Friday, May 22, 2020
Do Recruiters Have the Right to Privacy Online Cojones!
Do Recruiters Have the Right to Privacy Online Cojones! Yet another session with agency recruiters has forced me to publish a rant! Iâm there talking about Twitter and Facebook and a consultant tries to persuade me that the Twitter account he has is private, can only be seen by him and his mates and is protected. He therefore has the right to do what he wants with it. I checked out his LinkedIn profile, spotted the account he referred to, noticed that he had the F word in his Bio (amongst other things) got out my collapsible soap box and⦠COJONES! I work with some really lovely clients. They are all really great people: funny, educated, great companyI really rate the industry. I have a Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, LinkedIn, Slideshare, blah blah account. I have a nice number of followers. However, I get really fed up when a recruiter tells me they can do what they like on Facebook and Twitter as itâs their personal space â" itâs just Cojones: I dont spill my guts online â" Iâm a lady! I stick to the positive on my social networks, and tune into the news when I want doom and gloom I engage with happy, positive people. I donât get involved in online chats with people where the content is negative, political or nasty (no matter how close I am to them offline). I value my business relationships, my pipeline and my kidsâ futures. When I read negative stuff online I get down (and not in a funky way either!). You donât need to spill your guts online to be interesting: I think I have a pretty interesting life, and I share stuff that I get up to inside and outside of work. I donât share things that would lead to my clients disrespecting me. I aim to be positive and constructive â" rarely negative. I have a pretty dry sense of humour; which if we met face to face would be coupled with a glint in my eye. You wonât see my cheeky grin / glinty eye online, and negative comments taken out of context will be misinterpreted I can add a :) but it just doesnât convey my approach, so I try to stick to happy, jokey Lisa online. Recruiters are getting fired because theyâre stupid: I know a lawyer who is currently working with 2 recruiters who have been fired due to their supposed privacy being interrupted by their supposed friends grabbing a screen shot of their supposed private Facebook / protected tweets and publishing this in public. So much for supposed privacy (that Print Screen button is the devil!) I am sure the âitâs not fairâ mantra is prevalent in those homes right now, and who knows they may be reinstated if the tribunal finds that they were unfairly dismissedâ¦but their careers have been interrupted, people have got hurt and all because they were stupid (or perhaps just a little rash and uneducated about how their âprivateâ lives arenât really private?) Educate rather than stipulate: I talk to clients and their recruitment staff every day about the potential outcome of theoretical privacy. I believe a lack of understanding of online privacy is a massive risk to the recruitment industry for a number of reasons: 60% employers check employees out Do they really log off when they bump into you online? Bear in mind that most social media software is built around forcing you to bump into your real / potential contacts, so the likelihood of your clients accidentally finding you is pretty high. Serendipity does not exist online anymore â" there are no happy accidents which show you profiles of people â" itâs all engineered according to who you know and what you say. Ideas surrounding âviews are my ownâ protecting individuals â" Clients and candidates wonât care if theyâre âyour ownâ if your ideas are offensive, theyâll disconnect and move on to a recruiter who does not offend them. Many recruitment leaders shy away from social media Through fear of a lack of privacy, and this behaviour also leads to a lack of expectation and endorsement of social media. Silly! Your clients and candidates are âon itâ. Privacy online is an education piece adults need to know the potential outcomes of their behaviour if theyâre to buy in to behaving differently and reducing risk to their jobs and the business which employs them. Do the math! Some cojones solutions: Advise your staff to go âundergroundâ and have a separate Twitter account This is akin to saying to your staff âyes, off you go and post what you want on your own Twitter pageâ Really?!? I rarely see this work, so unless your staff are so secretive that no-one knows them, or they work for Nasa and get how to lock down their profiles, I suggest you donât bother with this approach, itâs just too dangerous âViews are my ownâ your bios â" Not convinced that this protects your staff â" but it does protect the business from lawsuits from suppliers, candidates, clients who may be offended / affected by what they post. But again it does not protect the user / business from a drop in fees if the clients / candidates spot theoretically private content not meant for them that causes harm. Lock down access to social media â" ABSOLUTELY, letâs demoralise the workforce and prevent them from using the one thing that their clients and candidates are getting really savvy at in order to protect your reputation. After all, they donât have smart phones, 3g, wifi, fag breaks, an axe to grind⦠So, whatâs your plan? Educating your staff is key to helping them use these systems to deliver their KPIs. Make sure that they are aware of what their actions could result in and make sure you have a policy that covers you if you want to something drastic. And please donât restrict your policy to âdonât do stupid stuff or weâll fire youâ. You need detail and practical advice not an umbrella statement that is likely to be misinterpreted. Due diligence: And perhaps checking them out before they join the business to ensure that they are âon brandâ before you get them to take your brand online too. Whatâs your plan? Note: Meaning of Cojones (in case youâre not bi-lingual like me! ??
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