Is it acceptable to include the general letter of reference with my application even though no letter of reference is requested?
January 13, 2005 10:51 AM Subscribe
Jobfilter. I am applying for a position for which I am qualified because of my education, but not my recent work experience. A few years ago I did volunteer work that is almost identical to what I would be doing in the position I am applying for. Is it acceptable to include the general letter of reference I have from the volunteer work with my application and resume, even though no letter of reference is required or mentioned in the ad? [more inside]
My last few years of work history have been in a different field, and I wanted to include the letter of reference to show that I have performed competently in this capacity in the past. However, some people have been telling me that including information not specifically requested can be seen as a failure to follow instructions and result in my application being discarded.
Anyone have any experience with this?
posted by Sheppagus to work & money (9 answers total)
I may be too idealistic, but I really can't see a company discarding an application that includes a letter of recommendation. They ask for references all the time, after all. Letters strike me as just taking that one step further. I would think discarding an application is more likely if too little information is included.
Personally, I always include my letters, simply because most states don't allow them to grill former employers about you, they're merely allowed to verify if you worked there when you claimed.
posted by Kellydamnit at 11:03 AM on January 13, 2005