My name is _________ and I'm an employment representative at Lockheed Martin Corporation. I support our hiring efforts for ______ in the ________ location. We are currently reviewing resumes for our summer intern positions. I believe you may be a match for our current and/or future positions at our _________ facility.</p>
<p>To complete your profile, please include the following attachments with your email by end of day on ______</p>
<pre><code>* The most current copy of your resume (.doc or .txt format)
* An Unofficial copy of your college transcripts (fax copies also accepted when noted in your email)
* A copy of the questions below with your responses done in a new document (.doc or .txt format)
</code></pre>
<p>If you do not reply with a complete profile before this deadline, there is no guarantee you will be considered for this first-come, first-served opportunity.
[/quote]
</p>
<p>What does this mean? Do they offer this to everyone? Will submitting a profile guarantee me an interview on site?</p>
<p>Did you contact them first...?
Does this sound like spam to anybody else...? =\
I'd contact LM's hiring department directly and ask if this is for real, because it sounds like spam... I think LM has a separate human resources server for submitting things like resumes and transcripts...</p>
<p><checks>...</checks></p>
<p>Yeah, they do...</p>
<p>Yeah, I think this might be spam... Careful submitting your resume to random e-mail addresses... =</p>
<p>It's entirely possible that it's spam. I've gotten several messages from a headhunter for a position with Lockheed Martin, as well as other firms. What gave it away was that they mentioned the salary, which was ridiculously high.</p>
<p>I'm sure they got my email address from those online job-search websites. Do you have a profile on one of those? </p>
<p>And when does any company ever hire or interview on a first-come first-serve basis?</p>
<p>I didn't contact them; I was assuming this was the HR taking action after I submitted my profile on line.</p>
<p>I checked the email that it was from, and it was from a lmco.com address, so I am assuming it was legit. The name had a N-atr on the display, so whatever that means.</p>
<p>Nevertheless, I submitted the information yesterday. I hope I didn't get myself into any trouble ... :</p>
<p>I would only submit my resume through the Lockheed website, or at a career fair, or headhunter I trusted. Don't respond to an unsolicited e-mail. Call the company and ask to verify.</p>
<p>I did a reverse telephone lookup and that phone number (480-756-7622) is listed as a "residential" phone in Santa Clara, CA. It does not belong to L-M's HQ.</p>
<p>It could be that the recruiter is working from home, but I would still be cautious. I would certainly call L-M's main number and ask about it before sending any personal information.</p>
Since you submitted a profile previously, it's very likely legitimate.
[/quote]
</p>
<p>I submitted to multiple positions on the LM website, and dropped in my resume at possible a half dozen LM- school events (career fair, infosessions, rep Q&A). It does increase the chance that the email was from a recruiter, but also increases the chance of spam since my resume was circulated beyond what I could keep track off :rolleyes:</p>
<p>
[quote]
I did a reverse telephone lookup and that phone number (480-756-7622) is listed as a "residential" phone in Santa Clara, CA. It does not belong to L-M's HQ.
[/quote]
What source is this from? I would like to see as well, before actually calling the number tonight. BTW, the area code is (408) instead of (480), which might have caused the suspicion.</p>
<p>Sorry for the confusion. I typed 480 in error -- probably because it's my area code! I did use 408 in my inquiry because it did say "Santa Clara, CA."</p>
<p>Just google "reverse telephone" and you'll find a number of websites that let you look up phone numbers to see who owns them. (I don't remember which one I used.) Sometimes you'll only get "wireless" or "unlisted" (or in this case, "residential" with no name attached).</p>
<p>I've received those questionnaires from Lockheed. I've usually received a phone call from the facility HR depart before they send the questionnaire though.</p>
<p>Give them some time to call. He sent that e-mail out to a lot of people, I bet... maybe 40+.</p>
<p>I accepted a position with Lockheed Martin in NY. I also have an offer from Boeing, but that's more CS related... and I'm an EE. I'm still interviewing with companies like Intel.</p>
<p>When I interviewed for the Lockheed in NY, they sent me an e-mail asking me to fill out a profile, too. It's not spam, it's legitimate. Lockheed Martin has HR recruiting centers that hire people. HR at the facilities are very small, compared to the main agencies. Each regional part of the US has one.</p>
<p>I also already accepted an offer but until 100% of the paperwork is complete and there could be absolutely no question about it, I won't just turn down an offer.</p>
<p>Also received message before after an on campus interview, I don't think it's spam but I also turned it down. LM is not such a great company to work for in my opinion.</p>
<p>As far as the interviewing process goes, it depends on the location. I was contacted via phone and went straight to the facility for the interview. I didn't have a phone interview. I know other facilities (1 hour from the one I interviewed from) where they do a prescreen phone interview, then call you in for the face to face interview.</p>
<p>As far as working in a department, it's just the name. I wouldn't stress too much about if you're working in ___ department or ___. If you're going to be dealing with electronics in either one, it doesn't really matter.</p>