REVIEW: The Twitter Job Search Guide (Whitcomb, Bryan and Dib, 2010)

November 29, 2010

As someone who devours social media news, trends and interaction on a daily basis, I was intrigued by the title of a recently published book The Twitter Job Search Guide: Find a Job and Advance Your Career in Just 15 Minutes a Day. Written by Susan Whitcomb, Chandlee Bryan and Deb Dib, the guide promises to help you easily and effectively:

  • Access more than half a million jobs listed on Twitter
  • Build and leverage your professional network
  • Get the inside scoop.

So is it worth the read?  

 I recommend it highly for any newbie to social media, especially Twitter. Section 1 focuses on getting you acquainted with Twitter and setting up a basic profile. I especially liked their baker’s dozen of job-hunting tweeter success stories complete with their Twitter handles for easy following and modeling.

The tactical, step-by-step instructive style of The Twitter Job Search Guide makes it a useful companion for creating your social branding strategy and implementing their tools to create a “Twit-Fit Resume” or a cover letter in only ten tweets. There’s even a chapter devoted to helping both introverts and extroverts find their Twitter identity. There’s tons of information in this guide book and much of it’s actionable to reach your own job search or career networking goals.

The authors demystify Twitter and suggest recruiters and career gurus you can follow to get started. They also feature third-party Twitter resources to monitor followers, search Twitter, and optimize your Twitter experience.

The intention of the book is noble and I think it achieved the author’s stated goals: “This book is for everyone” and “Regardless of your background or circumstances, the principles covered in this book will work for you: they are universal.”


More tweets for you @jffa_jobs

October 11, 2010

If you are looking for a job, or you just want to follow the latest job posts, follow our newest Twitter account @jffa_jobs; it’s a direct feed from the JobsFreeForAll.com website and will include posts from across the U.S. and Canada.

If you’re only interested in following job postings for your area, we also have regional Twitter accounts. All fifty American states and the Canadian provinces each have their own account. See the complete list on JobsFreeForAll.com.

For those seeking industry news or updates from our blog, follow our B2B Twitter account @JobsFreeForAll. Our CEO even has his own account @jffaBigKahuna.

Happy tweeting.


Social Media Policies:Developing Your Policy (Part II)

September 23, 2010

If you are crafting a social media policy from scratch, it doesn’t need to be long.

Some companies have no more than 10 clear, easy-to-understand bullet points in their social media policy.

You may want to include some of the following:

• Whether participating in social media at work or at home, and no matter what the “privacy level” setting, employees are expected to conduct themselves professionally. (Some companies physically ensure that employees have privacy settings set properly on their personal Facebook and Twitter accounts.)

• When posting about the workplace in any medium, employees must make clear that they are not speaking on behalf of the company, and they may not post a company logo, graphic, trademark, slogan or similar.

• Employees must not post material that is embarrassing or damaging to the company, may be confidential or proprietary, is critical of the company, or which may, in any way, expose the company to liability.

• Whether the employee is at work or home, all company policies on company loyalty, ethics and anti-harassment apply to social networking.

• The employer reserves the right to monitor employees’ use of social media, whether the employee participates from work or home.

• Any violations of this policy, whether intentional or unintentional, may lead to disciplinary action, up to and including dismissal.

State clearly who at your company is responsible for overseeing online activity, and let employees know they can and should go to that person if they are unsure about whether something is permissible to post.

Some employers advise employees to keep photos and other more personal content away from social media sites where work friends and professional contacts would see them. This type of a decision should be aligned with your company’s culture.

Once you’ve created your social use policy, don’t merely hand employees a revised copy of their employee handbook. Train your employees so they fully understand the new rules, as well as the risks, they take by not complying and the consequences. You may want to include interactive training or tests to ensure that employees demonstrate understanding of your new policies.

Post your policies where they can easily be seen. Many companies remind their employees of their social media policy from time to time (annually, quarterly, in pay envelopes or elsewhere). Best practice is to have employees to sign an acknowledgement that they have read and understand the material (as you would with any other important policy).

As technology changes, your social media policy may need to change, too. Be sure to communicate changes to your employees accordingly. You may want to consult with an experienced labor and employment attorney to discuss legal aspects of creating a social networking policy.


It’s FREE to share

September 20, 2010

Sharing is caring and we’ve added Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn sharing tools into our site design at JobsFreeForAll.com. Simply click on the icons displayed prominently at the top of each of our job detail pages to let the caring begin. (You can still email them, too).

JobsFreeForAll.com Sharing Tools

Everyday – more and more cities across the nation are getting on board with JobsFreeForAll.com and the FREE movement – so there are lots of delicious new jobs to share with your friends and loved ones.

If sharing a blog post is more your speed, then click the permalink to any article and choose the service to which you wish to share.


What not to do in social-networking when job hunting

June 14, 2010

So you’ve got a social-network profile or two and want to maximize their use for your job search? Here are the essentials you should know to keep your social etiquette in line with job hunting smarts.

  1. Don’t Overshare. Friends, networking pals and potential recruiters will grow weary of too many tweets or status updates, especially if they are auto-updates from your Mafia Wars or Farmville escapades.
  2. Don’t be “Template.” Try to customize your profile as much as you can. Don’t add animations and blinking gif animations, but do tell your story; be unique.
  3. Don’t under-update. A lack of activity can be just as detrimental as over-updating. Be sure to have some current updates in your news feed. Use them strategically, especially if you’re actively seeking a new career. Choose your updates and conversations wisely.
  4. Don’t add phony friends.  Grow your network carefully.  Understand your goals and the networking group with whom you’re affiliated.  Who you’re connected to on LinkedIn may vary widely from your connections on Facebook.
  5. Don’t auto-DM.  Personal updates and direct messages are far more powerful than setting up an automatic response.  Followers will appreciate the personal attention and won’t feel like you’re spamming them.

Does Your Workplace need a Social Media Policy?

April 29, 2010

JobsFreeForAll.com’s Hawaii partner, ALTRES,  recently released their latest white paper, “Social Media and the Workplace: A Guide for Hawaii Employers”. Social networking’s influence on business is growing daily, and ALTRES believes business owners need to be aware of the inherent risks of social media amidst the potential rewards.

“Social Media and the Workplace” was created to keep their clients informed, but they’ve made the white paper available to any businesses at no cost. Anyone can download a copy at: simplicityHR.com/social

This 14-page guide covers important social networking issues that all organizations should understand and provides practical steps for mitigating risk. Highlights include:

  • The liabilities and risks of social media to employers
  • How a social media policy can protect a business
  • Whether or not employers should be monitoring social media use
  • Hiring, firing and disciplining employees over social networking

Even Hawaii business news commentator Howard Dicus blogged about the paper after an on-air interview with an ALTRES representative the day the paper was released.

Read Howard’s blog post here:

http://blogs.hawaiinewsnow.com/howard/2010/04/workplace-rules-for-social-media.html


Dear Jobseeker – You’re Not Hired – crafting candidate rejections

March 4, 2010

Despite the uncomfortable pause of giving bad news when recruiters can’t help a jobseeker with an opening, it is so very vital to be clear and communicate with candidates about the status of their application.

JobsFreeForAll.com lets jobseekers see if their application has been received by an employer on the site and if/when the position has been filled. These self-service views can make it simpler to handle candidates who may never enter into the interview pool.

Nothing is more infuriating than a non-response, and in today’s socially charged world of the blogosphere and Twitter, treating candidates respectfully with dignity and timely communications can mean the difference between just letting them down easy to potential viral and irreperable damage to your corporate brand.

Follow these simple steps to provide timely communications:

1. Treat candidates with respect. Don’t allow candidates to have to wait and see.  Provide a simple message within set expectations which should be clear at the close of the interview.  “We hope to make a decision in a week.”  If you say that, then keep to it.

2. Be organized. You may have different messages based on the phase of the interviewing/screening process that a candidate entered into.  i.e. resume/application received, interviewed once, interviewed more than once, pre-employment screenings, etc.  The further along the process you may have courted a candidate should follow with the level of care and dignity you pay in the communication.

3. Consider your brand. Is the timing of your message or the tone of your letter in line with your corporate values and principles.  If you keep to the core of what your organization stands for and represent this letter as another extension of your brand, despite delivering bad news you should retain the respect of the candidate.  Avoiding negative word of mouth advertising from disgruntled candidates should be a concern, they can very easily in Web 2.0 make their experience go a long way with Facebook or Twitter updates or on sites solely dedicated to revealing corporate faux-pas like Glassdoor.

 


Post a job. Find a job. Win cash! FREE

September 8, 2009
At JobsFreeForAll we thought the whole “FREE” thing was pretty good. Well, “FREE” just got a whole lot better. How about free money? That’s right. You could win $250 this week from JobsFreeForAll.com. 250 bucks, 250 smackaroos. Free money!

Win $250 with JobsFreeForAll.com

Starting September 7, we’ll be picking two lucky winners every week. Just create your online profile and either post a job or apply for one. It’s easy. It’s free. And you could pick up an extra 250 bucks. Sign up now for your chance to win 250 big ones from JobsFreeForAll.com.

Hawaii’s newest and best job site is giving away cash prizes every week. Post a job. Find a job. Win cash!

 Listen in on Cox radio stations (@krater96 @hawaiian105kine @kccnfm100) as winners will be announced every Monday starting September 14. We’ll announce winners on our Twitter streams too @JobsFreeForAll and @jffa_HI.  Visit our site for Official Rules.


“A Reputation to Upload”

August 7, 2009

I had lunch with tech guru extraordinaire Chris Pirillo the other day and during the lively conversation he said something that struck a chord, “I have a reputation to upload.”

Chris knows a lot about uploading content to the masses in lightening quick speed, with an edge and ferocity to go viral to his eager and engaged fans…

Sometimes whether you know it or not – you’ve got a reputation that is uploading. People are watching, bloggers are listening and recruiters will find it.  You could be tagged in Facebook, name dropped on Twitter, or even the subject of someone’s blog – even the New York Post or CNBC.com.

Jobseekers Sean Christman and Trina Thompson probably never imagined their job seeking efforts good or bad would go viral as revealed by Corn on the Job blogger Rich DeMatteo.

Sean Christman’s panhandling was picked up by hundreds of media outlets, bloggers, and the Twitterverse – with an air of praise/awe and “wow he’s got some B@llz”. On the otherhand, Trina’s threat to sue Monroe College to the tune of of her $70,000 tuition was received with — well less than a supportive attitude from critics.

CNBC.com reported that the  “Who Thinks Trina Thompson Is an Idiot?” Facebook group now has more 115 members, more than the Thompson support group. Who would have ever dreamed their job search efforts/antics would garner an anti-fan group on Facebook?

We live in a different age, a different time and everybody needs to think about what’s being uploaded about their reputation, because it will be downloaded.


JobsFreeForAll Gets Social

July 24, 2009

In an effort to reach out to the community, JobsFreeForAll is signing up on some of the big social websites, including Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn.  We are just getting started, but have already begun tweeting all new JobsFreeForAll Hawaii jobs here:

http://twitter.com/jffa_HI or @jffa_hi

Every job posted to this account will contain the hashtags: #hawaii #jobs.  We plan on encouraging other Hawaii job sites that use Twitter to also use these hashtags, so if you do a Twitter search using both of these tags, you will find not only get jobs from JobsFreeForAll, but other Hawaii jobs as well.

The official JobsFreeForAll Facebook page has not been released yet, but I have my own page up.  Add me as a friend and you can stay up to date with the latest JobsFreeForAll news.


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