Job Searching in Public

A new study by Wakefield Research (infographic below) shows that although almost 9 out of 10 job searchers think privacy is important when searching for a job, but three-quarters of us think that in the age of social media, there is no longer any such thing as a private job search.

Quite an amazing disparity when you think about it. That enormous gap between our preferences (privacy please) and perceptions (everything is public) when it comes to seeking employment, indicates a widespread cultural need for a secure search solution.

And yet, instead of increased confidentiality we see the exact opposite trend, as job searches get more public. Consider the amazing recent popularity of Facebook job apps like BranchOut and BeKnown. The success of these new services might indicate that more of us are comfortable with social career development. It’s just as likely however, that we think we’ve no choice. In line with the survey findings, the BeKnowers and Branchouters are jumping on a trend widely perceived as inevitable: the job market is thoroughly social. Employers are screening candidates online, evaluating applicants according to their social media footprint.

And companies continue with this surveillance and social listening after they make a hire. A case in point: just this month the story of an HR professional who got fired for posting his resume on LinkedIn was carried across mainstream media — another sign of massive interest in this trend of socializing all-things human resources. In that case, the employee was not actively job searching (he claims, though he did check the box indicating an interest in “career opportunities”) but the company objected to the disclosure of what they felt was private information on his profile. This case points to the everyday social media monitoring and management that companies are engaged in, including active investigation of staff social profiles to enforce compliance with corporate social media policy.

Social Job Search

Can you find a job through Facebook or Twitter? If so, maybe using a Facebook app like BranchOut (where the user base is growing madly in 2011) or Monster’s BeKnown [mobile app here] is a good first step toward professionalizing your Facebook profile (though the latter was by far too gimmicky/gameified and spammy for me).

I’ve seen plenty of infographics describing how employers are using social media to recruit and screen talent, but today an image crossed my desktop that indicates social job seekers are finding some success online, and it’s not all about LinkedIn. They key to finding a job in the age of social media is building a sizeable professional network before you need it.

According to MBAOnline.com’s research, those social job seekers who have built a network containing over 150 contacts on a LinkedIn/facebook/Twitter are finding jobs — 1 in 4 of these “super social job seekers” lands a position via their online connections.

Socializing Human Resources

Socializing Human Resources
View more presentations from Sidneyeve Matrix

Slides from my keynote presentation at Impact99 the social media and human resources conference held this week in Toronto, can be downloaded from slideshare. If you would prefer to download a PDF handout version (warning: small fonts!) please click here.

Download is also available from social publishing platform Scribd.

Feeling Creative? Infographic Resumes

“I am of the opinion that [traditional] resumes are absolutely useless,” comments Marie-Lynn Richard, who then created a gorgeous and user-friendly infographic CV:

After I posted the idea of designing a visual resume, the post received 1,200 hits in one day (I normally get 400 hits on my posterous blog posts). So clearly there is a lot of interest in this idea. Web-ready, socialized and infographic resumes are trending.

Derek Bruff shared a very valuable link to a collection of other creative resumes, including these:

Map design by Jordan Carrol

Detail from a design by Stephen Gates

If a template sounds like a good idea, I found this one (below, $12 PSD file), and for the rest of my picks for amazing templates please click here.

Visual Resume.com also has free templates, and a paid service of $60/year for added job search support and features. Thank you to Jonathan Petrino for finding this service and blogging about it on the StudentBrandingBlog. Example template:

If you think that a PowerPoint/Keynote slide presentaion resume might be more your style, check out these examples:

You might also be interested in these posts:
“Professionalizing a Facebook Profile”
“Design a Professional Digital Footprint”
“Design your ePortfolio this week”

Social & mobile recruiting

Excerpts from my recent seminar on social and mobile tech strategy for human resources.

Links to research studies cited in this slide deck are available here.