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What does it take to succeed at Goodwin? Hear our perspectives on how to approach your interview and what to focus on once you join us.

Recruitment Privacy Notices

Scope Of Privacy Policy

Like most businesses, Goodwin Procter (UK) LLP, Goodwin Procter (France) LLP, Goodwin Procter LLP (acting through its branch offices in Germany) and Goodwin Procter Luxembourg (each a “Goodwin entity” and together, “we”, “us”, “our”) hold and process a wide range of information, which relates to the individuals who apply, and those we recruit, to work for us. This Policy explains the type of information we process, why we are processing it and how that processing may affect you.

This Policy also includes the Supplementary Information contained in Appendix A, wherein we explain what we mean by “personal data”, “processing”, “special categories of personal data” and other terms used in this Policy. 

In brief, this Policy explains:

  • what personal data we hold and why we process it;
  • the legal grounds that allow us to process your personal data;
  • where the personal data comes from, who gets to see it and how long we keep it;
  • how to access your personal data and other rights; and
  • how to contact us.

Personal Data – What We Hold and Why We Process It 

We process personal data for the purposes of our business, including recruitment, management, administrative, employment and legal purposes. The Supplementary Information provides more specific information on these purposes, on the type of data that may be processed and on the grounds on which we process data in the context of recruitment. See What are the legal grounds for processing? and Further information on the data we process and our purposes. 

Where The Data Comes From and Who Gets To See It 

Some of the personal data that we process about you comes from you. For example, you tell us your contact details and work history. If you are joining us, you may provide your banking details.

Other personal data may come from third parties, such as recruiters acting on your or our behalf or from your references. 

Your personal data will be seen internally by administrators, HR, lawyers and managers involved in the interview and decision-making process, and, in some circumstances (if you join us), colleagues. We will, where necessary and as set out in this Policy, also pass your data outside the firm, for example to people you are dealing with. 

Further information on this is provided in the Supplementary Information. See Where the data comes from and Who gets to see your data? 

How Long Do We Keep Your Personal Data? 

We keep your personal data in line with our document retention policy, and in any event we will not retain it for longer than is necessary for our lawful purposes. In general, if you become employed by us, we will keep your personal data for the duration of your employment and for a period afterwards, as described in our document retention policy. If you are unsuccessful in gaining employment with us, we will likely keep your personal data for a short period after informing you that you were unsuccessful. 

See Retaining your personal data – more information in the Supplementary Information. 

International Transfers of Personal Data

We may transfer your personal data outside of the EEA or the UK (as applicable) to other Goodwin offices in our international network and to third parties, who provide services to us and to you.

Further information on these transfers and the measures taken to safeguard your data are set out in the Supplementary Information under International transfers of personal data – more information.

Your Data Rights

You have a right to make a subject access request to receive information about the personal data that we process about you. Further information on this and on other rights is in the Supplementary Information under Access to your personal data and other rights. We also explain how to make a complaint about our processing of your personal data.

Controller Contact Details

In processing your personal data, we act as a data controller. This means that we determine the purposes and means of the processing of your personal data. In most cases, the controller for your personal data will be the Goodwin entity to which you apply for work, and you would contact them by email on dataprivacy@goodwinlaw.com and at the following office addresses:

London:
Goodwin Procter (UK) LLP
100 Cheapside
London EC2V 6DT

Cambridge:
Goodwin Procter (UK) LLP
50-60 Station Rd
Cambridge CB1-2JH

Frankfurt:
Goodwin Procter LLP
TaunusTurm, Taunustor 1
60310 Frankfurt am Main

Munich:
Goodwin Procter LLP
Max-Joseph-Straße 2
80333 München

The Data Protection Officer (Datenschutzbeauftragter) for the Frankfurt and Munich offices, appointed in accordance with the General Data Protection Regulation and the requirements of the Federal Data Protection Act can be contacted at IITR Datenschutz GmbH, Dr. Sebastian Kraska, Marienplatz 2, 80331 München.

Paris:
Goodwin Procter (France) LLP
12 rue d’Astorg
75 008 Paris

Luxembourg:
40 Avenue Monterey
L-2163 Luxembourg
Grand Duchy of Luxembourg

EU and UK Representatives Contact Details

Goodwin Procter (UK) LLP is required to designate a representative in the EU that can be addressed by data subjects in addition to or instead of it on all issues related to the processing of personal data under the GDPR. Its representative in the EU is:

Goodwin Procter (France) LLP
12 rue d’Astorg
75 008 Paris

Goodwin Procter (France) LLP, Goodwin Procter (Luxembourg), and Goodwin Procter LLP (in respect of its branch offices in Germany) are each required to designate a representative in the UK that can be addressed by data subjects in addition to or instead of them on all issues related to the processing of personal data under the UK GDPR. Their representative in the UK is: 

Goodwin Procter (UK) LLP
100 Cheapside
London EC2V 6DT

Status of this Policy

This Policy does not form part of any contract of employment you might enter into and does not create contractual rights or obligations. It may be amended by us at any time. Nothing in this Policy is intended to create an employment relationship between any Goodwin entity and any non-employee.

Last updated: May 2023

 

APPENDIX A: SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION

What do we mean by “personal data” and “processing”?

“Personal data” is information relating to a natural person, from which such person may be identified. It includes not only facts about you, but also intentions and opinions about you. 

"Processing" means doing anything with the personal data, whether or not by automated means, such as collecting, holding, disclosing and deleting the data. Examples of personal data processed automatically include information held on, or relating to use of, a computer, laptop, mobile phone or similar device. It covers data derived from equipment such as access passes within a building and sound and image data such as CCTV or photographs. 

Regulation (EU) 2016/679 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 27 April 2016 on the protection of natural persons with regard to the processing of personal data and on the free movement of such data (“GDPR”) and the United Kingdom General Data Protection Regulation, which is the GDPR as incorporated into UK domestic law by virtue of section 3 of the European Union (Withdrawal) Act 2018 and amended by The Data Protection, Privacy and Electronic Communications (Amendments etc) (EU Exit) Regulations 2019 (“UK GDPR”) apply to the processing of personal data by automated means and otherwise when that data forms (or is intended to form) part of a filing system.

Personal data revealing racial or ethnic origin, political opinions, religious or philosophical beliefs, health, sexual orientation, sex life, trade union membership and genetic and biometric data are subject to special protection and considered by the GDPR and the UK GDPR to be “special categories of personal data”. 

References in this Policy to employment, work (and similar expressions) include any arrangement we may have under which an individual provides us with work or services, or applies for such work or services. By way of example, when we mention an “employment contract”, that includes a contract under which you provide us with services; when we refer to ending your potential employment, that includes terminating a contract for services. We use the word “you” to refer to anyone within the scope of this Policy. 

What are the legal grounds for processing?

Under the GDPR and the UK GDPR (as applicable), there are various grounds on which we can rely when processing your personal data. In some contexts more than one ground applies. We have summarised these grounds as Contract, Legal Obligation, Legitimate Interests and Consent and outline what those terms mean in the following table. When processing your personal data for the purpose of recruitment in our German offices, we also rely on §26 of the German Bundesdatenschutzgesetz (BDSG), which applies to data processing for employment related purposes.

 

Term Ground for Processing Explanation
Contract Processing necessary for performance of a contract with you or to take steps at your request to enter a contract This covers carrying out our contractual duties, exercising our contractual rights and taking the necessary steps to prepare your employment contract. 
Legal Obligation Processing necessary to comply with our legal obligations  Ensuring we perform our legal and regulatory obligations. For example, depending on applicable law, providing a safe place of work, avoiding unlawful discrimination, including with regard to disabled workers and complying with our obligations relating to professional equality between women and men, fulfilling our obligations of tax and social declarations, and responding to relevant regulators, immigration authorities and other government departments or public bodies.
Legitimate Interests Processing necessary for our or a third party’s legitimate interests  

We or a third party have legitimate interests in carrying on, managing and administering our respective businesses effectively and properly and in connection with those interests processing personal data.

This includes in particular our legitimate interest to assess your suitability for the proposed job.

Personal data will not be processed on this basis if our or a third party’s interests are overridden by your own interests or fundamental rights and freedoms. 

Consent You have given specific consent to processing your data In general, processing your data in connection with employment is not conditional on your consent (even for processing special categories of personal data). However, there may be occasions where we do specific things such as provide a reference or obtain medical reports and rely on your consent to our doing so, where permitted by applicable law. 

Processing special categories of personal data

If we process special categories of personal data about you, as well as ensuring that one of the legal grounds for processing listed in the table above applies, we will make sure that the processing is:

  • necessary for the purposes of your or our obligations and rights in relation to employment in so far as it is authorised by law or collective agreement;
  • related to data about you that you have made manifestly public (e.g., if you tell colleagues that you are ill);
  • necessary for the purpose of establishing, making or defending legal claims;
  • necessary for provision of health care or treatment, medical diagnosis, and assessment of your working capacity, where permitted by applicable law;
  • for equality and diversity purposes to the extent permitted by applicable law; or
  • subject to your explicit consent.

If we decide to hire you, where required or permitted by applicable local law, we will collect the following special categories of personal data:

UK offices:

  • your health data as needed to allow us to comply with relevant employment laws, such as details of your disability in order to provide you with reasonable adjustments, information relating to your illness or pregnancy to process statutory payments, and information about your physical and mental health and possible exposure to contagious disease to ensure your health and safety and that of your co-workers;
  • your diversity data as needed to identify or review the equality of opportunity afforded to our staff, to identify suitable candidates and promote and maintain diversity in senior positions in the firm, and (with your explicit consent) as requested by clients for their own diversity monitoring purposes; and
  • your criminal conviction and offences data as necessary to meet the requirements of money laundering regulations with respect to certain categories of employees and in connection with any legal proceedings, in order to obtain any legal advice or otherwise as necessary to establish, exercise or defend a legal claim.

Paris office:

  • your social security number for purposes of payroll and communication with social bodies;
  • your health data in the event of a workplace accident or your voluntary disclosure to us of exposure to infectious disease, which may include symptoms and test results; and
  • details of any disability or incapacity.

German offices:

  • information about your health and possible exposure to contagious disease as needed to allow us to comply with relevant health and safety laws to ensure your safety and that of your co-workers;
  • details of any disability or incapacity; medical and sickness certificates; and medical data and other documents required to confer special benefit status, where applicable;
  • your medical leave information and related medical certificates; and
  • information about your religion if required for tax purposes and in compliance with German law and trade union affiliation, if you have informed us of your trade union membership and/or asked us to make payments to trade unions or for religious tax on your behalf.

Luxembourg office:

  • your social security number for purposes of payroll and communication with social bodies;
  • your health data in the event of a workplace accident or your voluntary disclosure to us of exposure to infectious disease, which may include symptoms and test results; and
  • details of any disability or incapacity and medical and sickness certificates.

Further information on the data we process and our purposes

This Policy outlines the purposes for which we process your personal data. More specific information on these purposes, including examples of the personal data that may be processed and the grounds on which we process such data, are included in the table below for illustrative purposes and are not meant to be exhaustive. 

Purpose Examples of personal data that may be processed Grounds for Processing
Recruitment in relation to any role for which you apply, we recruit you for and/or any role we think you might be suitable for in the future  

Standard data related to your identity, e.g., your name, address, email address, ID information and documents, telephone numbers, place of birth, contact details, and professional experience and education (including university degrees, academic records, professional licenses, memberships and certifications, awards and achievements, and current and previous employment details), financial information (including current salary information), language skills, and any other personal data that you present us with as part of your application, related to the fulfilment of the role (which may include special categories of personal data in the UK and Germany, as permitted by applicable law).

Information concerning your application and our assessment of it, your references, any checks we may make to verify information provided or background checks (see below) and any information connected with your right to work in the relevant country.

If we decide to hire you, if necessary, we will also process information concerning your health (UK and German offices) and/or any disability (all offices) in connection with any adjustments needed to working arrangements.
 

Consent

Contract

Legal Obligation

Legitimate Interests

§26 BDSG (German offices)
Administering our recruitment process   

Your experience and qualifications for the position you are applying for (or any future job for which we think you are suitable). 

Data you enter into our online careers portal. 

Communications with you in respect of any offer of employment we choose to make and providing you with information about our onboarding process. 
 

Contract

Legal Obligation

Legitimate Interests

§26 BDSG (German offices)
Conducting pre-employment screening to assess your suitability for employment  

Criminal records, credit worthiness, standing and capacity, sex offender records, insolvency records, bankruptcy filings, civil litigation history and national insurance numbers (UK offices).

Certificate of Conduct issued by the German Federal Office of Justice and credit rating from SCHUFA (German offices)

Extracts from your criminal record, i.e., “B3”, when this is necessary for the position you are applying for (or any future job for which we think you are suitable) (Paris office)

Education records, previous employment records, legal admissions, certificates of good standing and media publications (all offices).
 

Contract

Legitimate Interest

Legal Obligation

Consent

§26 BDSG (German offices)
Entering into a contract with you (if you are made an offer by us)  

Information on your terms of employment from time to time, including your hours and working patterns, your pay and benefits, such as your participation in pension arrangements, life and medical insurance, and any bonus schemes.

 

Contract

Legal Obligation

Legitimate Interests

§26 BDSG (German offices)
Contacting you or others on your behalf Your address and phone number, emergency contact information and information on your next of kin.  

Contract

Legitimate Interests

§26 BDSG (German offices)
Payroll administration / partnership accounts Information on your bank account, pension contributions and tax (except that tax number of potential employees cannot be collected in France), national insurance and/or social security numbers or other government issued identifier as permitted by applicable law.  

Contract

Legal Obligation

Legitimate Interests

§26 BDSG (German offices)
Financial planning and budgeting  Information such as your proposed salary and (if applicable) envisaged bonus levels.   

Legitimate Interests

§26 BDSG (German offices)
Physical and system security  

CCTV images upon attendance for interviews at our premises.

 

Legal Obligation

Legitimate Interests

§26 BDSG (German offices)
Providing information to third parties in connection with transactions that we contemplate  Information on any offer made to you and your proposed contract and other employment data that may be required by a party to a transaction such as a prospective purchaser, seller or outsourcer.  

Legitimate Interests

§26 BDSG (German offices)
Monitoring of diversity and equal opportunities   

Information on your nationality, gender, disability and age; and for the UK, also information on your racial and ethnic origin and sexual orientation.

 

Legitimate Interests

Legal Obligation

§26 BDSG (German offices)

Substantial Public Interest
Disputes and legal proceedings Any information relevant or potentially relevant to a dispute or legal proceeding affecting us.   

Legitimate Interests

Legal Obligation

§26 BDSG (German offices)
Complying with data subject rights Information necessary to comply with rights asserted by you over the personal data that we process.  

Legal Obligation

§26 BDSG (German offices)
Managing, limiting and containing health risks posed by a public health emergency Information on your symptoms and possible exposure to a public health emergency through test results, contact with others and travel, collected directly from you.

Legal Obligation

Necessary for the purposes of your or our obligations and rights in relation to employment and/or public health in so far as it is authorised by law or collective agreement

Please note that if you accept an offer from us, we will process further information as part of the employment relationship. We will provide you with our full Workplace Privacy Policy (European offices) as part of the on-boarding process.

Where the data comes from

When you apply to work for us, the initial data about you that we process is likely to come from you, for example, contact details, bank details and information on your immigration status and whether you can lawfully work. Where necessary and in accordance with this Policy, we will require references and information to carry out background checks. If you do not provide information that you are required by statute or contract to give us, you may lose benefits or we may decide not to employ you. If you have concerns about this in a particular context, you should speak to your recruiter or our HR department.

Please note we may also receive data from third party recruiters, agents and similar organisations as a part of the recruitment process.

Who gets to see your data?

Internal use: Where necessary and as set out in this Policy, your personal data will be disclosed to relevant lawyers, HR and administrators for the purposes of your application as mentioned in this Policy. We will also disclose this to other Goodwin Procter affiliated entities where necessary for decision making regarding your application – this will depend on the type of role you are applying for. These affiliated entities may also process your personal data if you visit their offices, for instance, in order to provide IT support, access to systems, and for purposes of security.

External use: We will only disclose your personal data (see the table at paragraph 4 above) outside Goodwin if disclosure is consistent with a ground for processing on which we rely and doing so is lawful and fair to you.

We will disclose your data if it is necessary for our legitimate interests as a firm or the legitimate interests of a third party (but we will not do this if these interests are overridden by your interests or fundamental rights and freedoms).

We may also disclose your personal data based on your consent, or where we are required to do so by law, or in connection with criminal or regulatory investigations. 

Please note that when we disclose your data in such circumstances we will ensure that any necessary due diligence has been undertaken on the recipient and any necessary contractual documentation is in place to ensure the integrity and security of the data as required by law.

Specific circumstances in which your personal data may be disclosed include:

  • Disclosure to organisations / vendors that process data on our behalf (such as our payroll service, our bank, vendors that host or support our IT systems and data) - this would normally occur if you accept an offer from us and would be carried out as part of the on-boarding process;
  • Disclosure to third party recruitment consultants and similar businesses (including online recruitment portals) as a part of the recruitment process;
  • Disclosure to any regulator as necessary as part of the recruitment process;
  • In our UK offices, disclosure to a third party background report service provider for the purposes of conducting pre-employment screening in relation to the following areas (as applicable to the role you are applying for): education verification; previous employment verification; legal / bar admissions; criminal records; credit worthiness; standing and capacity; sex offender notification and disclosure scheme; insolvency; bankruptcy filings; and civil litigation;
  • Disclosure on a confidential basis to our advisers, for example to our external lawyers for the purposes of seeking legal advice.
  • We also use a third party HR management system which tracks your application and stores your personal data for us once you have made an application.

Retaining your personal data – more information

We will retain your personal data in line with our document retention policy, and in any event we will not keep it for longer than is necessary for our lawful purposes.

In general, if you are successful in becoming employed by us, we will keep your personal data for the duration of your employment and for a period afterwards.

If you are unsuccessful in gaining employment with us, we will likely keep your personal data for six months after informing you that you were unsuccessful. In considering how long to keep your data, we will take into account its relevance to our business and your potential employment either as a record or in the event of a legal claim. Your data may also be kept on file and considered for other roles. However, any criminal record data processed in accordance with applicable law will not be retained.

If your data is only useful for a short period, or we are only permitted by law to retain it for a specified period of time (for example, CCTV footage), we will delete it more frequently.

International transfers of personal data – more information

In connection with our business and for employment, administrative, management and legal purposes, we transfer your personal data outside the EEA (EU Member States, Iceland, Liechtenstein and Norway) or the UK (as applicable) to other Goodwin offices in our international network and to third parties, including to countries that may have data protection laws less stringent than or otherwise different from the laws in effect in the country in which you are located.

When we transfer your personal data to:

  • Goodwin offices located in the United States, Singapore and Hong Kong, we do so in reliance on an intragroup data transfer agreement which incorporates the standard contractual clauses for the transfer of data to third countries approved by the European Commission and the UK Addendum approved by the UK Information Commissioner (together the “SCCs”). These Goodwin offices will from time to time transfer your personal data onward to third parties outside of the UK and the EEA in accordance with the terms of the SCCs;
  • Goodwin offices located in the EU or the UK, we do so were necessary in reliance on a decision by the European Commission or the UK government (as applicable) that the data privacy regimes of the EEA or the UK (as applicable) ensure an adequate level of protection (“Adequacy Decision”), so additional safeguards are not needed to transfer your personal data there; and
  • third parties located outside of the UK or the EEA, for example to our service providers, external recipients of electronic communications, other counsel, accountants, insurers and advisors, we do so in reliance on an Adequacy Decision, SCCs, EU SCCs approved with Commission Implementing Decision (EU) 2021/914 of 4 June 2021, UK International Data Transfer Addendum or your consent. 

If you wish to see details of these safeguards, please contact dataprivacy@goodwinlaw.com.

Access to your personal data and other rights

We try to be as open as we reasonably can about personal data that we process. If you would like specific information, just ask us.

Under Article 15 of the GDPR / UK GDPR, you have a legal right to make a “subject access request”. If you exercise this right and we hold personal data about you, we are required to provide you with information on it, including:

  • Giving you a description and copy of the personal data
  • Telling you why we are processing it

If you make a subject access request and there is any question about who you are (for example, the request comes from an email address that we do not recognise and which does not readily enable us to identify you), we may require you to provide information from which we can satisfy ourselves as to your identity and protect your personal information in case the request is not genuine.

As well as your subject access right, you have a legal right to have your personal data rectified (Art. 16 GDPR / UK GDPR) or erased (Art. 17 GDPR / UK GDPR), to object to its processing on grounds relating to your particular situation (Art. 21 GDPR / UK GDPR), or to have its processing restricted (Art. 18 GDPR / UK GDPR). If you have provided us with data about yourself (for example your address or bank details), you have the right to be given the data in machine readable format for transmitting to another data controller (Art. 20 GDPR / UK GDPR). This only applies if the ground for processing is consent or contract.

If we have relied on consent as a ground for processing, you may withdraw consent at any time (Art. 7 par. 3 GDPR / UK GDPR) – though if you do so that will not affect the lawfulness of what we did before you withdrew consent.

If we have relied on legitimate interests as a ground for processing, you have the right to object, on grounds relating to your particular situation, at any time to the processing of your personal data, and we shall no longer process your personal data unless we can demonstrate compelling legitimate grounds for the processing which override your interests, rights and freedoms or the processing is for the establishment, exercise or defence of legal claims (Art. 21 GDPR / UK GDPR).

There are exceptions to these rights according to the GDPR, the UK GDPR and local laws. For example, it will not be possible for us to delete your data if we are required by law to keep it; and access to your data may be refused if making the information available would reveal personal information about another person or if we are legally prevented from disclosing such information.

If you are hired to work for our Paris office, you will have the right under French data protection laws to provide instructions regarding the management of your personal data after your death.

If you wish to exercise your rights, please contact HR.

Complaints

If you have complaints relating to our processing of your personal data, you should raise these with HR in the first instance. You may also raise complaints with the relevant Data Protection Authority, as detailed below:

United Kingdom:
Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO). For contact and other details please contact our HR department or see: https://ico.org.uk/ICO.

France:
Commission Nationale de l’Informatique et des Libertés (CNIL). For contact and other details please contact our HR department or see: https://www.cnil.fr/

Frankfurt:
Der Hessische Beauftragte für Datenschutz und Informationsfreiheit. For contact and other details please contact our HR department or see: https://datenschutz.hessen.de/

Munich:
Das Bayerische Landesamt für Datenschutzaufsicht. For contact and other details, please contact our HR department or see https://www.lda.bayern.de/de/index.html 

Luxembourg:
Commission nationale pour la protection des données (CNPD). For contact and other details please contact our HR department or see: https://cnpd.public.lu

Note to Placement Agencies 

We value your input and assistance in the hiring process.

To ensure a smooth and efficient working relationship, please note our guidelines for working with placement/search agencies, shown below. If you have any questions, please do not hesitate to contact us.

  • We will only accept resume submissions from search firms with whom we have a current search/fee agreement on file. If your firm/agency does not have an agreement with us (of if you are unsure whether a current agreement exists), please contact one of our local office Talent Acquisition, Legal contacts to ascertain agreement status.
  • Resumes must be submitted through our online application in order to be deemed a valid submission. Our online application can be accessed by clicking “Apply” on the Job Details page. Resumes submitted to lawyers in our firm will not be deemed valid submissions unless a member of the Talent Acquisition, Legal team for the relevant office location is also copied on such submission and/or correspondence regarding potential candidates.
  • For professional staff positions resumes must be submitted to the Professional Staff Recruitment team (see our Contact Page) in order to be deemed a valid submission. Resumes submitted to the hiring managers will not be deemed valid submissions unless a member of the Professional Staff Recruitment team is copied on the submission and/or correspondence regarding potential candidates. Please note not all positions are open to placement agencies. 
  • Transcripts must accompany all associate candidate submissions.
  • If the conditions above are not satisfied, submissions will be deemed unsolicited and no fee will be paid by Goodwin Procter for hiring said candidate(s).

Goodwin Recruitment Privacy Policy for California Residents

Effective: March 11, 2020

Goodwin Procter LLP and its affiliated undertakings ( “Goodwin,” “we,” “us,” “our”) is providing this Recruitment Privacy Policy (“Policy”) to individuals residing in California who apply to work at or for Goodwin (“Applicants”).

For purposes of this Policy, “Personal Information” means information that identifies, relates to, describes, is reasonably capable of being associated with, or could reasonably be linked, directly or indirectly, to an Applicant. 

Please contact dataprivacy@goodwinlaw.com with any questions or to access an alternative form of this Policy.

The purpose of this Policy is to describe:

  1. the categories of Personal Information that Goodwin collects about Applicants who reside in California; and
  2. the purposes for which Goodwin uses such Personal Information.

Categories of Personal Information Collected:

Category of Personal Information  Examples 
Identification Information  Your name, address, email address, telephone numbers, date of birth, social media profiles/handles, and other contact details 
Sensitive Information  Your social security number, passport number, driver’s license or state ID card number, and insurance information. 
Application Information  Your resume information (including school(s) attended, years of attendance, degree, major, employment history, languages spoken, interests, skills, and prior or desired salary), questionnaire responses, interview evaluations, reference information, offer letter information, and background check information (including criminal record checks, credit reports, standing and capacity, sex offender records, insolvency records, bankruptcy filings, and civil litigation history). 
Employment Information  Your green card status, federal or state identification forms and numbers, beneficiary/dependent information (including names, addresses, dates of birth and social security numbers), past employment history (including references) current employment information (including job titles, salary information, and performance evaluations), as well as information related to hours, working patterns, pay and benefits. 
Financial Information  Your bank account and compensation information. 
Demographic Information  Your nationality, racial and ethnic origin, gender, gender identity, sexual orientation, religion, disability and age. 
Physical and Biometric Information  Your fingerprints and photographs and physical descriptions of you. 
Health Information  If necessary, we will process other information concerning your health and/or any disability. 
Communication Information  Information contained in communications sent and received. 
Education Information  Your education history (including, but not limited to, school(s) attended, years of attendance, courses taken, degree, major, and grade point average). 

 

Purposes for which Personal Information will be used:

We use Personal Information for the following purposes:

  • To administer our recruitment process, including to source, recruit, and evaluate Applicants;
  • To assess eligibility for employment;
  • To perform background checks;
  • To communicate with Applicants;
  • To perform financial planning and budgeting and payroll administration;
  • To prepare immigration, payroll, and tax filings;
  • To offer and administer benefits;
  • To assess and report on the diversity of our Applicants;
  • To determine whether any adjustments to work arrangements are needed for health or other reasons; 
  • To ensure the security of our premises and systems; and
  • To exercise and defend legal claims and comply with applicable legal requirements.