Breaking Down Barriers: Moving Beyond the 15% to Support Employee...
Read MoreScanning online behavior can be a great way to see if a candidate is a good fit for the company culture. I’m not talking about seeing their interests or following other companies merely, but rather about how they use their online platform.
Are they posting about going to the gym and eating well, or are they complaining about work or the people they work with? Online profiles are windows into a person’s life, and employers are using them to determine if candidates are the right fit for their company.
Matthew Ramirez, CEO, Rephrasely
Employers want to get a fuller idea of what the person they’re hiring is like. Social media can allow them to understand what a person’s behavior represents when they aren’t acting on a script. It provides a more natural view of a candidate than they might see during an interview.
If understanding a candidate before hiring saves a company from having to deal with behavior troubles or legal liabilities of any sort, then it’s already worth the effort.
If understanding a candidate before hiring saves a company from having to deal with behavior troubles or legal liabilities of any sort, then it’s already worth the effort. It will always be better for a company to reject an unsuitable candidate than it will be to fix any issue caused by them in hindsight.
I’ve learned the hard way how important it is to conduct candidate background checks, especially their social media profiles.
Five years ago, I hired an apparently perfect candidate for a role, only to have the HR department bombarded with complaints about inappropriate remarks and insensitive behavior towards other employees. Later, I discovered this was the norm for him; his Facebook profile was full of problematic status updates, racist quotes, and shockingly sexist remarks.
With challenging times ahead for businesses, I think it’s better to deep-dive into whatever candidate information is available instead of risking hiring them, only to terminate them and rehire someone else in a month.
Anjela Mangrum
President, Mangrum Career Solutions
Sometimes, online profiles can also provide clues about the legitimacy of applications that seem too good to be true. With challenging times ahead for businesses, I think it’s better to deep-dive into whatever candidate information is available instead of risking hiring them, only to terminate them and rehire someone else in a month. As it is, with the current challenges of running a business, office drama is the last thing we need!
Anjela Mangrum, President, Mangrum Career Solutions
The things that an employee posts or does online don’t just impact their individual reputation; they can also influence how people view or think about your company, even when someone is posting on their personal social media.
Many customers today want to do business with companies that share their values, and job seekers feel the same way about employers. If you hire someone who’s an online bully or regularly posts offensive content, this could lead to people associating these behaviors with your company, and your online reputation as a business can suffer.
If you hire someone who’s an online bully or regularly posts offensive content, this could lead to people associating these behaviors with your company, and your online reputation as a business can suffer.
This is aside from the potential impact on your team, culture, and morale from hiring someone who’s hostile, prejudiced, or otherwise toxic, although that’s something else that’s important to consider. Scanning the profiles and posting behavior of candidates before they get through the interview process is an easy way to check for red flags and avoid hiring someone who will cause you these kinds of headaches.
Archie Payne, CEO, CalTek Staffing
People always warned us in college that employers would search through our social media. It’s true because, as I am in charge of gathering candidates for new openings, the first thing I do when someone applies is look over their social media profiles. We do this to see if they will be a good fit with our company culture.
Obviously, you want employees who will show up on time and get along with others. When I see people who have their profile photos as themselves flipping off the camera and smoking drugs, those are red flags that they probably wouldn’t do well in our culture. With social media, you are supposed to put your best foot forward or show the best side of yourself. Make sure it truly is the best side you are showing others.
Seth Newman, Director, Sporting Smiles
Social identity online is vital for employers to determine the integrity of potential candidates. Candidates with a dirty online identity can damage the reputation of the brand and link it with associated behaviors, such as racism or sexism.
Online scanning can validate the information that potential candidates provide and help gauge the intangible aspects of trust and integrity. It is also vital for security to avoid hiring candidates involved in illegal activities such as money laundering and cybercrime. It is also a way to eliminate unconscious bias through objective scanning of potential candidates.
Pick up any of these points shared by workplace leaders and you’ll know there are plenty of valid reasons to review a candidate’s online behavior and determine if they’d be a good fit or not. So the next time you post something or leave a comment without thinking twice, remember that your potential employers will get to it, review it, and probably use it as enough reason to reject you.
Do you have a valid pointer to add to this list? Or is there another topic you’d like to start a conversation around on the HR Spotlight platform?
Write to us at connect@HRSpotlight.com, and our team will help you share your insights.
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