Submitting more applications increases your chances of landing a job.
Here’s how busy the average job seeker was last month:
Opportunities viewed
Applications submitted
Keep exploring and applying to maximize your chances!
Looking for employers with a proven track record of hiring women?
Click here to explore opportunities now!You are invited to participate in a survey designed to help researchers understand how best to match workers to the types of jobs they are searching for
Would You Be Likely to Participate?
If selected, we will contact you via email with further instructions and details about your participation.
You will receive a $7 payout for answering the survey.
Register now or log in to join your professional community.
Where does the limit of personal privacy end, and the line of corporate interests start? If an employee is hurting the company's brand on his social media accounts, does the HR manager have the right to question his actions? Where do we draw the line?
My humble opinion is that employees' personal social media accounts are part of their private lives and HR managers as a matter of principle should not have the right to investigate them unless an employee:
As the term says, it's social. HR managers are not intruding or breaking a candidates privacy by check if the candidate's behavior, attributes, and background is in line with their culture.
Social media has been a platform for the companies to accept applications from the applicants. HR managers have the right to check the profile of their applicants at first hand, however, if it suits the HR manager's taste, then, after accepting the applicant's employment, as long as the employee is an asset to the company, there must be restriction to investigate the employee's social media account. One's personal social media account is a private account which the HR managers should respect. Unless, an informant inform the HR manager. Nevertheless, investigation of the HR managers should come on first hand when the employee is still applying.
NO because that their private account and they have full right to speak whatever they want.
Actually HR should built up a channel for the employees to speak or to suggest or even to lodge a complaint against their own direct manager which should be kept confidential by HR
Checking or not it's a different matter, actually, we have no right to judge a candidate by their social media account.
because that their private account and they have full right to speak whatever they want but also, it would depend on the circumstances so it's quite possible because also it's a SOCIAL ACCOUNT.
Yes, if it is related to a secret of work, incitement to strike, suspension of work or prejudice to the reputation of a person related to the work entrusted to him? Especially if a complaint has been filed by a staff member regarding this work
No they don't as it is an invasion of privacy
Not for sorely, but for the right matching, it is needed.