What would you do? Great catch doesn’t look that good on social site
January 31, 2011 by Tim GouldPosted in: Behavior, Communication, Hiring, In this week's e-newsletter, Latest News & Views, Management, policies, References, What would you do?
Periodically, we ask three managers how they’d handle a difficult situation at work. Today’s problem: A Facebook profile shows a different side of an “ideal” job candidate.
The Scenario
“Stu, have you finished looking over Carl’s application yet?” asked manager Eric Krewson, stepping into HR director Stu Capper’s office.
“Ah, Eric, just the man I was looking for,” said Stu. “Come take a look at this.”
“Look, I know I said it before, but I really think Carl would be a perfect fit here,” said Eric. “Plus, I think he’s the most qualified candidate we’ve seen.”
“Well, let’s hold off on the ‘perfect fit’ idea for a moment,” said Stu. “Take a look at what I found on his Facebook profile.”
Social media tells a different story
With Eric looking over Stu’s shoulder, Stu clicked through Carl’s photos, apps and wall posts for a couple of minutes before logging out of Facebook.
Eric folded his arms in front of his chest. “Well, that’s unfortunate.”
“Agreed,” said Stu. “What do you think about our ‘ideal candidate’ now?”
“Look,” Eric said, “the guy’s 22 years old. If I could still party like that without losing the next day to a hangover, I totally would.”
“Come on, this is serious,” said Stu. “We need someone who’s responsible. What we don’t need is someone who’s going to come in to work with a headache every Friday and call out sick every Monday.
“Plus, where’s his common sense?” Stu added. “How could he have failed to make his profile private?”
“Wait, are you really considering not hiring him?” asked Eric. “Minus this, he’s exactly the type of person we’re looking for. At least give him a chance to explain himself.”
If you were Stu, what would you do next?
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What your peers had to say
An assistant superintendent for personnel in Illinois
What she would do: I think we’d pass on Carl.
Reason: Carl doesn’t seem to care who sees his Facebook profile, which doesn’t bode well for a potential employee. We can’t have anything reflect badly on our organization.
In addition, if Carl had been an employee and had those things on his Facebook page, he would have been in violation of our own social media policy. We wouldn’t be too keen on hiring someone who’s managed to violate our policies before he’s even hired.
A controller in Indiana
What he would do: At our company, we don’t check social media profiles of applicants.
However, if the inappropriate things on his Facebook profile were prevalent in his life, they likely would show up on a background check or be mentioned on his references – both of which we get before we hire anyone. If they showed up on either of those, then we wouldn’t hire him.
Reason: For our industry, what’s on social media isn’t too important to us — a candidate’s personal life isn’t a reflection on his or professional life. That’s why we rely on the application, reference and background checks to make our decision.
A treasurer in California
What she would do: I wouldn’t address what we’d seen on the Facebook page, and I’d hire him anyway.
Reason: Your private life is just that — private. It doesn’t become our concern until something inappropriate happens in the workplace. We only address problems when they enter our work environment.
Tags: Facebook, job candidates, photos, profile, social media
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February 7th, 2011 at 1:32 pm
Democrats would claim Clinton’s dalliances with Monica did not affect his performance. If Monica had posted her romps on Facebook, would it / should it have made a difference?
Before Tiger’s indiscretions were made public, he was the number one golfer and his private life activities did not seem to affect performance at all. Anyone would have wanted him on their golf team.
My sense is that, in general, people tend to embellish their exploits in print?
For a multitude of reasons, many talented people in their career fields engage in stupid or nonconforming pastimes in their free time.
Oftentimes, legal but unconventional activities energize the talented and creative. And it certainly makes for entertaining water cooler talk.