
Feb 25, 2016 ● Kate Lopaze
How to Answer “Can I Contact Your Current Employer?”
If anyone asks where you were today, you were at a dentist’s appointment. Right? The vague “appointment,” always in the middle of the day, is a classic tactic for interviewing for new jobs while you’re still at your current one. You just put up your “out of office" message and hope no one notices that you’re awfully dressed up for a Wednesday. However, your slick cover story could be blown if the interviewing company contacts your current one.
How does one avoid this potential explosion of awkwardness?
Look, everyone understands that the sneaky interview is kind of the dirty little secret of the working world. Everyone does it at some point, in hopes of trading up their current position, or pursuing a new opportunity. That doesn’t mean you want your intentions broadcast across your current company—especially if you don’t get the new gig. Ideally, the interviewer will accept your list of non-current-boss references without question. But there’s a chance he or she might ask you the dreaded question: “Hey, do you mind if I contact your current employer?”