Spread Out Nickname License For Free

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Yes, as long as the nickname is sufficient to identify you as party to the contract, but generally a full legal name is better able to do this.
While it's okay to display a nickname on your resume under normal circumstances, supplying a false name in order to hide your identity or pass yourself off as another person may be considered a criminal offense.
Yes, as long as the nickname is sufficient to identify you as party to the contract, but generally a full legal name is better able to do this.
You can use a different name on your resume and on applications, if it's the name that you go by. This sounds good, but I don't go by any other name other than my actual name. It would be weird to have people calling me by a fake name and referring to me by a fake name at work.
In short, you can use your chosen or preferred name throughout your job search, as long as you provide your legal name when it comes time for a background check. If you go by a nickname and don't mind sharing your legal name, you can put this on your resume like these: AIU King Suzie Li or Robert Bobby Doe.
As a general rule of thumb, any nickname that is just a shorter version of your given name is fine for the workplace, says Amanda Augustine, career expert at Theaters. Salem agrees that you can make a nickname work in any occupation so long as “you own it, and you're proud, and you're professional.”
Having a name on your resume that you go by other than your birth name is completely acceptable, as long as it is properly written. Although you should include your legal name for official reasons on your resume, it is customary to include the name you want to call in the hiring process.
In short, you can use your chosen or preferred name throughout your job search, as long as you provide your legal name when it comes time for a background check. (If you don't provide current or prior legal names at that point, it can be seen as lying on the application, and grounds for firing.)
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