Identity in Communities and Networks

LinkedIn for Recruitment? No, Thanks

Abstract:

The purpose of this paper is to highlight the ineffectiveness of utilizing LinkedIn as a recruiting tool for screening and subsequently selecting job candidates due to the ease of which inauthentic presentations of self are delivered. Using the works of Chiang & Suen, (2015); Davison, Bing, Kluemper, & Roth, (2016); Donath, (1999); Guillory & Hancock, (2012); Jansen, König, Stadelmann, & Kleinmann, (2012); Kuznekoff, (2012); Miller, (1995); Paliszkiewicz & Madra-Sawicka, (2016); and Pearson, (2009) this paper highlights the fact that inauthentic presentations of self are achieved by employing impression management and self-presentation techniques on LinkedIn profiles. This means that recruiters are in fact not viewing the candidate as they are but as the candidate wishes to be perceived. Additionally, there are no standard measurement techniques for evaluation employed when using LinkedIn in this way and because of this advantages and or disadvantages are suffered unbeknownst to LinkedIn profile creators. The result is that we find the use of LinkedIn as a recruitment tool to be problematic at best and at worst, useless.

Introduction

It has become the norm, among recruiters, to utilize professional social networks like LinkedIn to screen prospective employees (Chiang & Suen, 2015; Davison et al., 2016; Guillory & Hancock, 2012; Jansen et al., 2012; Kuznekoff, 2012; Paliszkiewicz & Madra-Sawicka, 2016; Society for Human Resource Management, 2013; Tifferet & Vilnai-Yavetz, 2018). It is easy to think that this style of recruitment might be efficient. However, this paper will show that while professional social networks like LinkedIn can be useful recruiting tools, the profiles on such platforms should be viewed as idealized and therefore are inauthentic representations of a professional self. This paper will briefly examine LinkedIn, then go on to look at the presentation of self. Drawing from Pearson (2009), Paliszkiewicz & Madra-Sawicka (2016) and Guillory & Hancock (2012) this paper discusses performances of self online and inauthentic presentations of self on LinkedIn. The work of Donath (1999) and Guillory & Hancock (2012) was used to illustrate veracity and identity concealment on LinkedIn profiles. Finally we will examine the usefulness, or rather, uselessness, of LinkedIn as a tool for recruitment, with help from the work of Davison et al (2016)

LinkedIn

With more than 610 million users worldwide, LinkedIn is the worlds largest online professional social network (LinkedIn, 2019a). The purported vision and mission of LinkedIn is to boost economic opportunity for the global workforce and make them more productive and successful by being the conduit through which they connect (LinkedIn, 2019a). While this sounds altruistic and can indeed be very helpful we must remember that LinkedIn is a for-profit business and has no legal or moral obligation to ensure, or enforce people to provide honest representations of themselves or their skills and abilities. LinkedIn is the world’s most popular online space to create and maintain professional networks over time. Employers, recruiters and head-hunters alike utilize LinkedIn to seek out and screen potential employees and in turn, job-seekers utilize LinkedIn to create the most professional profile they can to ensure they appear to be a perfect candidate to any employer (Paliszkiewicz & Madra-Sawicka, 2016). The latter is where the inauthentic presentation of self is exhibited.

Presentation of Self

There are fewer online spaces where the performance of self is as consequential as LinkedIn. Success or failure in this arena can determine whether or not a person can achieve, or maintain, their desired lifestyle. There are few things worth lying for but this is one of them. This is not to say that everybody with a LinkedIn profile lies but I wish to highlight the perceived importance of success in the online job market. Like many online social networks LinkedIn has many customizable facets that comprise the online profile wherein the presentation of self can be exhibited in any way the creator deems worthy. These facets include spaces for: uploading a photograph (portrait); writing a biography; outlining your experience, skills, interests and endorsements. Each of these facets provides an opportunity for a recruiter to learn about a potential candidate, however, it is here that the inauthentic presentations of self can be found. Some of them are more useful than others at conveying misinformation.

The aim of the LinkedIn profile is to present the person as being acceptable of consideration by a recruiter by attempting to prove expertise in an area and by attempting to show morality and ethicality as perceived by said recruiter (Miller, 1995). The performances of self online, as explained by Pearson, are “…disembodied, mediated and controllable…” meaning they are separate from the offline self – as if almost a completely new creation, and they are thoughtfully, carefully and purposefully constructed, this is especially the case with LinkedIn profiles (Pearson, 2009). The purpose of maintaining a LinkedIn profile is usually to expand current networks, become employed, or obtain better employment, so it is within the best interests of LinkedIn members to appear to others as the best self you can (Guillory & Hancock, 2012). This means thinking about – and manufacturing your profile according to – the perceptions of others (Guillory & Hancock, 2012; Paliszkiewicz & Madra-Sawicka, 2016; Pearson, 2009). According to Guillory and Hancock (2012), LinkedIn provides interesting opportunities for deceit that cannot be replicated in face-to-face interactions. Guillory and Hancock (2012) conducted a study that found that people were just as likely to lie on the resumes they provide on their LinkedIn profiles as they are within an old-school paper resume. Further to this, Guillory and Hancock (2012) attest to identity based deception occurring more in computer mediated communication than in face-to-face interactions.

Deception online

In discussing deception online, Donath (1999) explains the difference between assessment signals and conventional signals through an ethnographic lens and it’s useful to draw upon that here. Assessment signals are those that are costly to the signaler but are reliable to whoever receives the message. Whereas, conventional signals are those that have little cost to the signaler but are less reliable in terms of the actual message (Donath, 1999). The example Donath (1999) provides is that of the stag with large horns. The horns show that this stag is strong and would make a tough adversary and a good mate. The horns are heavy and cumbersome which is costly for the stag in terms of energy output and these types of assessment signal are almost impossible to fake (Donath, 1999). According to Donath (1999), statements made during an interview are an example of assessment signals because they usually denote actual experience, whereas statements made within a LinkedIn profile are conventional signals and can be falsities or exaggerations. In reality, every aspect of a LinkedIn profile exemplifies a conventional signal that, in fact, cannot be trusted to be accurate or authentic.

Further to this, in a 2013 study, one quarter of organizations cited the doubtfulness of the veracity of the information contained in social network sites as a reason to not use sites like LinkedIn for recruitment (Society for Human Resource Management, 2013). This cannot be surprising information. Like Donath (1999), Pearson (2009), Kuznekoff (2012) and Paliszkiewicz & Madra-Sawicka (2016) illustrate, self presentation is dependent upon the audience to which the self is presented. In the case of LinkedIn we are aspiring to achieve the best possible first impression online, yet also present ourselves as part of an online community. This requires careful selection and omission of information. Much of the time the concealment of identity occurs in omitting details, for example, if a person thinks they may like to work for an animal rights group one day they will not feature their love of hunting in their LinkedIn ‘interests’ (Donath, 1999). So what people are trying to do is make a good first impression while adhering to the unwritten rules of the cohort – an activity that is fraught with fallacies (Paliszkiewicz & Madra-Sawicka, 2016; Pearson, 2009). Interestingly, according to Donath (1999) when faced with a possible fallacy we are more likely to manipulate our interpretation of events (or things we’ve read) to align with the fallacy, rather than go back and change our views accounting for new information (Donath, 1999). .

Possible fallacies and exaggerations negatively impact on the ease and success of recruiting the best candidate for the job, but what about the deception performed on LinkedIn that can ruin people’s lives through identity theft, cyber-crime and spreading viruses? Due to its success as a global networking platform, LinkedIn has gone from being a pool of recruits to a pond for phishing. Cyber criminals are taking advantage of the trust users have in LinkedIn to obtain private, identity authenticating information such as email addresses and passwords, as well as spreading viruses and committing other types of cyber-crime (Gray, 2018). Fake profiles are created with ease and both individuals and businesses are at risk. LinkedIn knows this and has created a site specifically to guide and educate users to protect their vital information (Gray, 2018; LinkedIn, 2019b). Luckily for the average user, criminals on LinkedIn tend to target bigger companies by sending fake emails to finance departments with the aim of fooling them into making large deposits into scammers accounts (Cropp, 2016). LinkedIn and cyber security experts make the recommendation that users only connect with people they actually know (Cropp, 2016; LinkedIn, 2019b). However, if we adhered to that guideline, LinkedIn would be nothing more than a glorified contacts list not unlike those currently on our cell phones.

Concessions should be made to note that there are mechanisms in place online that encourage honesty but these can be easily circumvented (Guillory & Hancock, 2012). For example, a profile that links to other people becomes a source of reference for the person in question, but these could be friends or associates who will happily uphold the stretching of the truth, or an outright lie, to assist in job obtainment (Guillory & Hancock, 2012). Other online mechanisms that promote honesty include rating systems such as those found on eBay and AirBnB, which provide feedback about both the service provider and the consumer, but no such function is provided on LinkedIn. This means that recruiters will only see the very best information a person chooses to provide about them.

Reason to lie?

The Australian Human Rights Commission (2015) suggest that when seeking candidates for a position, recruiters need to view information about potential candidates based on the selection criteria for the job in question and not take into account factors that could be discriminated against. This cannot happen by viewing LinkedIn profiles for two reasons. Firstly, because the information given on profiles on LinkedIn is that which has been deemed worthy of inclusion by the creator not necessarily with a particular job or position in mind at the time of creation (or during any subsequent updates to the profile). Secondly, because we cannot know which aspects of our identity, as displayed on LinkedIn, may be discriminated against. As explained by Guillory and Hancock (2012), a job seeker can “influence recruiter evaluations by impression management” but what if this happens in a negative way, relating to aspects of a potential candidate that cannot be controlled? In societies like ours, on old school paper resumes, it is not uncommon for Asian people to choose to use Western names, for women to choose more masculine names and for older people to leave out their date of birth entirely, for fear of discrimination. Imagine the lengths people will have to go to now, to avoid being discriminated against on LinkedIn! We cannot change the colour of our skin, yet, with a LinkedIn profile a screener can simply choose to not select a person based on this (Davison et al., 2016; Turnbull & Howman-Giles, 2014).

Defective Techniques

Despite the wealth of studies in this area the potential usefulness of social media as a personnel selection and hiring resource remains to be seen (Davison et al., 2016). Davison et al. (2016) attest to the need for there to be a “sound theoretical rationale” for using such sources and describe relevance, consistency, reliability and validity testing abilities as part of such a technique. In terms of standardization there are currently no adequate measurements for ‘scoring’ potential recruits on LinkedIn (Davison et al., 2016). Further to this, different recruiters and screeners will be looking for different things, and making judgments differently from each other based on what they see. In other words they are “using their own idiosyncratic standards” for evaluation (Davison et al., 2016). Without an established criteria, profiles cannot be scrutinized equally and therefore diminishes the ability for the screener to employ consistent, reliable and valuable evaluation methods (Davison et al., 2016). Accordingly, Davison et al. (2016) break down some of the findings from the study done by the Society for Human Resource Management (2013) and conclude from this that highly trained and qualified Human Resource professionals have doubts about the usefulness of LinkedIn as a recruitment screening tool. If those that lead the industry in human resource management are in doubt about LInkedIn, we should be too.

Recruiters Beware!

LinkedIn is the world’s largest online space for professionals. It can be used reliably for expanding personal and professional networks and is a useful way to keep abreast of global and local business knowledge. However, using online social media profiles, like those on LinkedIn, to make recruitment decisions is a fruitless exercise, given that inauthentic presentations of self can, and are, provided. Impression management techniques are employed to fool recruiters and profiles on LinkedIn should not be relied upon for screening candidates. The profiles on LinkedIn are thoughtfully and purposefully crafted with the perceptions of the audience – the recruiter or the employer – in mind and are therefore a better representation of what people think employers want than being accurate representations of each individual person (Jansen et al., 2012; Pearson, 2009). Moreover, LinkedIn is an unreliable tool given there are no reliable measurement techniques or validity testing techniques that can provide fair and just reviewing of the profiles of potential job candidates. The profiles on LinkedIn take part in a “cozy conspiracy” whereby appearing to be flawless is the main concern (Miller, 1995). As we can see here, alternate performances of self are displayed on LinkedIn, therefore proving that through online impression management techniques, inauthentic professional self-presentations are made. Recruiters beware!

References:

Australian Human Rights Commission. (2015, February 11). A step-by-step guide to preventing discrimination in recruitment. Retrieved April 1, 2019, from https://www.humanrights.gov.au/employers/good-practice-good-business-factsheets/step-step-guide-preventing-discrimination

Chiang, J. K.-H., & Suen, H.-Y. (2015). Self-presentation and hiring recommendations in online communities: Lessons from LinkedIn. Computers in Human Behavior, 48, 516–524. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chb.2015.02.017

Cropp, A. (2016, April 27). LinkedIn scams land big “phish.” Dominion Post; Wellington, New Zealand, p. B.5. Retrieved from http://search.proquest.com/docview/1784231046/abstract/2B31A93944E64222PQ/1

Davison, H. K., Bing, M. N., Kluemper, D. H., & Roth, P. L. (2016). Social Media as a Personnel Selection and Hiring Resource: Reservations and Recommendations. In R. N. Landers & G. B. Schmidt (Eds.), Social Media in Employee Selection and Recruitment: Theory, Practice, and Current Challenges (pp. 15–42). https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-29989-1_2

Donath, J., S. (1999). Identity and Deception in the Virtual Community. In P. Kollock & M. Smith (Eds.), Communities in Cyberspace. Retrieved from http://smg.media.mit.edu/people/Judith/Identity/IdentityDeception.html

Gray, R. (2018). Common LinkedIn phishing scams and how to prevent them. Retrieved from Wandera website: https://www.wandera.com/mobile-security/phishing/common-linkedin-scams-and-how-to-prevent-them/

Guillory, J., & Hancock, J. T. (2012). The Effect of LinkedIn on Deception in Resumes. Cyberpsychology, Behavior, and Social Networking, 15(3), 135–140. https://doi.org/10.1089/cyber.2011.0389

Jansen, A., König, C. J., Stadelmann, E. H., & Kleinmann, M. (2012). Applicants’ Self-Presentational Behavior: What Do Recruiters Expect and What Do They Get? Journal of Personnel Psychology, 11(2), 77–85. https://doi.org/10.1027/1866-5888/a000046

Kuznekoff, J. H. (2012). The Online Presentation of Self: Re-examining Goffman’s Presentation of Self Across Contemporary CMC Contexts (Ph.D., Ohio University). Retrieved from http://search.proquest.com/docview/1034564908/abstract/9A165B2E0E1B4685PQ/1

LinkedIn. (2019a). About LinkedIn. Retrieved March 25, 2019, from https://about.linkedin.com/

LinkedIn. (2019b). LinkedIn Safety Center. Retrieved from https://safety.linkedin.com/

Miller, H. (1995). The Presentation of Self in Electronic Life: Goffman on the Internet. 8. Retrieved from http://www.douri.sh/classes/ics234cw04/miller2.pdf

Paliszkiewicz, J., & Madra-Sawicka, M. (2016). Impression management in social media: The example of LinkedIn. Management, 11(3), 203–212. Retrieved from http://www.fm-kp.si/zalozba/ISSN/1854-4231/11_203-212.pdf

Pearson, E. (2009). All the World Wide Web’s a stage: The performance of identity in online social networks. First Monday, 14(3). https://doi.org/10.5210/fm.v14i3.2162

Society for Human Resource Management. (2013). SHRM Survey Findings: Social Networking Websites and Recruiting/Selection. Business. Retrieved from https://www.slideshare.net/shrm/social-networkingwebsitesrecruitingselectingjobcandidatesshrm2013final

Tifferet, S., & Vilnai-Yavetz, I. (2018). Self-presentation in LinkedIn portraits: Common features, gender, and occupational differences. Computers in Human Behavior, 80, 33–48. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chb.2017.10.013

Turnbull, J., & Howman-Giles, C. (2014, February 13). Social media in the workplace – the good and the bad. Retrieved April 1, 2019, from Workplace Law & Strategy website: https://www.workplacelawandstrategy.com.au/2014/02/social-media-in-the-workplace-the-good-and-the-bad/

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LinkedIn for Recruitment? No, Thanks by Cesarina Fitzgerald is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.

18 thoughts on “LinkedIn for Recruitment? No, Thanks

  1. Hello CFitzgerald!

    A very interesting read!

    I enjoyed your presentation and position of the paper as one of warning, a very clever way to present the argument.
    I do however wish to question the extent of the argument of LinkedIn as a useless tool due to deception, as offline and online identity are both conscious constructions of self that are done so with the advantage of the individual in mind can it not be said that this kind of deception is just as present offline?I note that you mentioned the extent of which is easier to do on rather than offline, which I completely agree, but I ask that with this in mind is a physical resume the same? As a constructed representation in order to increase chance of hire as much as possible?

    The discussion on impression management is a great way to analyse this kind of deceptive behaviour and I throughly enjoyed your take on this. Impression management is in itself an interesting topic from both sides of the argument, whether recruited or LinkedIn user, and I think you addressed this brilliantly.

    A great paper overall, good job!

    Cheers,
    Sophie

    1. Thanks for reading and commenting Sophie!
      You’ve hit the nail on the head there. It’s absolutely possible for deception to occur through impression management offline as well as online. My favourite example of this is Frank Abagnale Jr. – he is the subject of the movie and book “Catch me if you can”. He did such a successful job of impression management he managed to fool airline staff, police and federal agents (to name a few).
      One of the differences is the ease at which it is performed. Offline impression management requires much more work than online impression management due to the amount of assessment signals needing to be performed in real time to convince the audience. You need to be prepared well ahead of time. Conversely, online impression management is something that can be built over time at the leisure of the individual and with the whole internet of stock photos and profiles to copy, a lot of the work has already been done.
      I believe that old school paper resumes are very similar to LinkedIn profiles regarding the opportunity for identity deception. There are subtle ways to work the information in a resume, just like with a LinkedIn profile, that, while not necessarily being outright lies, can make a person look super sparkly. and even though deception might occur therein, it’s the individuals prerogative to look as sparkly as possible I think.
      Thanks again,
      Ces

  2. Hi CFitzgerald,
    I read your paper and I can say that it is a very interesting topic that you explore. Even on ‘professional’ social networking sites, there is still a glimpse of deception present where everyone wants to put forward their best self.
    The question that I raise reading your paper is, people, think that SNSs actually make our lives easier. Coming to LinkedIn recruiters may think that it is less time consuming but I guess that it stays a social networking site before all and that only a limited trust should be given. What do you think?

    1. Hi Stacey, Thanks for reading and leaving a comment.
      There are lots of ways that SNS’s do make our lives easier. For me though, the question is, can we catch up with technology in regards to being safe and truthful online? Social networking technology has advanced so quickly and there hasn’t been a great deal of work, to my knowledge, in managing the presentation of inauthentic selves in a way that assists people stay safe online. This includes platforms like LinkedIn.
      Yes, caution needs to be taken by recruiters using LinkedIn but that caution can also be extended to the members on LinkedIn. How do they know what a recruiter is looking for? How do they know which “best self” to put forward. And from the perspective of the recruiter – how do they know that this person is what they say they are?
      I believe that face-to-face interviews is where all of these questions can be answered, but even there people can still employ impression management to provide a self according to the perceived views of the audience. So I guess, we had all better get really good at reading between all those lines!

  3. Hi Cesarina, I thoroughly enjoyed reading your paper as you explore the same topic as I have in my own paper, however you have presented a different approach to the matter in a captivating way!
    One point that specifically caught my attention was the suggestion that people are just as likely to lie on old school paper resumes as they are on LinkedIn – do you think this means that LinkedIn is no less successful than any other form of recruitment? I think this is a very interesting point to consider when examining the disadvantages of LinkedIn as a recruitment tool.
    I like the way you’ve broken down what impression management really is by addressing the notion of deception online and focusing on why people feel the need to lie on LinkedIn profiles. I personally don’t have a LinkedIn account but from previous experiences of writing cover letters when applying for jobs, I am certain that if creating a LinkedIn profile I would employ impression management to some extent to present myself in the best way possible – I’d be interested to see the lengths to which some people go in order to lie on their profiles.

    1. Hi EOwen, thanks for reading and making comment.
      i think it’s important that we are aware that impression management occurs on LinkedIn profiles as well as paper resumes when considering how successful both avenues are. These days I think a lot of people are so comfortable online that perhaps they forget that not everybody is being truthful. In my opinion, the best place to ascertain the job-fit of a person is through interviews and on the job trials but to get there we have got to convince the recruiter to give us a chance.
      It’s also worthwhile to highlight that performing some impression management techniques doesn’t make us bad people. Humans by their very nature are so different from each other and to have cohesive, harmonious relationships we need to use impression management so it’s not always a bad thing!

  4. Hey Cesarina,

    What a very interesting read! I really enjoyed your paper!

    You raised a very interesting point in regard to how LinkedIn provides, alike all social media platforms enable inauthenticity and even worse- enable people to lie. What are your thoughts on creating unrealistic representations of ones self on platforms such as LinkedIn?
    It’s crazy to think that platforms such as linkedIn still don’t really provide tools that can prevent people from lying on their pages and resumes, which can be seriously misleading. Do you have any ideas on how they can prevent this?

    1. Hi TYates, Thanks for reading and commenting!
      I think it can be dangerous for people to lie or mis-represent themselves on LinkedIn profiles because eventually there will be a time that the inauthenticity will be found out.
      I don’t really know how platforms can prevent this type of mis-representation but perhaps they could start with some kind of fact-checking against other profiles the person has, if they are linked in some way but then we get into that muddy field of online privacy. Its hard to say what the best plan of attack is. I think as long as people are aware of areas like this where it is relatively easy to perform inauthentic presentations then at least we can proceed with caution.

  5. Hello Cesarina.F.

    I really enjoyed reading your paper as it explored the “professional” social networking site for recruitment. Most people disregard the fact that LinkedIn forms part of the Social Networking Sites and has many disadvantages concerning inauthenticity and fake representations of their identities.

    Thank you for sharing your paper.

    Kind Regards,
    ABhackaurally

    1. Hello and thank you for reading my paper and leaving a comment.
      You are totally right. Although LinkedIn is a part of the suite of Social Networking platforms available to us, many people hold it in higher esteem due to its basis as a professional networking site. But, as you say, it is liable to inauthenticity just as much as any other platform.

      Kind Regards,
      Ces

  6. Hi Cesarina,
    Your paper very interesting to read and you have clearly pointed out some great arguments and facts. I can relate somehow to the lies you have mentioned. I myself have seen various fake accounts on linked in. For example, I have come across a person who was only 19 years old and has 6 years of working experience, which is clearly fake!

    1. Hi KAntoaroo, Thank you for reading my paper and commenting!
      Wow! That sure does sound too hard to believe! Yes, LinkedIn can be a forum for people to provide some really false claims. Many of the scams on LinkedIn are aimed at building networks for fake accounts so they look more reputable. One of the ways they do this is by making fake accounts like the one you have seen and using them to build the connections to another fake account. Eventually, all these fake accounts will culminate in one of them being able to get enough information to perform identity theft or other scams. As I say in my paper LinkedIn scammers are usually targeting big businesses and companies but we, as individuals need to be wary too.

  7. Hi Cesarina,
    Your title is what actually did grab my attention its quite a direct one and unexpected one because nowadays the trendy app for professional purpose is LinkedIn.Don’t you think that there should be a moderator to actually detects scams like for instance i know a girl who actually stated she is 18 yrs old with 8 yrs of experience in marketing like these kinds of fake information should be reported.

    1. Hi DRamen, thank for reading and making comments.
      Yes, I absolutely do think it is an excellent idea to have someone, or a team of people, working for LinkedIn, or some third party agency, that manages the deletion of scam accounts and information like you’ve detailed, where people are making obvious lies. That’s a great idea and it’s one mechanism of deterrence for people that might feel like providing those lies too!

  8. Hi Cesarina,
    Your title is what actually did grab my attention its quite a direct one and unexpected one because nowadays the trendy app for professional purpose is LinkedIn.Don’t you think that there should be a moderator to actually detect and moderate scams on this app?

  9. Hello,

    What an interesting angle.

    I find the online resume to be a great way to see how a person really portrays themselves. Yes people lie on their resume’s as no one wants to shine light on the negatives in their lives and want to always show the best side to suit the job. Do you agree that Facebook or Instagram could also be seen as a sort of resume? Seeing the way someone appears online, the way they look, dress or act can say a lot about a person. These days when applying for a job employers will dig deeper than just looking at a sheet of paper highlighting their qualities.

    Thanks again for the read!

    Feel free to read my paper,
    https://networkconference.netstudies.org/2019Curtin/2019/05/05/uncovering-all-sides-of-social-media-the-good-the-bad-and-the-ugly/

    Renee.

    1. Hi Renee, thanks for reading and commenting. It has become fairly standard practice for recruiters to Google a candidate and check out any and all of their socials and the content can absolutely affect the way they are perceived by the recruiter. So, yes, we need to make sure that our online presence across all platforms purveys the kinds of personal information that makes us look good to potential employers. I think about this often and I talk about it with my younger friends and family because I think that it would be a real shame for someone to miss out on something they are perfect for due to something they posted when they were young. It’s a minefield.

  10. Hi Cesarina,

    The title got me by storm as I was actually looking for job offers on LinkedIn recently. So, you stating that companies do not ‘really’ use the LinkedIn job search tool for finding candidates even if they advertise on the online platform?

    This makes sense in some way as candidates can portray themselves in any manner they want, even faking it, to the employer.

    Online recruitment can barely be compared to a face-to-face interview. But in this digital era, can’t something be done to authenticate candidates for a job without looking into them and their papers?

    Thanks for sharing,
    Keshav

    You can have a look on my paper on this link : https://networkconference.netstudies.org/2019Curtin/2019/05/09/social-media-influencers-defining-construction-of-identit/

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