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Could your Social Media Profile make or break your next job?

According to the 2012 annual technology market survey conducted by Eurocom Worldwide, “Almost one in five technology industry executives say that a candidate’s social media profile has caused them not to hire that person.” Previous Eurocom Worldwide surveys had found almost 40% of the survey respondents from technology companies review job candidate’s profiles on social media sites.

While we’ve all heard about the increase in companies checking the social media profiles of job candidates, this survey provides the first evidence that prospective job candidates are actually being rejected because of their profiles.

Tips to build a positive social media profile and avoid being rejected by a potential employer:

Facebook: Always follow the old saying about not posting anything that would make you embarrassed if it were published on the front page of a newspaper. Don’t use Facebook as a forum to vent on everything you hate about life, your job, someone else, or a company – talk to a friend in person if you feel the need to vent. Some people recommend creating separate personal profiles – one for business and one for family and close friends only – but this is not recommended because it can be next to impossible to manage.

(Update: According to Forbes.com blog reader Jennie van Luptak, “creating dual professional/personal Facebook accounts is a serious violation of Facebook’s terms of service that could get you banned.” If you are worried about what potential employers might see, Jennie recommends you “segment your friends using lists” because it allows you to “control who sees what – your supervisor gets to see the interesting news story you shared but not the pictures from last weekend.”)

LinkedIn: Better for job seekers than Facebook is LinkedIn because you can create a highly professional profile by using LinkedIn as an electronic résumé. This includes writing a succinct profile summary, adding your current job information, past job experience, education, skills, awards, and even obtaining testimonials from previous managers, co-workers, or direct reports. If you author a blog that relates to business or your work, be sure to include the URL information. Then, you can encourage potential employers to review your information on LinkedIn.

With more and more companies jumping on the social media bandwagon, it only makes sense that searching social media for background information on potential job candidates will continue to grow. This will make it even more important that everyone actively manage his or her online persona.

Bottom line: Decide how you intend to use social media and to whom you will allow access (especially on Facebook). Remember, if you want to ensure a potential employer never rejects you, make sure your online social profile depicts the type of employee a company would want to hire.

Article originally spotted on Forbes.


Online Professional Networks: Part Two

In a recent blog post, we spoke about the huge growth that is currently occuring in the Online Professional Network sphere.  Fuelled by reports that LinkedIn and Viadeo are set to go public.

In Part One of this blog mini-series, we detailed the stats of LinkedIn with their rather nice infographic.  This time round we’re focusing on Viadeo, who are rapidly gaining ground on Linkedin, having opened an office on Linkedin’s doorstep in San Francisco and who claim they are number one in Europe – being as they are a French company.

While the tech press tends to concentrate on LinkedIn, its rival has a substantial audience in a number of regions, as this infographic shows.

To put this in some context, LinkedIn boasts over 90 million members worldwide, including 20 million in Europe. While Viadeo is sitting at just over a third of the total users if we go by LinkedIn’s figures, we read that Viadeo stands by its claim of being number one in Europe and questions LinkedIn’s numbers.

Either way, France-based Viadeo is targeting developing markets for further growth. As the graphic shows, it sees significant potential in Asia and is set to open offices soon in Russia and Brazil.

Thenextweb.com report that Just weeks after LinkedIn filed to go public, it appears that rival social network for professionals Viadeo is thinking of heading in the same direction.

AFP reports that the company is “Studying the possibility” of an Initial Public Offering. Although the company doesn’t appear to be rushing into a decision, Dan Serfaty, co-founder of Viadeo, is quoted as saying “We’ve existed for five years, we have the size, we are credible. In terms of images and resources, it could be interesting,”

The Paris-based company isn’t yet even sure which stockmarket it might float on, considering emerging markets as one possibility. “The question arises of where we would do our IPO, in France or not. We’re number one in France, Italy, Spain, and in countries like China, Mexico, India and Brazil.” Serafty told AFP. “It could be that we would seek a listing on the stock exchange in an emerging market, because it would allow us to position ourselves as a social network in these countries.”

Demand Media and LinkedIn have kicked off a renewed appetite for tech IPOs this year. Zynga, Groupon and Facebook are all thought to be considering going public in the next couple of years. It looks like we can now add Viadeo to the list too.

 

 

Click here to see the full size version on thenextweb.com.


Online Professional Networks: Part One

Great things are afoot as Professional Online Networks (LinkedIn, Viadeo, Xing) open new offices, break new growth barriers and generally seem to be entering into a season of growth.

After observing this, we thought it would be interesting to explore this further, so we ran a poll on our website were we asked:

How many Professional Online Networks are you part of?
The results were surprising:
5 or more (31%)
1 (27%)
2 (25%)
3 (13%)
4 (4%)

This shows that a third of visitors to our website are members of five or more professional online networks – not including social sites like Facebook.

LinkedIn, widely regarded as the number one Professional Online Network, has recently announced that it has finally reached a major milestone: 100 million users and counting.

The company, founded in December 2002 and launched in May 2003, reached profitability fairly soon, and its growth has been accelerating over the past few years. It took LinkedIn six years to reach 50 million users, but it only took a year and a half for the business social network to double that number. LinkedIn hit 85 million members in October 2010 and revealed that it had more than 90 million users when it filed to go public earlier this year. LinkedIn is now adding one new member per second.

To celebrate its new achievement, the LinkedIn team has released an infographic breaking down its growth and its overall membership. It comes with several interesting tidbits of information on who uses LinkedIn and even when they use it.

Here are some of the most intriguing stats from LinkedIn’s infographic:

  • 56% of LinkedIn’s users are outside of the United States. LinkedIn is experiencing its fastest growth internationally.
  • LinkedIn’s fastest-growing country is Brazil, with 428% growth year-over-year. Brazil is followed by Mexico, India and France.
  • The height of LinkedIn activity happens during the workday, peaking at around noon. Mobile usage, on the other hand, typically peaks around 8:00 p.m.
  • There are almost 1 million teachers on LinkedIn; 20% of the site’s users work in the service sector, while 9% work in finance and another 9% are in the high-tech industry.

For most of its 7-plus years of existence, LinkedIn has dominated its niche of social business users. The result is a valuation nearing $3 billion and 5.5 billion monthly pageviews. While it’s no Facebook, we bet most people would love to be in LinkedIn founder Reid Hoffman’s shoes right now.

We’ve included LinkedIn’s infographic for your viewing pleasure.

You can also connect with ROD on LinkedIn

In our next blog post we’ll focus on French firm Viadeo, who are making waves in San Francisco.


Online Networking: Improving your online presence

Today’s job marketplace has evolved to the extent that recruiters and employers are now hunting online for their next candidate, but all too often they’re not finding the candidates they need or are missing good candidates due to out-of-date online profiles.

At Resource On Demand we firmly believe in candidates having strong online profiles.  Believe it or not most companies will Google you before they hire you, so make sure what they find is the best professional presence that you can offer.

To this extent we came across an interview with Pete Crosby, COO of  Viadeo, who shares some great tips on how to have a good online presence. Enjoy and then implement for yourself.

How important a role are social networks currently playing in helping job seekers find employment?

Well, it’s very important. In fact, something like 60 percent of employers are now searching on professional social networks for candidates and they’re looking in advance of job interviews to see what your profile says about you. But the most crucial thing is that when they search Google, if they don’t find a professional profile, what do they find instead? And frequently, they find something that you don’t control and so the most important thing about a professional network is to have a profile, update it, keep it refreshed which means that when the employer does run the search they find information that you’re in charge of rather than information about you or those slightly embarrassing Facebook photographs that you wish you hadn’t posted.

In your experience does job seeking and recruitment activities represent a significant part of what goes on in professional social networks?

Yes. In fact it’s the biggest reason that people use a professional social network. Something like 40 percent of our members tell us that they are using our service either to recruit or to be recruited. But there’s a hidden number behind there as well because, of course, what social networks represent is not active recruitment but, in fact, passive recruitment which means that even though you can use our service, and we’ll talk about this shortly, for contacting recruiters, for advertising yourself, in fact what we tend to find is that recruiters contact you. And they contact you because they use our back-office recruitment systems to access more sophisticated search mechanisms to look for the right candidates and then they send the mail directly to the right candidate based upon the search criteria and the key words they’ve used. And the majority, almost 90 percent of our members, leave that box ticked which says I’m happy to receive job offers and suggestions from recruiters because, of course, even if it’s not the right job for you, you don’t regard it as spam; it’s kind of flattering and, of course, hundreds and thousands of our members have found jobs in that way.

What advice would you give to someone who is actively seeking employment through a networking site such as Viadeo or LinkedIn?

Ok, well there’s three things and I’ll start with the basic and the basic is that you must have your profile up to date. What you can now do, increasingly, is create a rich media profile. That means rather than simply transcribing your resume in to your professional profile, which is fine and is important, you can now, for example, include a presentation which you’ve done or perhaps you want to include in your profile a YouTube video of you speaking at a conference or perhaps; quite an exciting company we’re working with in London called Inspire Interns and work with recent MBA graduates; they do a 60 second video of you talking to camera. You can imbed that in to your profile which, number one, could be really interesting for the potential employer and, number two, is different and anything that’s different stands out and helps you go through that initial first sift where employers are looking for something that makes you stand out from the crowd.

So, number one, obviously update your profile. Number two is to be active. If you are active on the network then people who search for you will find you at the top if the list. What does that mean? If you’ve got a complete profile with a photograph you’re going to come at the top of the search. If you answer questions in the expertise section on Viadeo then you’re going to come nearer to the top of the search and you’re going to appear to be active and knowledgeable. Ask for recommendations from previous employers or from a colleague; ask them to talk about you because it adds weight, it adds third party substance to your profile. And finally, I would suggest joining a community. If you join a community you start to network online with people who are based in your industry; you start to make contacts in just the same way you would in an offline event and, of course, the majority of jobs are got through third party contacts and your extended network, if it has 100 people in it, your extended network will be about half a million people. So, all of those people you’re connected to and, of course, for many of us that’s the way we got our job; it’s through connections.

Pete Crosby, COO of Viadeo

Can you explain the difference between active and passive recruiting?

If you are actively recruiting then what will happen as the candidate is you’ll go and look for advertisements and will respond to advertisements. We have thousands and thousands of advertisements and people respond to them all the time and they’re very successful. What’s the game changer is that the recruiter can start to actively hunt for you so if your profile has the right key words, the right level of experience; let’s talk about a Digital Marketing Manager based in London. If you type in ‘digital marketing’ as a recruiter and you look for five years experience or more and you want to see a couple of marketing associations name checked in there as well and you want to be sure that they’re in the UK in the South East of England, you’re going to get the 30 million Viadeo members down to a much smaller sub section and then you can start to filter and filter and filter. And the guys that come at the top of that search will probably receive an e-mail from the recruiter; this is what we call passive recruitment. You might be in work, you might not be in work, but you have a good resume and you receive contact from the head hunter which enables you to organize and interview; organize a consultation. And we find that that increasingly is the way that people are starting to get recruited on Viadeo.

Is there a lot of cross border recruitment activity and do you need to be on a professional networking site to be noticed?

Yeah, well first of all I would go a step further and say that it’s important to be on more than one professional social network. Not doing so would be a little like advertising on ITV and not advertising on Channel 4; it doesn’t make any sense. You want to be in the place where the recruiter is looking and the recruiter looks in multiple locations. Talking of cross border, Viadeo is particularly strong in mainland Europe, in China, in India and in the emerging Nations. You want to be on LinkedIn though if you’re in America, of course you do, because that is where the recruitment is taking place. So, it’s important to be on a number. In fact, if you’re in the German countries then there’s another competitor there as well. I wouldn’t say for a moment that you should be on one Network but that you should be on multiple networks.

So, finally, is it important to have a presence on a professional networking site?

No question. The market in our view for professional networks at the moment stands at about half a billion professionals and right now about 70 to 80 million of those professionals are online which is about 15%. But it’s growing and it’s curving very, very rapidly. What we really saw in the financial crisis was, at that point, were people realized that the job market wasn’t so secure and had to do all the things they could possible do to maximize their potential and those people that have the professional profiles, those people that when you search on Google you find a professional description which is maintained personally, has connections, they’re able to hunt for jobs successfully online, those people have an advantage in the job market. However, it’s a good question because there are some industry segments, particularly in some of the emerging Nations, where it’s not yet essential. But it will be, there’s no question. And in order to be ahead of the game, particularly in the UK, the US and the English speaking world, in Europe, in China, in India, it’s absolutely essential to have a profile on a professional network.


9 Tips to Cracking the Cloud

We’re always being asked how candidates can ‘get into the cloud’, so here’s our top tips, but don’t just pick one, go through all of them and if you really want to work in the salesforce.com ecosystem – do as many of these as you can.  It will pay off.

1.  Do not underestimate the effect of demonstrating enthusiasm and persistence when attempting to break into the salesforce.com ecosystem. Do online training, get certified, push yourself into the salesforce.com world.

2.  Try and identify areas of salesforce.com technologies and features that you are not aware of and learn about them. See what experienced salesforce.com Consultants and Developers are talking about on forums such as this one.

3.  Be prepared to attend events, and when you do attend don’t just shuffle around on your own – Network, Network, Network!

4.  Continue networking online, through Twitter, Facebook, Linkedin and Viadeo.

5.  Relationships are very important in the salesforce.com ecosystem as it is currently very close knit – so your reputation and history will follow you!

6.  Be prepared to start building from the ground up, remember, 3 months is a long time in this industry and progression can be swift.

7.  There is a wide cultural range of consulting partners for salesforce.com, find the organisations that you would like to work with and tell the recruiter that you are dealing with.

8.  Also, be willing to get involved and possibly keep your expectations on salary flexible – at least until you have proved your worth to your employer.

9. Offer yourself to ROD’s Volunteer programme. If you have the time, ROD can help you in offering your services to a charity organisation that uses salesforce.com. This will give you some real world salesforce.com exposure and provide you with a salesforce.com recognised project to put on your CV.