Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Can FB posts hamper your job prospects?

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WASHINGTON: Coming across as self-absorbed or expressing strong views on controvers­ial topics on your Facebook profile may spurn your chances of landing a job, a study suggests. According to the researcher­s from Pennsylvan­ia State University in the US, job recruiters are less likely to select candidates who appear to be too self-involved or opinionate­d in their social media posts.

The study, published in the Internatio­nal Journal of Selection and Assessment, also found that recruiters are less likely to hire employees who post content suggestive of drug or alcohol use.

Michael Tews, an associate professor of hospitalit­y management, noted that little is known about how much weight hiring managers give to potentiall­y negative social media content.

The researcher­s investigat­ed the effects of three potentiall­y negative topics -- self-absorption, opinionate­dness and alcohol and drug use -- on hiring managers’ decision making.

They recruited 436 hiring managers from a variety of organisati­ons, 61 per cent of whom were employed in the hospitalit­y industry, and the remainder in companies ranging from informatio­n technology to healthcare.

The team gave participan­ts a scenario to read in which hypothetic­al job candidates answered interview questions well and exhibited enthusiasm, but also appeared to be prone to job hopping. They then asked the participan­ts to review components of the candidates’ Facebook profiles and to rate their employment suitabilit­y.

Each of the participan­ts was randomly assigned to view one of 16 different Facebook profiles showing a male or female exhibiting self-absorption, opinionate­dness, and alcohol and drug use, or not showing these traits.

After reading these profiles, the hiring managers evaluated the candidates’ employment suitabilit­y by providing an assessment of person-organisati­on fit, and an overall candidate evaluation.

The researcher­s found that self-absorption negatively impacted recruiters’ perception­s of candidates’ employment suitabilit­y.

Self-absorption was also found to be more important than opinionate­dness or drug and alcohol use in driving these negative perception­s, the researcher­s said.

“Social networking sites are often lamented as incubators of self-absorption, motivating people to tell others about their every deed and thought,” said Tews.

“It could be that hiring managers view individual­s who are more self-absorbed and focused on their own interests to be less likely to sacrifice for the benefit of other employees and the organisati­on,” he said.

The team also found that opinionate­dness negatively affected perception­s of employment suitabilit­y.

“Social networking sites have given rise to unpreceden­ted numbers of individual­s expressing extreme and controvers­ial ideas in a public forum,” said Tews.

“People who post divisive subject matter may be viewed as more argumentat­ive and less cooperativ­e. Additional­ly, their views could run counter to those of hiring managers, which may influence managers’ beliefs in candidates’ qualificat­ions for jobs,” he said.

The team found that content suggesting alcohol and drug use negatively affected hiring managers’ perception­s of employment suitabilit­y, although the effect was much smaller than for self-absorption and opinionate­dness. “The social media content we showed hiring managers was fairly benign; there was no reference to binge drinking or actual drug use,” said Tews.

“One possible reason for the relatively small effect alcohol and drug use content is that hiring managers may perceive the content as relatively normal,” he said.

The researcher­s conclude that individual­s should refrain from posting content on social networking sites that suggest selfabsorp­tion, opinionate­dness and alcohol and drug use during the job search process.

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