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Summitexecutivesearch.org Reports & Reviews (2)

- Jefferson, TX, USA • Jan 15, 2024

On December 9th, I was contacted by Angie DeWitt stating I was a great fit for a Head of Procurement Position their client ONEngine.ai had open. She then sent me a pre-live interview questionairre to answer 10 questions, which I provided back to her on December 13th after spending 8 hours crafting a response that could easily be turned into a business model/plan. She said that the next step would be for her to review the document and would get back to me. She called and spoke to me and said the information was impressive and that she would be sending my resume and responses over to the client and would get back to me. At that time, ONEngine.ai had a website up and running but I could never get an answer as to how./why an AI company would be looking for a Procurement manager. A week after not hearing anything or getting the job and company description, I emailed Angie and she finally provided it. The documents seemed to be legitimate but the company information was very unprofessionally written which caused a red flag. On 1/8/2024, Angie emailed me to set up an interview. She wanted to set up for 1/9 and I gave her times. On 1/9 at 13:37 she emailed me stating the hiring manager wanted to push all interviews to the following Monday, January 15. We agreed on 12:00 noon CST. On 1/9 I then got an email from her using a different address ([email protected]). A day later, she sent another email from fmsearch changing the time to 11:30 am cut, without any explanation. Today, 1/15 @ 9:33 am, she emailed me from summit stating the hiring manager (her father, Ken Dewitt, owner of Summit Exec Search) reached out to her and after reviewing my application and questionnaire decided to move forward with other applicants. Today, ONEngine.ai is no longer a valid website, it shows an error. When I looked at the documents she sent, the one providing company information was for a company called NFD (National Facilities Direct) at the very bottom but ONEngine.ai at the top. I don't know who is involved in the possible fraud/scam at this point. I have reached out to NFD and provided the documents I was provided by Angie at Summit. I truly believe this is a scam, the phone number Angie provided sometimes works and sometimes does not. She was very bad about calling back if I left a voicemail and she rarely responded in the email chain, she normally would write a new email.

+2
• Apr 25, 2024

I had a similar experience, starting Feb 29 2024. They claimed that they were hiring for some facilities management company. Talked to "Angeleen" ([email protected]) on the phone, filled out an extensive questionnaire that took hours. No contact for weeks, even after numerous follow up emails. Smelling something fishy, I checked and found a few things:
The image Angeleen used on LinkedIn was also on some actor site. That site's image has since been removed.
She was supposedly a recruiter for the past 7 years but only has 12 connections on LinkedIn?
The initial company's (forgot the name) site looked fake AF - fake info, stock photos, no specific info about how to contact them, etc.

The kicker? She just emailed me AGAIN in April, same sparse-looking form letter. This time for a company called Onengine.AI that another recruiter told me about months ago. That site is fake AF for many of the same reasons.

So here are all of the scam companies in these exchanges:
OneEngine.AI [scam!] - she claimed they're developing an Uber-like app to send technicians to companies, like Wal-Mart (associating the fake company with huge players)
FMSearch.com [scam!]
Summit Executive Search Group [scam!] - she claimed that this company rebranded into FMSearch to focus on facilities management companies.

I'm tired of these fake companies wasting my [censored]in time. Since then I've found other companies that use stock or stolen images from LinkedIn. Most of them claim they have offices in US and India. That second one is the scam tipoff. The vast majority of scam emails I get about a job are from Indians (this is not a comment on all Indians, just my personal experiences with job scammers). This FMSearch scam caught me off guard because I hadn't run into an American scammer before. Now that I know they exist, I'm checking everyone, and nobody gets hours of questions answered by me unless I'm 100% certain.

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