It’s tempting to think you can handle background checks yourself. Just pull a few public records, call some references, maybe check a diploma or two. How tough could it really be?
Turns out, it’s a lot harder than you think. It’s riskier than you probably want to deal with. And, believe it or not, it might even be illegal.
The Compliance Minefield
Here’s the thing: background screening isn’t just about digging up information. It’s about finding it the right way, reporting it the right way, and making sure you don’t accidentally trip over a dozen different laws in the process. Privacy and fairness are big deals that can’t be ignored.
The Fair Credit Reporting Act alone has enough technical requirements to sink an unprepared employer:
- Proper disclosure forms
- Specific authorization language
- Pre-adverse action notices
- Waiting periods
- Individualized assessments
Miss just one of these and you could be staring down a class-action lawsuit. And yes, this happens way more often than you think.
Professional screening vendors live and breathe this regulatory stuff. They know exactly which records you’re allowed to see, how far back you can look in each state, and what’s off-limits. And when the laws change (which is all the time), they update their processes. Ban-the-box laws, salary history bans, state rules about marijuana, the list just keeps growing. Honestly, you need a full-time legal team (or a pro background check company) just to keep up.
The Data Access Problem
You can’t just pick up the phone and call a county courthouse for criminal records. Well, you could try. But which county do you call? People move around. Sometimes they get in trouble in the next county over. Sometimes they use different versions of their name. Getting the info is not as simple as it sounds.
Vendors maintain access to thousands of courthouses, databases, and record repositories. They know felony records in some states are only available at the state level, while others require county-by-county searches. They understand the difference between a name match and an actual record match. They employ researchers who physically go to courthouses when records aren’t digitized.
This kind of infrastructure took years and a lot of money to build. You’re not going to recreate it with a few quick Google searches.
International Screening: Where DIY Really Falls Apart
Now, let’s make things even more complicated: go global.
Let’s say your candidate spent two years working in Singapore, and you want to check their background there. What do you do next? You can’t just request criminal records from Singapore as a US employer. You’re dealing with strict privacy laws, different ways to access records, language barriers, a different time zone, and consent rules that aren’t what you’re used to.
Professional vendors have on-the-ground resources and legal frameworks in dozens of countries. They navigate GDPR in Europe, work around personal information protection laws in Asia, and understand which records exist and which don’t in Latin America. They know some countries require notarized consent, others need physical presence, and a few simply won’t release certain records to foreign employers at all.
Processing times, authentication requirements, and document verification is all specialized international background screening work that needs local know-how.
The Accuracy Stakes
Bad data can ruin lives. One wrong birthdate, a similar name, or a simple courthouse typo, and suddenly you’re turning away a perfectly good candidate solely because of bad data.
Reputable vendors use multi-point verification. They match names, dates of birth, addresses, and other identifiers before reporting a record. They employ Medical Review Officers for drug tests. They have dispute-resolution processes for when candidates challenge results.
Here’s the bottom line: professional screening vendors have the infrastructure, compliance know-how, global reach, and accuracy checks you need to deliver reliable data for solid hiring decisions.
You’re not outsourcing because you’re lazy. You’re partnering with people who know what they’re doing, so you can get back to actually running your business.
