Breaking News
You are here: Home / Job Market / Career Advice / Time to Clean Up Your Online Identity

Time to Clean Up Your Online Identity

 

By Ritika Trikha, CareerBliss Writer

Did you know that every time you tweet the deets or update your status on Facebook your brain gives you a tiny blast of euphoria?

Social media sites are “brain candy,” according to a recent LA Times story, and sharing information produces the same sensation of pleasure that comes with eating food, receiving money and having sex, though to a lesser degree, scientists found.

So it’s official. People, by nature, love talking about themselves.  We’re just wired that way.

But if you’re searching for new job opportunities, any public displays of self-indulgence should be tactful. Many recruiters and hiring managers are combing the web for dirt on applicants. Give them something hirable to look at. Take some time to clean up your online identity and reinvent one that says Hello, I’d be a great addition to your team.

Here’s how you should start:

1. Steer Clear of Employer Turnoffs

It’s fairly common sense. Don’t post anything that would embarrass your future boss: swearing, racist slurs, cleavage, pictures from raging parties. In fact, Frances Cole Jones, author of How to Wow: Proven Strategies for Selling Your (Brilliant) Self, goes as far as to suggest that you should take down 80 percent of your pictures.

“If you have that much time to spend online managing your social media,” she says, “you don’t seem like you really want a job.”

Instead, use the web to show employers that you’re good at your job and you’d be a great fit for the company culture — not how much you are obsessed with your pets (no matter how adorable your cat might be).

Google also has a “me on the web” feature in your Google account dashboard. Check it out—it helps you track your name on the web and blow any unwanted content into smithereens!

‘Drinkin’ Photos on Facebook Cost Man Disability Benefits

2. If a job seeker doesn’t show up in Google, does he exist?

No, according to Jones. She says that “candidates who don’t have any online presence are just as troubling” as those with inappropriate posts.

So, if nothing comes up when you Google your name, at the very least create a LinkedIn profile … STAT! More on what you can do to create awesome search results on No. 5.

3. Make your Facebook Top-Secret in 3 Steps

Employers’ go-to scouting site is none other than Facebook, according to a great infographic put together by Online Colleges.  Facebook is actually neck-and-neck with LinkedIn –  65 percent use Facebook the most and 63 percent mostly look at LinkedIn. Here’s how to make your Facebook incognito:

Step 1: By now most of you have switched to Facebook Timeline. Take a scroll down memory lane and make sure none of your super old posts from back in the day are public. The best way to do this is to go to your profile and click the icon in the corner next to “Activity Log” and then click “View As …”

This feature lets you see exactly what your timeline looks to the public. Scroll down to see if there are any embarrassing updates from 2005 that need to be edited or deleted ASAP. That’s the one great thing about the new Facebook Timeline — you can edit history.

Step 2: Go to your Privacy Settings and edit the settings under “How You Connect.”  Make sure that you limit who can look up your timeline by name, email address or phone number just to your friends.

Step 3: Finally, it’s time to make your Facebook profile unsearchable on the web altogether. Facebook has just one little checkbox that controls whether or not you’ll be searchable on Google and other search engines.

Go to Privacy Settings –> Ads, Apps and Websites –> Public Search. Then, make sure that you do NOT check the box that says “Enable public search.”

4. Be Smart about Social Sign ins

Have you noticed how more and more websites are giving you the option to sign in using your Facebook or Twitter login while registering? It’s for those of us who are too lazy to go through that whole registration spiel—some people call it “password fatigue.”

The problem with this is many sites that are seamlessly integrated with Facebook or Twitter, such as Spotify or Like a Coupon, automatically post your updates publicly. If someone important happens to stumble upon your public profile, they might see your guilty pleasures (Carly Rae Jepsen, anyone?)! Make sure you edit the public settings on each new app you use.

5. Start Contributing Smart, Relevant Info about your Specialty

Now that you’ve scrubbed the Internet of all the useless info about you — it’s time to be proactive and add some professional sauciness. Share relevant new articles, write insights and connect with other pros like you to establish a clean, professional presence. These are the best places to do this:

LinkedIn – Create a LinkedIn profile, add people you know and join a bunch of groups that relate to you. Oh, and don’t be creepy about adding connections—send a proper LinkedIn invite.

Blog – Start one. Immerse yourself into what’s being said about your niche right now. Get involved. Jones suggests you buy your domain name and build on that. If you’re feeling lost, check out blog directories like BlogHints.com or BlogHub.com.

Quora – This is another tool to help you showoff whatever credibility you have in your field. It’s basically a giant question-and-answer resource that connects you with other establish experts in any field of interest. Just search for a topic and if you have a question, fire away!

Twitter – Create a professional, public Twitter exclusively about your profession. Use it to share blog entries, other industry news articles, Twitter chats, find other people in your field and much more.

About ResumeBear

Manage your Professional Brand with ResumeBear's New Career Tools! Track Down the Job of your Dreams using our New Online Resume Builder, Free Resume Delivery, Real Time Resume Tracking and our all NEW Job Matching !

24 comments

  1. I just want to tell you that I’m new to blogging and seriously enjoyed you’re website. Probably I’m going to bookmark your blog . You absolutely have good articles. Thanks for sharing with us your web-site.

  2. Thanks for such practical tips, and for including the “how-to” information and resources!

  3. Sabastian Blake

    Every job seekers should follow these tips. Because these tips are valuable to all. Thanks for these tips.

  4. Now for a little “brain candy”.

    When I did a search on my name I had 24,300 results. Of course most of them did not refer to the “real” me. Yet it was interesting. My LinkedIn profile came in #1, so it is important to have a good and complete LinkedIn profile which means I need to do some updating on mine.

    It is wise to make FaceBook unsearchable by following the advice in #3 above.

    I never did like those easy to use sign-ins that we often get as an option on some sites.

    As usual, I did learn something new by reading your blog, “Quora”. Thanks for sharing.

  5. Great advice. Much of this seems to be obvious to those of us who have navigated the perils of job hunting and those of us who have hired people. But young people, especially, need to take note, particularly once you near the end of your studies. Your online demeanor needs to reflect the seriousness of your job search. Potential employers do not need to see a pictorial encyclopedia of your party years.

  6. This is a very useful article. Especially to those who doesn’t realize how risky to share your information online. I would really want to learn how to erase my personal info to prevent google from tracking it.

  7. This has some very useful information on how to project the image you want an employer to see and how to eliminate the things that would get in your way. Cleaning up the FB history is a good idea since we don’t always remember what we said previously and that can hurt us.

  8. I’m always amazed by the things people — not just recent grads — post. I’m pretty open on FB, but I’m well past my partying days. I can only imagine what I might have posted back in the seventies!!

  9. Sound advice, and I love the tips on how to do this!

  10. Great article. As an employer I always look up job applicants on-line. If I can see their profile it gives me a better idea of their “real” personality and saves me a lot of time and money!

  11. Thanks Bob, I always get something important out of your posts.

  12. Thanks for the timely reminder. I just advised my college freshman to clean up his site when I took a brief look over his shoulder. Not too early to start especially when underclassmen may be looking for internships, too.

  13. Great common sense reminders. And how interesting that every time we use social media it gives us a tiny blast of euphoria! So we really are addicts after all!

  14. Great idea, something very easily forgotten or paid no attention, but very important :)

  15. This is the best article of our age, this is what happening all the time. Specially when it comes to do business the first thing we all do is that we google the person if the person does not show up he really does not exist or at least do not know the importance of showing up on search, second if we find the facebook profile we do go and check the time line and we do scroll down to the birth, no one actually want to open each and every post but if any post opens that can be embarrassing it effects and also there is a great deal of showing your photograph which matches you is so important.

  16. Some VERY good advice here. I regularly block people from twitter and FB for unsavoury language and I am not an employer.
    I don’t want to see/read it and I am sure that is a 100% turn-off for a potential employer….as is a seemingly insatiable desire for alcohol or a daily hangover!

  17. This is all good advice, but I have a feeling it is not all that easy to erase traces you would rather not have left online!

  18. In time, we will all move from FB and hopefully have more control over privacy again.

  19. It’s nice being my own boss so I don’t have to worry about someone finding a negative impression of me on the social media.

  20. Excellent suggestions, all. In the real world, it is not so easy to extricate yourself from things you didn’t know were still around. Remember that Google is not the only search engine. I was shocked to hear a prospective client recently tell me that when they searched for me they found something I had not been associated with for almost four years!

  21. This is great advice for job seekers, especially the recent grads. I write for the careers blog for a leading software company in DC called Vocus. I am always stressing the importance of personal branding and letting the readers know they should be wary of employers checking search results. More and more employers are doing this and rejecting candidates based on what they find.

    Check out our latest post Job Search Tips for Recent Grads: http://bit.ly/La9eSD

  1. Pingback: Maja

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

*

You may use these HTML tags and attributes: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>

Scroll To Top