– Issel
9 hours ago




1




1





Related: workplace.stackexchange.com/questions/18484/…

– That Brazilian Guy
9 hours ago





Related: workplace.stackexchange.com/questions/18484/…

– That Brazilian Guy
9 hours ago










9 Answers
9






active

oldest

votes


















35














I have been in that situation, and not only once, it is definitely an ugly decision to make.

I decided to be open with my friend, and tell him that I don't feel like recommending him as I would only recommend people that I consider to be above average, and sorry, he isn't in my eyes.

It is not necessary to word it that he is generally not above average (even if you think so), you can say 'for the specific role/position this is about'. Also, if the role/position is quite different from your own (or yet unspecific), you have the option to say you wouldn't recommend anyone for that role/position, because you are not qualified to evaluate people for such roles/positions, and the hiring manager would see your recommendation as just that - a friend recommending a friend, without real conviction of his qualities.



In addition, it is ok to forward a resume to the hiring manager 'for info' with the note that you cannot evaluate the person. If you word it right, it doesn't come over as negative recommendation either - just that you don't know how good he is.






share|improve this answer



















  • 96





    It's stone cold to tell a friend he's not good enough. Even your judgement is accurate, it would only serve to bring his self esteem down. It's perfectly fine to forward a CV to the recruiter without putting you in a bad spot. You just have to set expectations that your friend might not be selected

    – Luffydude
    14 hours ago






  • 50





    This is a perfect way to lose a friend. So I do not understand how so many people voted up so bad answer.

    – BЈовић
    13 hours ago






  • 14





    @BЈовић, It's pretty easy to say "My friend is looking for a job, here's his info. I can't say if he's a perfect fit or not but he's probably worth a shot." Your friend will never know what you said. They will know they got a callback or an interview and should be grateful for that.

    – JPhi1618
    13 hours ago






  • 6





    @BЈовић honesty is the best thing you can give a friend. If you are good friends they can handle it. Its is also the most difficult way to go though.

    – Joel Harkes
    13 hours ago








  • 12





    @UKMonkey seriously? It's such an incredibly subjective and pompous opinion to have, saying that someone is not good enough.

    – Luffydude
    12 hours ago





















27















I don’t want to be responsible if he gets the job in my company and fails as my manager would probably blame me and would likely jeopardise my position here.




If he gets the job, it won't be down to your recommendation. Recommended people still have to go through interviewing and tests etc.. If he makes it through all of these it is likely due to the hiring manager seeing something that you clearly do not. They cannot blame you when they hire someone you recommended.



That's like saying this guy is great he deserves the £60k+ p/y job and that person gets the job, that isn't how it works.



That being said:




How should I respond so that I don't hurt my job or my friendship?




Just tell him that your company does not do recommendations and you have to apply to roles as they are posted. This way you ensure he goes through the entire process or hiring and he can't really have an argument to it because it's just the way the company does it.






share|improve this answer



















  • 15





    And it's always a good point to emphasize the difference between a recommendation and a referral. A recommendation means that you think this person is qualified and a good fit for the job. A referral just means that you are passing on their application/resume, but you admit you can't speak to their ability or not.

    – David K
    16 hours ago






  • 12





    Recommended people still have to go through interviewing and tests etc Depends on the company. At my old company, word of mouth was seen as good enough for some positions, developer would have been one of them. I agree thats generally how it should work, but doesn't always.

    – Magisch
    15 hours ago






  • 1





    @Magisch, in my current company we have that scenario. Word of mouth is very strong, and you don't need to the tests. Thanks for the comment Twyxz!

    – Bino
    15 hours ago






  • 9





    "tell him that your company does not do recommendations" may lead to the scenario of the friend getting the job through "normal" means and then finding out that they do, in fact, hire based on recommendations. In which case it will be clear to the friend that OP simply didn't want to recommend them.

    – Alexandre Aubrey
    13 hours ago






  • 2





    "`If he gets the job, it won't be down to your recommendation." This is not necessarily true. At my company if I were to recommend someone for a developer position they would go through a very minimal interview and probably be hired.

    – Clonkex
    7 hours ago



















18














As you clarified in the comment, your company has a public portal for job applications.



Mention to your friend:




We have this job portal and we're encouraged to inform any potential employee to check for the openings and apply online. This way, the process is smoother and unbiased. I'll send you the link, please let me know if you need any help / clarification in accessing that website.




This way, it's a win-win,




  • You don't need to associate yourself with the application or the recruitment process, so whatever happens with the applicant (hired or not), will not be referred back to you.

  • You will have your friend also happy.


Think it in this way: Whether you like it or not, your friend can still apply and get a job in your organization from using the very same portal. in this scenario, you're the one only "providing" him/her with the info (which he/she could have anyways found if they checked the company website, maybe), so you're still in the "good-book".






share|improve this answer
























  • If your hiring process is like the on at my company, there's an opportunity after you've got the job to name an employee who told you about the position, so that they get the referral bonus. If that's the case it works even better: if they don't get hired, nobody knows you were involved, but if they do, then you get the credit.

    – anaximander
    14 hours ago






  • 1





    This is the correct answer in my opinion. Whenever in this situation, tell the friend to submit the CV themselves. They can even mention that they know you if they want to at some point. If your employer asks you about your friend, you can talk about their personal qualities but simply state that you haven't worked enough with him to evaluate his professional skills.

    – Jonast92
    13 hours ago











  • What if the friend persists on nepotism?

    – testing
    12 hours ago











  • it's also been pointed out in comments that word-of-mouth is highly valued in the hiring process. If the friend gets hired through the portal and realizes this, it will be clear to him that "go fill the form" is equivalent to "I didn't want to recommend you".

    – Alexandre Aubrey
    12 hours ago



















11














reading the question it's not clear to me if the request is about a recomendation letter or a simple CV delivery.



if the latter, that's something not unusual that hiring managers are aware of.



you can take the CV saying something like:




hi hiring manager, here is another CV. please don't take this as an endorsement, it's just a friend that asked me to take the CV.




this happened to me a couple of times; not sure if can be relevant but the context is western europe






share|improve this answer

































    10














    As you've pointed out in the comments of other answers, your company has a public portal for job applications but word-of-mouth and recommendations go a long ways in the application process.




    "Word of mouth is very strong, and you don't need to the tests."




    This complicates things, because a recommendation from you may very well lead to a hiring decision that would be blamed on you later rather than on a recruitment team.



    It further complicates things because if you point him towards the application portal with the claim your company doesn't do recommendations, he may get the job through the portal and it won't take him long to learn that the company does in fact value word-of-mouth recommendations. It doesn't take a genius to figure out at that point that you never wanted to recommend him.



    The best solution is to tell him you'll pass his resume along, and make it clear to your supervisor that this is a referral, not a recommendation.



    something along the lines of




    Hi Mr. Boss, someone I know is looking for a job... I've never worked with him as a colleague so I can't attest to whether or not he'd be a good fit here but he asked me to drop off his resume.




    It's a way to keep your friend happy and make sure the hiring decision isn't based on your input.






    share|improve this answer
























    • He can sidestep the second complication by not mentioning recommendations and simply encouraging him to go through the portal. If he gets hired and finds out about the culture Bino can give an excuse like "I believe in merits not recommendations so I do not give recommendations to anyone." or "I prefer a level playing field so we get the best candidate for the job, which since you got it means you were the best." to mitigate any fallout.

      – Anketam
      7 hours ago



















    4














    Tell him you don't do recommendations as a general rule.



    If he asks why, just say you don't like to be held responsible for other people, especially not friends.



    It might be a white lie if you do in fact do recommendations but:




    1. You won't damage your rep with the company because you haven't recommended him.

    2. You won't damage your relation with him because you haven't made it personal.






    share|improve this answer


























    • There is no reason to lie to your friend. There are many better approaches on this very page that don't require lying, so this gets my downvote.

      – Wildcard
      7 hours ago



















    1














    "Friend wants my recommendation but I don't want to"
    "How should I respond so that I don't hurt my job or my friendship?"



    I would help your friend do some introspection, in a way that protects you and helps him take inventory of what he offers:



    "Dear Enrique Iglesias, of course I am happy to help you. My company is very strict when hiring new developers, even more when they come from internal channels. The best way to make sure you make an impression is to carefully match your past work and achievements for the specific position you are looking for.
    Go on our website, find the role you are interested in and then write a few examples of past achievements in those areas.
    Another big requirement is teamwork: it's important for all developers to be social and involved, it's a bit of an unwritten rule. In your CV and cover letter you will also need to make examples of how you interacted with your colleague, especially beyond what was required for your main tasks.
    Once we have this, I'll be happy to forward it to the hiring manager of the position you are interested in. Anything less than this won't work".



    This will help your friend and protect you. All the selling is done by what he writes. Maybe just mention the hiring manager that your friend is very enthusiastic and will discuss in detail what he achieved, and how.



    If he still gets hired, it means that he's either qualified, or good enough to pass the dysfunctions of the selection process.






    share|improve this answer































      1














      Recommendations are not binary.



      Everyone has strengths. Start by identifying your friend's. Build the basis of your recommendation around those. Everyone also has weaknesses. Friends find a way to help friends recognize and work on their weaknesses. This is the ideal time for you to step up and help your friend.



      Honesty doesn't have to be brutal. Ideally, honesty will simultaneously serve the interests of you, your company, and your friend.



      Let those within your company make the call based upon your balanced assessment, including both the good and the bad, reasonably and fairly presented.






      share|improve this answer








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        0














        As hard as it sounds but generally I recommend you to separate friendship with business.



        If it is a very good friend you can help him to get a connection to your company, but you can tell your manager or the recruiter that a friend wanted you to give them his CV.
        Whether he wants to or not he has to complete a job interview which he can not skip just because you are friends.



        If they are satisfied with him and need someone they will offer him a job, otherwise they won't. Just that easy.






        share|improve this answer








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          9 Answers
          9






          active

          oldest

          votes








          9 Answers
          9






          active

          oldest

          votes









          active

          oldest

          votes






          active

          oldest

          votes









          35














          I have been in that situation, and not only once, it is definitely an ugly decision to make.

          I decided to be open with my friend, and tell him that I don't feel like recommending him as I would only recommend people that I consider to be above average, and sorry, he isn't in my eyes.

          It is not necessary to word it that he is generally not above average (even if you think so), you can say 'for the specific role/position this is about'. Also, if the role/position is quite different from your own (or yet unspecific), you have the option to say you wouldn't recommend anyone for that role/position, because you are not qualified to evaluate people for such roles/positions, and the hiring manager would see your recommendation as just that - a friend recommending a friend, without real conviction of his qualities.



          In addition, it is ok to forward a resume to the hiring manager 'for info' with the note that you cannot evaluate the person. If you word it right, it doesn't come over as negative recommendation either - just that you don't know how good he is.






          share|improve this answer



















          • 96





            It's stone cold to tell a friend he's not good enough. Even your judgement is accurate, it would only serve to bring his self esteem down. It's perfectly fine to forward a CV to the recruiter without putting you in a bad spot. You just have to set expectations that your friend might not be selected

            – Luffydude
            14 hours ago






          • 50





            This is a perfect way to lose a friend. So I do not understand how so many people voted up so bad answer.

            – BЈовић
            13 hours ago






          • 14





            @BЈовић, It's pretty easy to say "My friend is looking for a job, here's his info. I can't say if he's a perfect fit or not but he's probably worth a shot." Your friend will never know what you said. They will know they got a callback or an interview and should be grateful for that.

            – JPhi1618
            13 hours ago






          • 6





            @BЈовић honesty is the best thing you can give a friend. If you are good friends they can handle it. Its is also the most difficult way to go though.

            – Joel Harkes
            13 hours ago








          • 12





            @UKMonkey seriously? It's such an incredibly subjective and pompous opinion to have, saying that someone is not good enough.

            – Luffydude
            12 hours ago


















          35














          I have been in that situation, and not only once, it is definitely an ugly decision to make.

          I decided to be open with my friend, and tell him that I don't feel like recommending him as I would only recommend people that I consider to be above average, and sorry, he isn't in my eyes.

          It is not necessary to word it that he is generally not above average (even if you think so), you can say 'for the specific role/position this is about'. Also, if the role/position is quite different from your own (or yet unspecific), you have the option to say you wouldn't recommend anyone for that role/position, because you are not qualified to evaluate people for such roles/positions, and the hiring manager would see your recommendation as just that - a friend recommending a friend, without real conviction of his qualities.



          In addition, it is ok to forward a resume to the hiring manager 'for info' with the note that you cannot evaluate the person. If you word it right, it doesn't come over as negative recommendation either - just that you don't know how good he is.






          share|improve this answer



















          • 96





            It's stone cold to tell a friend he's not good enough. Even your judgement is accurate, it would only serve to bring his self esteem down. It's perfectly fine to forward a CV to the recruiter without putting you in a bad spot. You just have to set expectations that your friend might not be selected

            – Luffydude
            14 hours ago






          • 50





            This is a perfect way to lose a friend. So I do not understand how so many people voted up so bad answer.

            – BЈовић
            13 hours ago






          • 14





            @BЈовић, It's pretty easy to say "My friend is looking for a job, here's his info. I can't say if he's a perfect fit or not but he's probably worth a shot." Your friend will never know what you said. They will know they got a callback or an interview and should be grateful for that.

            – JPhi1618
            13 hours ago






          • 6





            @BЈовић honesty is the best thing you can give a friend. If you are good friends they can handle it. Its is also the most difficult way to go though.

            – Joel Harkes
            13 hours ago








          • 12





            @UKMonkey seriously? It's such an incredibly subjective and pompous opinion to have, saying that someone is not good enough.

            – Luffydude
            12 hours ago
















          35












          35








          35







          I have been in that situation, and not only once, it is definitely an ugly decision to make.

          I decided to be open with my friend, and tell him that I don't feel like recommending him as I would only recommend people that I consider to be above average, and sorry, he isn't in my eyes.

          It is not necessary to word it that he is generally not above average (even if you think so), you can say 'for the specific role/position this is about'. Also, if the role/position is quite different from your own (or yet unspecific), you have the option to say you wouldn't recommend anyone for that role/position, because you are not qualified to evaluate people for such roles/positions, and the hiring manager would see your recommendation as just that - a friend recommending a friend, without real conviction of his qualities.



          In addition, it is ok to forward a resume to the hiring manager 'for info' with the note that you cannot evaluate the person. If you word it right, it doesn't come over as negative recommendation either - just that you don't know how good he is.






          share|improve this answer













          I have been in that situation, and not only once, it is definitely an ugly decision to make.

          I decided to be open with my friend, and tell him that I don't feel like recommending him as I would only recommend people that I consider to be above average, and sorry, he isn't in my eyes.

          It is not necessary to word it that he is generally not above average (even if you think so), you can say 'for the specific role/position this is about'. Also, if the role/position is quite different from your own (or yet unspecific), you have the option to say you wouldn't recommend anyone for that role/position, because you are not qualified to evaluate people for such roles/positions, and the hiring manager would see your recommendation as just that - a friend recommending a friend, without real conviction of his qualities.



          In addition, it is ok to forward a resume to the hiring manager 'for info' with the note that you cannot evaluate the person. If you word it right, it doesn't come over as negative recommendation either - just that you don't know how good he is.







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered 16 hours ago









          AganjuAganju

          1,415411




          1,415411








          • 96





            It's stone cold to tell a friend he's not good enough. Even your judgement is accurate, it would only serve to bring his self esteem down. It's perfectly fine to forward a CV to the recruiter without putting you in a bad spot. You just have to set expectations that your friend might not be selected

            – Luffydude
            14 hours ago






          • 50





            This is a perfect way to lose a friend. So I do not understand how so many people voted up so bad answer.

            – BЈовић
            13 hours ago






          • 14





            @BЈовић, It's pretty easy to say "My friend is looking for a job, here's his info. I can't say if he's a perfect fit or not but he's probably worth a shot." Your friend will never know what you said. They will know they got a callback or an interview and should be grateful for that.

            – JPhi1618
            13 hours ago






          • 6





            @BЈовић honesty is the best thing you can give a friend. If you are good friends they can handle it. Its is also the most difficult way to go though.

            – Joel Harkes
            13 hours ago








          • 12





            @UKMonkey seriously? It's such an incredibly subjective and pompous opinion to have, saying that someone is not good enough.

            – Luffydude
            12 hours ago
















          • 96





            It's stone cold to tell a friend he's not good enough. Even your judgement is accurate, it would only serve to bring his self esteem down. It's perfectly fine to forward a CV to the recruiter without putting you in a bad spot. You just have to set expectations that your friend might not be selected

            – Luffydude
            14 hours ago






          • 50





            This is a perfect way to lose a friend. So I do not understand how so many people voted up so bad answer.

            – BЈовић
            13 hours ago






          • 14





            @BЈовић, It's pretty easy to say "My friend is looking for a job, here's his info. I can't say if he's a perfect fit or not but he's probably worth a shot." Your friend will never know what you said. They will know they got a callback or an interview and should be grateful for that.

            – JPhi1618
            13 hours ago






          • 6





            @BЈовић honesty is the best thing you can give a friend. If you are good friends they can handle it. Its is also the most difficult way to go though.

            – Joel Harkes
            13 hours ago








          • 12





            @UKMonkey seriously? It's such an incredibly subjective and pompous opinion to have, saying that someone is not good enough.

            – Luffydude
            12 hours ago










          96




          96





          It's stone cold to tell a friend he's not good enough. Even your judgement is accurate, it would only serve to bring his self esteem down. It's perfectly fine to forward a CV to the recruiter without putting you in a bad spot. You just have to set expectations that your friend might not be selected

          – Luffydude
          14 hours ago





          It's stone cold to tell a friend he's not good enough. Even your judgement is accurate, it would only serve to bring his self esteem down. It's perfectly fine to forward a CV to the recruiter without putting you in a bad spot. You just have to set expectations that your friend might not be selected

          – Luffydude
          14 hours ago




          50




          50





          This is a perfect way to lose a friend. So I do not understand how so many people voted up so bad answer.

          – BЈовић
          13 hours ago





          This is a perfect way to lose a friend. So I do not understand how so many people voted up so bad answer.

          – BЈовић
          13 hours ago




          14




          14





          @BЈовић, It's pretty easy to say "My friend is looking for a job, here's his info. I can't say if he's a perfect fit or not but he's probably worth a shot." Your friend will never know what you said. They will know they got a callback or an interview and should be grateful for that.

          – JPhi1618
          13 hours ago





          @BЈовић, It's pretty easy to say "My friend is looking for a job, here's his info. I can't say if he's a perfect fit or not but he's probably worth a shot." Your friend will never know what you said. They will know they got a callback or an interview and should be grateful for that.

          – JPhi1618
          13 hours ago




          6




          6





          @BЈовић honesty is the best thing you can give a friend. If you are good friends they can handle it. Its is also the most difficult way to go though.

          – Joel Harkes
          13 hours ago







          @BЈовић honesty is the best thing you can give a friend. If you are good friends they can handle it. Its is also the most difficult way to go though.

          – Joel Harkes
          13 hours ago






          12




          12





          @UKMonkey seriously? It's such an incredibly subjective and pompous opinion to have, saying that someone is not good enough.

          – Luffydude
          12 hours ago







          @UKMonkey seriously? It's such an incredibly subjective and pompous opinion to have, saying that someone is not good enough.

          – Luffydude
          12 hours ago















          27















          I don’t want to be responsible if he gets the job in my company and fails as my manager would probably blame me and would likely jeopardise my position here.




          If he gets the job, it won't be down to your recommendation. Recommended people still have to go through interviewing and tests etc.. If he makes it through all of these it is likely due to the hiring manager seeing something that you clearly do not. They cannot blame you when they hire someone you recommended.



          That's like saying this guy is great he deserves the £60k+ p/y job and that person gets the job, that isn't how it works.



          That being said:




          How should I respond so that I don't hurt my job or my friendship?




          Just tell him that your company does not do recommendations and you have to apply to roles as they are posted. This way you ensure he goes through the entire process or hiring and he can't really have an argument to it because it's just the way the company does it.






          share|improve this answer



















          • 15





            And it's always a good point to emphasize the difference between a recommendation and a referral. A recommendation means that you think this person is qualified and a good fit for the job. A referral just means that you are passing on their application/resume, but you admit you can't speak to their ability or not.

            – David K
            16 hours ago






          • 12





            Recommended people still have to go through interviewing and tests etc Depends on the company. At my old company, word of mouth was seen as good enough for some positions, developer would have been one of them. I agree thats generally how it should work, but doesn't always.

            – Magisch
            15 hours ago






          • 1





            @Magisch, in my current company we have that scenario. Word of mouth is very strong, and you don't need to the tests. Thanks for the comment Twyxz!

            – Bino
            15 hours ago






          • 9





            "tell him that your company does not do recommendations" may lead to the scenario of the friend getting the job through "normal" means and then finding out that they do, in fact, hire based on recommendations. In which case it will be clear to the friend that OP simply didn't want to recommend them.

            – Alexandre Aubrey
            13 hours ago






          • 2





            "`If he gets the job, it won't be down to your recommendation." This is not necessarily true. At my company if I were to recommend someone for a developer position they would go through a very minimal interview and probably be hired.

            – Clonkex
            7 hours ago
















          27















          I don’t want to be responsible if he gets the job in my company and fails as my manager would probably blame me and would likely jeopardise my position here.




          If he gets the job, it won't be down to your recommendation. Recommended people still have to go through interviewing and tests etc.. If he makes it through all of these it is likely due to the hiring manager seeing something that you clearly do not. They cannot blame you when they hire someone you recommended.



          That's like saying this guy is great he deserves the £60k+ p/y job and that person gets the job, that isn't how it works.



          That being said:




          How should I respond so that I don't hurt my job or my friendship?




          Just tell him that your company does not do recommendations and you have to apply to roles as they are posted. This way you ensure he goes through the entire process or hiring and he can't really have an argument to it because it's just the way the company does it.






          share|improve this answer



















          • 15





            And it's always a good point to emphasize the difference between a recommendation and a referral. A recommendation means that you think this person is qualified and a good fit for the job. A referral just means that you are passing on their application/resume, but you admit you can't speak to their ability or not.

            – David K
            16 hours ago






          • 12





            Recommended people still have to go through interviewing and tests etc Depends on the company. At my old company, word of mouth was seen as good enough for some positions, developer would have been one of them. I agree thats generally how it should work, but doesn't always.

            – Magisch
            15 hours ago






          • 1





            @Magisch, in my current company we have that scenario. Word of mouth is very strong, and you don't need to the tests. Thanks for the comment Twyxz!

            – Bino
            15 hours ago






          • 9





            "tell him that your company does not do recommendations" may lead to the scenario of the friend getting the job through "normal" means and then finding out that they do, in fact, hire based on recommendations. In which case it will be clear to the friend that OP simply didn't want to recommend them.

            – Alexandre Aubrey
            13 hours ago






          • 2





            "`If he gets the job, it won't be down to your recommendation." This is not necessarily true. At my company if I were to recommend someone for a developer position they would go through a very minimal interview and probably be hired.

            – Clonkex
            7 hours ago














          27












          27








          27








          I don’t want to be responsible if he gets the job in my company and fails as my manager would probably blame me and would likely jeopardise my position here.




          If he gets the job, it won't be down to your recommendation. Recommended people still have to go through interviewing and tests etc.. If he makes it through all of these it is likely due to the hiring manager seeing something that you clearly do not. They cannot blame you when they hire someone you recommended.



          That's like saying this guy is great he deserves the £60k+ p/y job and that person gets the job, that isn't how it works.



          That being said:




          How should I respond so that I don't hurt my job or my friendship?




          Just tell him that your company does not do recommendations and you have to apply to roles as they are posted. This way you ensure he goes through the entire process or hiring and he can't really have an argument to it because it's just the way the company does it.






          share|improve this answer














          I don’t want to be responsible if he gets the job in my company and fails as my manager would probably blame me and would likely jeopardise my position here.




          If he gets the job, it won't be down to your recommendation. Recommended people still have to go through interviewing and tests etc.. If he makes it through all of these it is likely due to the hiring manager seeing something that you clearly do not. They cannot blame you when they hire someone you recommended.



          That's like saying this guy is great he deserves the £60k+ p/y job and that person gets the job, that isn't how it works.



          That being said:




          How should I respond so that I don't hurt my job or my friendship?




          Just tell him that your company does not do recommendations and you have to apply to roles as they are posted. This way you ensure he goes through the entire process or hiring and he can't really have an argument to it because it's just the way the company does it.







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered 17 hours ago









          TwyxzTwyxz

          13.1k104080




          13.1k104080








          • 15





            And it's always a good point to emphasize the difference between a recommendation and a referral. A recommendation means that you think this person is qualified and a good fit for the job. A referral just means that you are passing on their application/resume, but you admit you can't speak to their ability or not.

            – David K
            16 hours ago






          • 12





            Recommended people still have to go through interviewing and tests etc Depends on the company. At my old company, word of mouth was seen as good enough for some positions, developer would have been one of them. I agree thats generally how it should work, but doesn't always.

            – Magisch
            15 hours ago






          • 1





            @Magisch, in my current company we have that scenario. Word of mouth is very strong, and you don't need to the tests. Thanks for the comment Twyxz!

            – Bino
            15 hours ago






          • 9





            "tell him that your company does not do recommendations" may lead to the scenario of the friend getting the job through "normal" means and then finding out that they do, in fact, hire based on recommendations. In which case it will be clear to the friend that OP simply didn't want to recommend them.

            – Alexandre Aubrey
            13 hours ago






          • 2





            "`If he gets the job, it won't be down to your recommendation." This is not necessarily true. At my company if I were to recommend someone for a developer position they would go through a very minimal interview and probably be hired.

            – Clonkex
            7 hours ago














          • 15





            And it's always a good point to emphasize the difference between a recommendation and a referral. A recommendation means that you think this person is qualified and a good fit for the job. A referral just means that you are passing on their application/resume, but you admit you can't speak to their ability or not.

            – David K
            16 hours ago






          • 12





            Recommended people still have to go through interviewing and tests etc Depends on the company. At my old company, word of mouth was seen as good enough for some positions, developer would have been one of them. I agree thats generally how it should work, but doesn't always.

            – Magisch
            15 hours ago






          • 1





            @Magisch, in my current company we have that scenario. Word of mouth is very strong, and you don't need to the tests. Thanks for the comment Twyxz!

            – Bino
            15 hours ago






          • 9





            "tell him that your company does not do recommendations" may lead to the scenario of the friend getting the job through "normal" means and then finding out that they do, in fact, hire based on recommendations. In which case it will be clear to the friend that OP simply didn't want to recommend them.

            – Alexandre Aubrey
            13 hours ago






          • 2





            "`If he gets the job, it won't be down to your recommendation." This is not necessarily true. At my company if I were to recommend someone for a developer position they would go through a very minimal interview and probably be hired.

            – Clonkex
            7 hours ago








          15




          15





          And it's always a good point to emphasize the difference between a recommendation and a referral. A recommendation means that you think this person is qualified and a good fit for the job. A referral just means that you are passing on their application/resume, but you admit you can't speak to their ability or not.

          – David K
          16 hours ago





          And it's always a good point to emphasize the difference between a recommendation and a referral. A recommendation means that you think this person is qualified and a good fit for the job. A referral just means that you are passing on their application/resume, but you admit you can't speak to their ability or not.

          – David K
          16 hours ago




          12




          12





          Recommended people still have to go through interviewing and tests etc Depends on the company. At my old company, word of mouth was seen as good enough for some positions, developer would have been one of them. I agree thats generally how it should work, but doesn't always.

          – Magisch
          15 hours ago





          Recommended people still have to go through interviewing and tests etc Depends on the company. At my old company, word of mouth was seen as good enough for some positions, developer would have been one of them. I agree thats generally how it should work, but doesn't always.

          – Magisch
          15 hours ago




          1




          1





          @Magisch, in my current company we have that scenario. Word of mouth is very strong, and you don't need to the tests. Thanks for the comment Twyxz!

          – Bino
          15 hours ago





          @Magisch, in my current company we have that scenario. Word of mouth is very strong, and you don't need to the tests. Thanks for the comment Twyxz!

          – Bino
          15 hours ago




          9




          9





          "tell him that your company does not do recommendations" may lead to the scenario of the friend getting the job through "normal" means and then finding out that they do, in fact, hire based on recommendations. In which case it will be clear to the friend that OP simply didn't want to recommend them.

          – Alexandre Aubrey
          13 hours ago





          "tell him that your company does not do recommendations" may lead to the scenario of the friend getting the job through "normal" means and then finding out that they do, in fact, hire based on recommendations. In which case it will be clear to the friend that OP simply didn't want to recommend them.

          – Alexandre Aubrey
          13 hours ago




          2




          2





          "`If he gets the job, it won't be down to your recommendation." This is not necessarily true. At my company if I were to recommend someone for a developer position they would go through a very minimal interview and probably be hired.

          – Clonkex
          7 hours ago





          "`If he gets the job, it won't be down to your recommendation." This is not necessarily true. At my company if I were to recommend someone for a developer position they would go through a very minimal interview and probably be hired.

          – Clonkex
          7 hours ago











          18














          As you clarified in the comment, your company has a public portal for job applications.



          Mention to your friend:




          We have this job portal and we're encouraged to inform any potential employee to check for the openings and apply online. This way, the process is smoother and unbiased. I'll send you the link, please let me know if you need any help / clarification in accessing that website.




          This way, it's a win-win,




          • You don't need to associate yourself with the application or the recruitment process, so whatever happens with the applicant (hired or not), will not be referred back to you.

          • You will have your friend also happy.


          Think it in this way: Whether you like it or not, your friend can still apply and get a job in your organization from using the very same portal. in this scenario, you're the one only "providing" him/her with the info (which he/she could have anyways found if they checked the company website, maybe), so you're still in the "good-book".






          share|improve this answer
























          • If your hiring process is like the on at my company, there's an opportunity after you've got the job to name an employee who told you about the position, so that they get the referral bonus. If that's the case it works even better: if they don't get hired, nobody knows you were involved, but if they do, then you get the credit.

            – anaximander
            14 hours ago






          • 1





            This is the correct answer in my opinion. Whenever in this situation, tell the friend to submit the CV themselves. They can even mention that they know you if they want to at some point. If your employer asks you about your friend, you can talk about their personal qualities but simply state that you haven't worked enough with him to evaluate his professional skills.

            – Jonast92
            13 hours ago











          • What if the friend persists on nepotism?

            – testing
            12 hours ago











          • it's also been pointed out in comments that word-of-mouth is highly valued in the hiring process. If the friend gets hired through the portal and realizes this, it will be clear to him that "go fill the form" is equivalent to "I didn't want to recommend you".

            – Alexandre Aubrey
            12 hours ago
















          18














          As you clarified in the comment, your company has a public portal for job applications.



          Mention to your friend:




          We have this job portal and we're encouraged to inform any potential employee to check for the openings and apply online. This way, the process is smoother and unbiased. I'll send you the link, please let me know if you need any help / clarification in accessing that website.




          This way, it's a win-win,




          • You don't need to associate yourself with the application or the recruitment process, so whatever happens with the applicant (hired or not), will not be referred back to you.

          • You will have your friend also happy.


          Think it in this way: Whether you like it or not, your friend can still apply and get a job in your organization from using the very same portal. in this scenario, you're the one only "providing" him/her with the info (which he/she could have anyways found if they checked the company website, maybe), so you're still in the "good-book".






          share|improve this answer
























          • If your hiring process is like the on at my company, there's an opportunity after you've got the job to name an employee who told you about the position, so that they get the referral bonus. If that's the case it works even better: if they don't get hired, nobody knows you were involved, but if they do, then you get the credit.

            – anaximander
            14 hours ago






          • 1





            This is the correct answer in my opinion. Whenever in this situation, tell the friend to submit the CV themselves. They can even mention that they know you if they want to at some point. If your employer asks you about your friend, you can talk about their personal qualities but simply state that you haven't worked enough with him to evaluate his professional skills.

            – Jonast92
            13 hours ago











          • What if the friend persists on nepotism?

            – testing
            12 hours ago











          • it's also been pointed out in comments that word-of-mouth is highly valued in the hiring process. If the friend gets hired through the portal and realizes this, it will be clear to him that "go fill the form" is equivalent to "I didn't want to recommend you".

            – Alexandre Aubrey
            12 hours ago














          18












          18








          18







          As you clarified in the comment, your company has a public portal for job applications.



          Mention to your friend:




          We have this job portal and we're encouraged to inform any potential employee to check for the openings and apply online. This way, the process is smoother and unbiased. I'll send you the link, please let me know if you need any help / clarification in accessing that website.




          This way, it's a win-win,




          • You don't need to associate yourself with the application or the recruitment process, so whatever happens with the applicant (hired or not), will not be referred back to you.

          • You will have your friend also happy.


          Think it in this way: Whether you like it or not, your friend can still apply and get a job in your organization from using the very same portal. in this scenario, you're the one only "providing" him/her with the info (which he/she could have anyways found if they checked the company website, maybe), so you're still in the "good-book".






          share|improve this answer













          As you clarified in the comment, your company has a public portal for job applications.



          Mention to your friend:




          We have this job portal and we're encouraged to inform any potential employee to check for the openings and apply online. This way, the process is smoother and unbiased. I'll send you the link, please let me know if you need any help / clarification in accessing that website.




          This way, it's a win-win,




          • You don't need to associate yourself with the application or the recruitment process, so whatever happens with the applicant (hired or not), will not be referred back to you.

          • You will have your friend also happy.


          Think it in this way: Whether you like it or not, your friend can still apply and get a job in your organization from using the very same portal. in this scenario, you're the one only "providing" him/her with the info (which he/she could have anyways found if they checked the company website, maybe), so you're still in the "good-book".







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered 15 hours ago









          Sourav GhoshSourav Ghosh

          6,01632447




          6,01632447













          • If your hiring process is like the on at my company, there's an opportunity after you've got the job to name an employee who told you about the position, so that they get the referral bonus. If that's the case it works even better: if they don't get hired, nobody knows you were involved, but if they do, then you get the credit.

            – anaximander
            14 hours ago






          • 1





            This is the correct answer in my opinion. Whenever in this situation, tell the friend to submit the CV themselves. They can even mention that they know you if they want to at some point. If your employer asks you about your friend, you can talk about their personal qualities but simply state that you haven't worked enough with him to evaluate his professional skills.

            – Jonast92
            13 hours ago











          • What if the friend persists on nepotism?

            – testing
            12 hours ago











          • it's also been pointed out in comments that word-of-mouth is highly valued in the hiring process. If the friend gets hired through the portal and realizes this, it will be clear to him that "go fill the form" is equivalent to "I didn't want to recommend you".

            – Alexandre Aubrey
            12 hours ago



















          • If your hiring process is like the on at my company, there's an opportunity after you've got the job to name an employee who told you about the position, so that they get the referral bonus. If that's the case it works even better: if they don't get hired, nobody knows you were involved, but if they do, then you get the credit.

            – anaximander
            14 hours ago






          • 1





            This is the correct answer in my opinion. Whenever in this situation, tell the friend to submit the CV themselves. They can even mention that they know you if they want to at some point. If your employer asks you about your friend, you can talk about their personal qualities but simply state that you haven't worked enough with him to evaluate his professional skills.

            – Jonast92
            13 hours ago











          • What if the friend persists on nepotism?

            – testing
            12 hours ago











          • it's also been pointed out in comments that word-of-mouth is highly valued in the hiring process. If the friend gets hired through the portal and realizes this, it will be clear to him that "go fill the form" is equivalent to "I didn't want to recommend you".

            – Alexandre Aubrey
            12 hours ago

















          If your hiring process is like the on at my company, there's an opportunity after you've got the job to name an employee who told you about the position, so that they get the referral bonus. If that's the case it works even better: if they don't get hired, nobody knows you were involved, but if they do, then you get the credit.

          – anaximander
          14 hours ago





          If your hiring process is like the on at my company, there's an opportunity after you've got the job to name an employee who told you about the position, so that they get the referral bonus. If that's the case it works even better: if they don't get hired, nobody knows you were involved, but if they do, then you get the credit.

          – anaximander
          14 hours ago




          1




          1





          This is the correct answer in my opinion. Whenever in this situation, tell the friend to submit the CV themselves. They can even mention that they know you if they want to at some point. If your employer asks you about your friend, you can talk about their personal qualities but simply state that you haven't worked enough with him to evaluate his professional skills.

          – Jonast92
          13 hours ago





          This is the correct answer in my opinion. Whenever in this situation, tell the friend to submit the CV themselves. They can even mention that they know you if they want to at some point. If your employer asks you about your friend, you can talk about their personal qualities but simply state that you haven't worked enough with him to evaluate his professional skills.

          – Jonast92
          13 hours ago













          What if the friend persists on nepotism?

          – testing
          12 hours ago





          What if the friend persists on nepotism?

          – testing
          12 hours ago













          it's also been pointed out in comments that word-of-mouth is highly valued in the hiring process. If the friend gets hired through the portal and realizes this, it will be clear to him that "go fill the form" is equivalent to "I didn't want to recommend you".

          – Alexandre Aubrey
          12 hours ago





          it's also been pointed out in comments that word-of-mouth is highly valued in the hiring process. If the friend gets hired through the portal and realizes this, it will be clear to him that "go fill the form" is equivalent to "I didn't want to recommend you".

          – Alexandre Aubrey
          12 hours ago











          11














          reading the question it's not clear to me if the request is about a recomendation letter or a simple CV delivery.



          if the latter, that's something not unusual that hiring managers are aware of.



          you can take the CV saying something like:




          hi hiring manager, here is another CV. please don't take this as an endorsement, it's just a friend that asked me to take the CV.




          this happened to me a couple of times; not sure if can be relevant but the context is western europe






          share|improve this answer






























            11














            reading the question it's not clear to me if the request is about a recomendation letter or a simple CV delivery.



            if the latter, that's something not unusual that hiring managers are aware of.



            you can take the CV saying something like:




            hi hiring manager, here is another CV. please don't take this as an endorsement, it's just a friend that asked me to take the CV.




            this happened to me a couple of times; not sure if can be relevant but the context is western europe






            share|improve this answer




























              11












              11








              11







              reading the question it's not clear to me if the request is about a recomendation letter or a simple CV delivery.



              if the latter, that's something not unusual that hiring managers are aware of.



              you can take the CV saying something like:




              hi hiring manager, here is another CV. please don't take this as an endorsement, it's just a friend that asked me to take the CV.




              this happened to me a couple of times; not sure if can be relevant but the context is western europe






              share|improve this answer















              reading the question it's not clear to me if the request is about a recomendation letter or a simple CV delivery.



              if the latter, that's something not unusual that hiring managers are aware of.



              you can take the CV saying something like:




              hi hiring manager, here is another CV. please don't take this as an endorsement, it's just a friend that asked me to take the CV.




              this happened to me a couple of times; not sure if can be relevant but the context is western europe







              share|improve this answer














              share|improve this answer



              share|improve this answer








              edited 13 hours ago

























              answered 14 hours ago









              PaoloPaolo

              1,4301512




              1,4301512























                  10














                  As you've pointed out in the comments of other answers, your company has a public portal for job applications but word-of-mouth and recommendations go a long ways in the application process.




                  "Word of mouth is very strong, and you don't need to the tests."




                  This complicates things, because a recommendation from you may very well lead to a hiring decision that would be blamed on you later rather than on a recruitment team.



                  It further complicates things because if you point him towards the application portal with the claim your company doesn't do recommendations, he may get the job through the portal and it won't take him long to learn that the company does in fact value word-of-mouth recommendations. It doesn't take a genius to figure out at that point that you never wanted to recommend him.



                  The best solution is to tell him you'll pass his resume along, and make it clear to your supervisor that this is a referral, not a recommendation.



                  something along the lines of




                  Hi Mr. Boss, someone I know is looking for a job... I've never worked with him as a colleague so I can't attest to whether or not he'd be a good fit here but he asked me to drop off his resume.




                  It's a way to keep your friend happy and make sure the hiring decision isn't based on your input.






                  share|improve this answer
























                  • He can sidestep the second complication by not mentioning recommendations and simply encouraging him to go through the portal. If he gets hired and finds out about the culture Bino can give an excuse like "I believe in merits not recommendations so I do not give recommendations to anyone." or "I prefer a level playing field so we get the best candidate for the job, which since you got it means you were the best." to mitigate any fallout.

                    – Anketam
                    7 hours ago
















                  10














                  As you've pointed out in the comments of other answers, your company has a public portal for job applications but word-of-mouth and recommendations go a long ways in the application process.




                  "Word of mouth is very strong, and you don't need to the tests."




                  This complicates things, because a recommendation from you may very well lead to a hiring decision that would be blamed on you later rather than on a recruitment team.



                  It further complicates things because if you point him towards the application portal with the claim your company doesn't do recommendations, he may get the job through the portal and it won't take him long to learn that the company does in fact value word-of-mouth recommendations. It doesn't take a genius to figure out at that point that you never wanted to recommend him.



                  The best solution is to tell him you'll pass his resume along, and make it clear to your supervisor that this is a referral, not a recommendation.



                  something along the lines of




                  Hi Mr. Boss, someone I know is looking for a job... I've never worked with him as a colleague so I can't attest to whether or not he'd be a good fit here but he asked me to drop off his resume.




                  It's a way to keep your friend happy and make sure the hiring decision isn't based on your input.






                  share|improve this answer
























                  • He can sidestep the second complication by not mentioning recommendations and simply encouraging him to go through the portal. If he gets hired and finds out about the culture Bino can give an excuse like "I believe in merits not recommendations so I do not give recommendations to anyone." or "I prefer a level playing field so we get the best candidate for the job, which since you got it means you were the best." to mitigate any fallout.

                    – Anketam
                    7 hours ago














                  10












                  10








                  10







                  As you've pointed out in the comments of other answers, your company has a public portal for job applications but word-of-mouth and recommendations go a long ways in the application process.




                  "Word of mouth is very strong, and you don't need to the tests."




                  This complicates things, because a recommendation from you may very well lead to a hiring decision that would be blamed on you later rather than on a recruitment team.



                  It further complicates things because if you point him towards the application portal with the claim your company doesn't do recommendations, he may get the job through the portal and it won't take him long to learn that the company does in fact value word-of-mouth recommendations. It doesn't take a genius to figure out at that point that you never wanted to recommend him.



                  The best solution is to tell him you'll pass his resume along, and make it clear to your supervisor that this is a referral, not a recommendation.



                  something along the lines of




                  Hi Mr. Boss, someone I know is looking for a job... I've never worked with him as a colleague so I can't attest to whether or not he'd be a good fit here but he asked me to drop off his resume.




                  It's a way to keep your friend happy and make sure the hiring decision isn't based on your input.






                  share|improve this answer













                  As you've pointed out in the comments of other answers, your company has a public portal for job applications but word-of-mouth and recommendations go a long ways in the application process.




                  "Word of mouth is very strong, and you don't need to the tests."




                  This complicates things, because a recommendation from you may very well lead to a hiring decision that would be blamed on you later rather than on a recruitment team.



                  It further complicates things because if you point him towards the application portal with the claim your company doesn't do recommendations, he may get the job through the portal and it won't take him long to learn that the company does in fact value word-of-mouth recommendations. It doesn't take a genius to figure out at that point that you never wanted to recommend him.



                  The best solution is to tell him you'll pass his resume along, and make it clear to your supervisor that this is a referral, not a recommendation.



                  something along the lines of




                  Hi Mr. Boss, someone I know is looking for a job... I've never worked with him as a colleague so I can't attest to whether or not he'd be a good fit here but he asked me to drop off his resume.




                  It's a way to keep your friend happy and make sure the hiring decision isn't based on your input.







                  share|improve this answer












                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer










                  answered 13 hours ago









                  Alexandre AubreyAlexandre Aubrey

                  39419




                  39419













                  • He can sidestep the second complication by not mentioning recommendations and simply encouraging him to go through the portal. If he gets hired and finds out about the culture Bino can give an excuse like "I believe in merits not recommendations so I do not give recommendations to anyone." or "I prefer a level playing field so we get the best candidate for the job, which since you got it means you were the best." to mitigate any fallout.

                    – Anketam
                    7 hours ago



















                  • He can sidestep the second complication by not mentioning recommendations and simply encouraging him to go through the portal. If he gets hired and finds out about the culture Bino can give an excuse like "I believe in merits not recommendations so I do not give recommendations to anyone." or "I prefer a level playing field so we get the best candidate for the job, which since you got it means you were the best." to mitigate any fallout.

                    – Anketam
                    7 hours ago

















                  He can sidestep the second complication by not mentioning recommendations and simply encouraging him to go through the portal. If he gets hired and finds out about the culture Bino can give an excuse like "I believe in merits not recommendations so I do not give recommendations to anyone." or "I prefer a level playing field so we get the best candidate for the job, which since you got it means you were the best." to mitigate any fallout.

                  – Anketam
                  7 hours ago





                  He can sidestep the second complication by not mentioning recommendations and simply encouraging him to go through the portal. If he gets hired and finds out about the culture Bino can give an excuse like "I believe in merits not recommendations so I do not give recommendations to anyone." or "I prefer a level playing field so we get the best candidate for the job, which since you got it means you were the best." to mitigate any fallout.

                  – Anketam
                  7 hours ago











                  4














                  Tell him you don't do recommendations as a general rule.



                  If he asks why, just say you don't like to be held responsible for other people, especially not friends.



                  It might be a white lie if you do in fact do recommendations but:




                  1. You won't damage your rep with the company because you haven't recommended him.

                  2. You won't damage your relation with him because you haven't made it personal.






                  share|improve this answer


























                  • There is no reason to lie to your friend. There are many better approaches on this very page that don't require lying, so this gets my downvote.

                    – Wildcard
                    7 hours ago
















                  4














                  Tell him you don't do recommendations as a general rule.



                  If he asks why, just say you don't like to be held responsible for other people, especially not friends.



                  It might be a white lie if you do in fact do recommendations but:




                  1. You won't damage your rep with the company because you haven't recommended him.

                  2. You won't damage your relation with him because you haven't made it personal.






                  share|improve this answer


























                  • There is no reason to lie to your friend. There are many better approaches on this very page that don't require lying, so this gets my downvote.

                    – Wildcard
                    7 hours ago














                  4












                  4








                  4







                  Tell him you don't do recommendations as a general rule.



                  If he asks why, just say you don't like to be held responsible for other people, especially not friends.



                  It might be a white lie if you do in fact do recommendations but:




                  1. You won't damage your rep with the company because you haven't recommended him.

                  2. You won't damage your relation with him because you haven't made it personal.






                  share|improve this answer















                  Tell him you don't do recommendations as a general rule.



                  If he asks why, just say you don't like to be held responsible for other people, especially not friends.



                  It might be a white lie if you do in fact do recommendations but:




                  1. You won't damage your rep with the company because you haven't recommended him.

                  2. You won't damage your relation with him because you haven't made it personal.







                  share|improve this answer














                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer








                  edited 13 hours ago

























                  answered 14 hours ago









                  Jamie ButterworthJamie Butterworth

                  792




                  792













                  • There is no reason to lie to your friend. There are many better approaches on this very page that don't require lying, so this gets my downvote.

                    – Wildcard
                    7 hours ago



















                  • There is no reason to lie to your friend. There are many better approaches on this very page that don't require lying, so this gets my downvote.

                    – Wildcard
                    7 hours ago

















                  There is no reason to lie to your friend. There are many better approaches on this very page that don't require lying, so this gets my downvote.

                  – Wildcard
                  7 hours ago





                  There is no reason to lie to your friend. There are many better approaches on this very page that don't require lying, so this gets my downvote.

                  – Wildcard
                  7 hours ago











                  1














                  "Friend wants my recommendation but I don't want to"
                  "How should I respond so that I don't hurt my job or my friendship?"



                  I would help your friend do some introspection, in a way that protects you and helps him take inventory of what he offers:



                  "Dear Enrique Iglesias, of course I am happy to help you. My company is very strict when hiring new developers, even more when they come from internal channels. The best way to make sure you make an impression is to carefully match your past work and achievements for the specific position you are looking for.
                  Go on our website, find the role you are interested in and then write a few examples of past achievements in those areas.
                  Another big requirement is teamwork: it's important for all developers to be social and involved, it's a bit of an unwritten rule. In your CV and cover letter you will also need to make examples of how you interacted with your colleague, especially beyond what was required for your main tasks.
                  Once we have this, I'll be happy to forward it to the hiring manager of the position you are interested in. Anything less than this won't work".



                  This will help your friend and protect you. All the selling is done by what he writes. Maybe just mention the hiring manager that your friend is very enthusiastic and will discuss in detail what he achieved, and how.



                  If he still gets hired, it means that he's either qualified, or good enough to pass the dysfunctions of the selection process.






                  share|improve this answer




























                    1














                    "Friend wants my recommendation but I don't want to"
                    "How should I respond so that I don't hurt my job or my friendship?"



                    I would help your friend do some introspection, in a way that protects you and helps him take inventory of what he offers:



                    "Dear Enrique Iglesias, of course I am happy to help you. My company is very strict when hiring new developers, even more when they come from internal channels. The best way to make sure you make an impression is to carefully match your past work and achievements for the specific position you are looking for.
                    Go on our website, find the role you are interested in and then write a few examples of past achievements in those areas.
                    Another big requirement is teamwork: it's important for all developers to be social and involved, it's a bit of an unwritten rule. In your CV and cover letter you will also need to make examples of how you interacted with your colleague, especially beyond what was required for your main tasks.
                    Once we have this, I'll be happy to forward it to the hiring manager of the position you are interested in. Anything less than this won't work".



                    This will help your friend and protect you. All the selling is done by what he writes. Maybe just mention the hiring manager that your friend is very enthusiastic and will discuss in detail what he achieved, and how.



                    If he still gets hired, it means that he's either qualified, or good enough to pass the dysfunctions of the selection process.






                    share|improve this answer


























                      1












                      1








                      1







                      "Friend wants my recommendation but I don't want to"
                      "How should I respond so that I don't hurt my job or my friendship?"



                      I would help your friend do some introspection, in a way that protects you and helps him take inventory of what he offers:



                      "Dear Enrique Iglesias, of course I am happy to help you. My company is very strict when hiring new developers, even more when they come from internal channels. The best way to make sure you make an impression is to carefully match your past work and achievements for the specific position you are looking for.
                      Go on our website, find the role you are interested in and then write a few examples of past achievements in those areas.
                      Another big requirement is teamwork: it's important for all developers to be social and involved, it's a bit of an unwritten rule. In your CV and cover letter you will also need to make examples of how you interacted with your colleague, especially beyond what was required for your main tasks.
                      Once we have this, I'll be happy to forward it to the hiring manager of the position you are interested in. Anything less than this won't work".



                      This will help your friend and protect you. All the selling is done by what he writes. Maybe just mention the hiring manager that your friend is very enthusiastic and will discuss in detail what he achieved, and how.



                      If he still gets hired, it means that he's either qualified, or good enough to pass the dysfunctions of the selection process.






                      share|improve this answer













                      "Friend wants my recommendation but I don't want to"
                      "How should I respond so that I don't hurt my job or my friendship?"



                      I would help your friend do some introspection, in a way that protects you and helps him take inventory of what he offers:



                      "Dear Enrique Iglesias, of course I am happy to help you. My company is very strict when hiring new developers, even more when they come from internal channels. The best way to make sure you make an impression is to carefully match your past work and achievements for the specific position you are looking for.
                      Go on our website, find the role you are interested in and then write a few examples of past achievements in those areas.
                      Another big requirement is teamwork: it's important for all developers to be social and involved, it's a bit of an unwritten rule. In your CV and cover letter you will also need to make examples of how you interacted with your colleague, especially beyond what was required for your main tasks.
                      Once we have this, I'll be happy to forward it to the hiring manager of the position you are interested in. Anything less than this won't work".



                      This will help your friend and protect you. All the selling is done by what he writes. Maybe just mention the hiring manager that your friend is very enthusiastic and will discuss in detail what he achieved, and how.



                      If he still gets hired, it means that he's either qualified, or good enough to pass the dysfunctions of the selection process.







                      share|improve this answer












                      share|improve this answer



                      share|improve this answer










                      answered 14 hours ago









                      MonoandaleMonoandale

                      3,31452257




                      3,31452257























                          1














                          Recommendations are not binary.



                          Everyone has strengths. Start by identifying your friend's. Build the basis of your recommendation around those. Everyone also has weaknesses. Friends find a way to help friends recognize and work on their weaknesses. This is the ideal time for you to step up and help your friend.



                          Honesty doesn't have to be brutal. Ideally, honesty will simultaneously serve the interests of you, your company, and your friend.



                          Let those within your company make the call based upon your balanced assessment, including both the good and the bad, reasonably and fairly presented.






                          share|improve this answer








                          New contributor




                          kjhughes is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                          Check out our Code of Conduct.

























                            1














                            Recommendations are not binary.



                            Everyone has strengths. Start by identifying your friend's. Build the basis of your recommendation around those. Everyone also has weaknesses. Friends find a way to help friends recognize and work on their weaknesses. This is the ideal time for you to step up and help your friend.



                            Honesty doesn't have to be brutal. Ideally, honesty will simultaneously serve the interests of you, your company, and your friend.



                            Let those within your company make the call based upon your balanced assessment, including both the good and the bad, reasonably and fairly presented.






                            share|improve this answer








                            New contributor




                            kjhughes is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                            Check out our Code of Conduct.























                              1












                              1








                              1







                              Recommendations are not binary.



                              Everyone has strengths. Start by identifying your friend's. Build the basis of your recommendation around those. Everyone also has weaknesses. Friends find a way to help friends recognize and work on their weaknesses. This is the ideal time for you to step up and help your friend.



                              Honesty doesn't have to be brutal. Ideally, honesty will simultaneously serve the interests of you, your company, and your friend.



                              Let those within your company make the call based upon your balanced assessment, including both the good and the bad, reasonably and fairly presented.






                              share|improve this answer








                              New contributor




                              kjhughes is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                              Check out our Code of Conduct.










                              Recommendations are not binary.



                              Everyone has strengths. Start by identifying your friend's. Build the basis of your recommendation around those. Everyone also has weaknesses. Friends find a way to help friends recognize and work on their weaknesses. This is the ideal time for you to step up and help your friend.



                              Honesty doesn't have to be brutal. Ideally, honesty will simultaneously serve the interests of you, your company, and your friend.



                              Let those within your company make the call based upon your balanced assessment, including both the good and the bad, reasonably and fairly presented.







                              share|improve this answer








                              New contributor




                              kjhughes is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                              Check out our Code of Conduct.









                              share|improve this answer



                              share|improve this answer






                              New contributor




                              kjhughes is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                              Check out our Code of Conduct.









                              answered 7 hours ago









                              kjhugheskjhughes

                              1113




                              1113




                              New contributor




                              kjhughes is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                              Check out our Code of Conduct.





                              New contributor





                              kjhughes is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                              Check out our Code of Conduct.






                              kjhughes is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                              Check out our Code of Conduct.























                                  0














                                  As hard as it sounds but generally I recommend you to separate friendship with business.



                                  If it is a very good friend you can help him to get a connection to your company, but you can tell your manager or the recruiter that a friend wanted you to give them his CV.
                                  Whether he wants to or not he has to complete a job interview which he can not skip just because you are friends.



                                  If they are satisfied with him and need someone they will offer him a job, otherwise they won't. Just that easy.






                                  share|improve this answer








                                  New contributor




                                  ebug38 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                                  Check out our Code of Conduct.

























                                    0














                                    As hard as it sounds but generally I recommend you to separate friendship with business.



                                    If it is a very good friend you can help him to get a connection to your company, but you can tell your manager or the recruiter that a friend wanted you to give them his CV.
                                    Whether he wants to or not he has to complete a job interview which he can not skip just because you are friends.



                                    If they are satisfied with him and need someone they will offer him a job, otherwise they won't. Just that easy.






                                    share|improve this answer








                                    New contributor




                                    ebug38 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                                    Check out our Code of Conduct.























                                      0












                                      0








                                      0







                                      As hard as it sounds but generally I recommend you to separate friendship with business.



                                      If it is a very good friend you can help him to get a connection to your company, but you can tell your manager or the recruiter that a friend wanted you to give them his CV.
                                      Whether he wants to or not he has to complete a job interview which he can not skip just because you are friends.



                                      If they are satisfied with him and need someone they will offer him a job, otherwise they won't. Just that easy.






                                      share|improve this answer








                                      New contributor




                                      ebug38 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                                      Check out our Code of Conduct.










                                      As hard as it sounds but generally I recommend you to separate friendship with business.



                                      If it is a very good friend you can help him to get a connection to your company, but you can tell your manager or the recruiter that a friend wanted you to give them his CV.
                                      Whether he wants to or not he has to complete a job interview which he can not skip just because you are friends.



                                      If they are satisfied with him and need someone they will offer him a job, otherwise they won't. Just that easy.







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                                      answered 17 hours ago









                                      ebug38ebug38

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