This job-safety guide is for job seekers who are receiving background check links. The goal is to verify the opportunity before you share money, documents, or sensitive information.
Background check links should come through known, verifiable employer processes.
What to focus on first
| Red flag | Check this first | Safer move |
|---|---|---|
| Contact method | Email domain, company site, recruiter profile | Confirms basic identity |
| Money request | Fees, checks, equipment payments, crypto, gift cards | Protects your cash |
| Paperwork timing | SSN, bank, ID, tax forms before offer | Protects personal data |
Priority scorecard
This simple visual block helps you decide what to improve first. It is a planning guide, not an employer guarantee.
Normal jobs should not require upfront payments.
Sensitive documents should wait until the employer is verified.
Real hiring processes usually leave a traceable paper trail.
Step-by-step action plan
- Pause before sending money, ID, banking details, or tax forms.
- Check the company website and official job posting.
- Compare the recruiter email domain to the company domain.
- Search the company name plus “job scam” and review warning signs.
- Use a tracker note before deciding whether to continue.
Quick checklist
- ☐ Company site checked
- ☐ Email domain checked
- ☐ Money request reviewed
- ☐ Sensitive-info timing reviewed
- ☐ Decision logged
Copy and paste template
Use this simple worksheet
Job verification note: Company name: [name] Official website checked: [yes/no] Recruiter email domain: [domain] Money requested: [yes/no] Personal info requested early: [yes/no] Decision: [safe / needs verification / avoid]
Common mistakes to avoid
- Applying before checking whether the role, company, or document request is legitimate.
- Using one generic resume or folder system for every situation.
- Skipping proof, dates, owners, examples, and follow-up notes.
- Waiting until the last minute to organize documents, keywords, or interview stories.
Mini FAQ
Should I make a separate version for this?
Yes. A focused version is usually easier to review than one broad version trying to cover every possible direction.
How much proof do I need?
Start with two or three real examples. Clear proof is better than a long list of claims that do not connect to the role or task.
What should I do today?
Pick one target, update one worksheet, improve one proof point, and set one follow-up reminder. Small clean actions compound quickly.
Protect your job search
Before sharing personal information, verify the company, recruiter email, job link, interview process, and paperwork request.