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One in five bosses run web checks on job-hunters

Companies increasingly looking at networking profiles

By Shaun Nichols, Information World Review 12 Sep 2008

One in every five employers look up social networking information on potential applicants, according to a recent survey.

Job-hunting site carrerbuilder.com ran a survey on over 3,100 people and found that companies are increasingly relying on a candidates social-networking pages in order to determine whether or not to hire them.

Of those who responded, 20 per cent said that they had looked up an applicant's social networking profile. An additional nine per cent told researchers that they plan to start checking profiles soon.

Of those who look up social networking information, 34 per cent said that they had found information which lead them to no longer consider the applicant for that position.

The two most frequently-listed reasons for eliminating the candidate were use of drugs or drinking and the posting of photographs deemed inappropriate or too provocative.

Other reasons include candidates showing poor communication skills, bad-mouthing previous employers, lying about qualifications and having an 'unprofessional' screen name.

Conversely, the survey found that 24 per cent of those who checked profiles had found information which helped them hire the applicant.

Among the most popular reasons listed was qualified background information, good communication skills and finding that a candidate would be a good fit for the corporate culture. Positive references and a professional page presentation were also noted.

The site suggests that job-seekers tend to their networking profiles regularly, tending to comments and removing friend or group links which may portray a negative image. The site also suggests that users who wish to keep would-be bosses away from their pages set the profile to "private" to avoid snooping.


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