Thursday, July 2, 2020
Social Media, how it can make or your job search and career.
Social Media, how it can make or your job search and career. Social media deserves respect Are you blowing social media opportunities? Social media deserves respect Think about your potential reader before you tweet or post a rant or negative content in your social stream. You never know who is looking. Social media gives the world access to your life. You are living in the proverbial glass house, and if you keep a messy house, everyone has access. If you do not want the public to judge you then donât give them the opportunity. We all wonder if Lindsey Lohan understands how public her life really is because if she did realize how many people were watching, you would think that she would slow her roll. I look at social media in a very similar way. Social media doesnât just give your social network insight into your life, but the entire internet-connected world is granted access to your life. My friend, your life isnât as private as you may think. According to a recent CareerBuilder article, 37% of companies use Social Media to research job candidates There has been a lot of talk about social media in the job search lately and how more companies are using information found online to make the hiring decision. I may not base a hiring decision on the content of your social graph, but I would be lying if I said it wasnât a data point I take into consideration. But the point is that your social graph IS a data point. I realize I am but a grain of sand in the desert of hiring managers but there are plenty of busybodies, insecure manager wanna-bes that thinks you are out to take their job and will find some dirt on you. You may not have any dirt listed on your social stream, but what may only be dingy to you may be doggy doo doo to another. As much as I am trying to help candidate land job offer and employee climb the career ladder, there are those that oppose the way in which I am going about it, the language I use, and the examples I make. Hence, the mask, dark glasses, and the hat. I am an insider, and one way that I will be able t help is, to tell the truth. Lets break down the listed stats and then give you the Nasty view behind the kimono: 37% of companies use Social Media to research job candidates I say the number is higher. Much higher. In a technology company, I would venture that the number is closer to 90 plus %. I just blogged about a company that took the use of Social Media to the next level by asking for a candidates Facebook login during an interview. I am confident that just about every company out there is using LinkedIn. 34% of hiring managers that use social media say they have found a reason to decline a candidate via social media Again, I would say the number is higher because I believe that most hiring managers just donât want to admit to these tactics. There is only downside in this confession. In the least, what they may not have found may not have caused them to decline a candidate, but it didnât help your case toward a job offer. 29% of hiring manager says that they have FOUND something that caused them to hire a candidate I completely agree with this statement and I believe the number SHOULD be much higher. This is a huge opportunity for the candidate that is usually NOT being leveraged. The writing style, how someone presents themselves, opinions they voice or the help they bring to a forum are all actions that reinforce the idea of a great potential employee. Some stats mentioned in the social media survey Employers primarily use Facebook (65%), LinkedIn (63%) and Twitter (16%) 15% of employers surveyed DO NOT allow Facebook in the workplace. Any recruiter or hiring manager worth their salt will check for personal blogs, comments on forums, a candidates name on a program of an industry-related conference as a guest speaker. All of these are outside of the Big 3 in the social media sphere and SHOULD be leveraged. Regardless of what you think is happening, or what empirical data is suggesting, I want to leave you with three thoughts. The use of social media in the interview process is only going to become MORE prevalent in time as companies move into the future. Resistance really is futile. Even if a company doesnât allow employees to view social media sites at work, too many people have smartphones that CAN access these sites from work and everyone has access at home. If there is even a chance your profile is going to be looked at, donât just clean it up, LEVERAGE YOUR PROFILE and online presence to help land the job. Social Media is an eye catcher Dont be afraid of Social Media. To most recruiters, Social Media is an eye catcher and it will only become more prevalent in the workplace. Below are some ideas on how you can leverage the above stats to YOUR advantage and take the fight to the hiring manager: If you donât have a profile, start one now. You may not be looking for a job. You may be happily employed. But remember a hiring manager within your company may be checking you out for a new team, department or opportunity. A friend you know may refer you to an opportunity that you donât know about. Your profile is being surreptitiously pinged. LinkedIn tells you who is checking you out and how many times you were checked out. If we know that our profiles are going to be checked, use this information to your advantage. Donât cower, donât hide. The best defense is a strong offense. Ask a (conservative) friend to look at your profile and if they even HINT that something is in poor taste, remove it. Donât argue with them, donât debate with them, just remove it. The hiring manager may be just as conservative as your friend. Beauty is in the eyes of the beholder. Even if the company doesnât allow social media in the workplace, I can still check your profile from my desk via my smart phone. It is not a matter of if someone will check your profile; it is a matter of WHEN your profile will be checked. The person conducting the interview wonât admit to looking at your profile. When they decline you, they are not going to say they declined you because of a picture of you passed out on a park bench cradling an empty 40 ouncer like a newborn. But make no mistake, they will decline you. The bottom line is that you really should clean up your online social profile. Things to think about and leverage: Blogs! Because so few people have them, they REALLY stand out. You can be a sub-par writer, but the very fact that you have a blog that is consistently updated will go FARRRRRRR. The topic doesnât even have to be related to the industry you are applying for but it wonât hurt if it is. If you are a sub-par writer, a blog will improve your writing. Forums: Providing advice, opinions and help in general is always a good thing. Rapportive: I have Rapportive installed, and with this app, I can see your social stream via my inbox. Pictures: Make sure your profile picture is current and ONLY portrays you. Pictures with two or more people in the profile suck because with I can not figure out which person is applying and which person is the frickân BFF. To leverage more facets of your personality, use a casual picture that shows some personality on Facebook and a professional picture suitable for a company website on LinkedIn. Mountain climbing on FB and corporate headshotesque picture on LinkedIn. The absence of a picture in this day and age is interpreted as âmust look like Quasimodo and the Hunchback of Notre Dame combinedâ. There must be something to hide or be embarrassed about. If you are looking for a job, you ABSOLUTELY need a picture. Twitter: Type in the word âjob searchâ or âinterview tomorrowâ and you will be amazed at the tweets that candidates post. Swearing, bitching, complaining. Companies want to hire employees that they can trust will represent them professionally with customers, at conferences, and online. Coming soon: what I think when someone states âI donât use Facebook, I call peopleâ. See you at the after party, HRNasty nasty: an unreal maneuver of incredible technique, something that is ridiculously good, tricky and manipulative but with a result that canât help but be admired, a phrase used to describe someone who is good at something. âHe has a nasty forkball. If you felt this post was valuable please subscribe here. I promise no spam,
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.