by DailyWorth
Before You Post
Last spring, at the start of baseball season, a manager friend called
 and asked if she should fire one of her direct reports. He had called 
in sick, and she’d heard through the grapevine that he was tweeting from
 a Cubs game. In 2013, I wondered, why would anyone make a mistake like 
this? In 2014, thankfully, these gross errors in judgment seem less 
common, but people continue to get tripped up by more subtle blunders.
Even if you’re using social media for purely professional purposes—or think you’re only using it to interact with personal friends—the line between the two continues to blur. Chances are you want to infuse at least a little bit of personality and fun into your accounts to make them interesting and appealing to potential employers. But getting noticed can have unintended consequences if you’re not careful about how you do it. Here are five mistakes to avoid.
 Universally and consistently—and whether you are hunting for a job or
 not—your social media brand should present you as a smart, mature, 
competent and enthusiastic person. Understand that the first thing 
people do when they meet you (or are preparing to meet you, as is the 
case with an interviewer) is Google your name. If what they see doesn’t 
knock their socks off, you’ll be out of contention before you can really
 show what you’re made of. If you find yourself competing with other 
people who have the same name, increase your share of online real estate
 by writing industry articles for third-party association websites or 
community blogs, setting up an eponymous website with basic professional
 information, building up your LinkedIn profile and setting up a Google+
 profile. (Get more tips on Google-proofing yourself here.)
Universally and consistently—and whether you are hunting for a job or
 not—your social media brand should present you as a smart, mature, 
competent and enthusiastic person. Understand that the first thing 
people do when they meet you (or are preparing to meet you, as is the 
case with an interviewer) is Google your name. If what they see doesn’t 
knock their socks off, you’ll be out of contention before you can really
 show what you’re made of. If you find yourself competing with other 
people who have the same name, increase your share of online real estate
 by writing industry articles for third-party association websites or 
community blogs, setting up an eponymous website with basic professional
 information, building up your LinkedIn profile and setting up a Google+
 profile. (Get more tips on Google-proofing yourself here.)
Check out the full article on the Levo League website.
 
  
Even if you’re using social media for purely professional purposes—or think you’re only using it to interact with personal friends—the line between the two continues to blur. Chances are you want to infuse at least a little bit of personality and fun into your accounts to make them interesting and appealing to potential employers. But getting noticed can have unintended consequences if you’re not careful about how you do it. Here are five mistakes to avoid.
Mistake #1: Revealing Too Much Information
At its core, social media encourages you to interact more and to share more about yourself. But playing fast and loose with the information you reveal through social media is asking for trouble. First, make sure you set privacy controls manually. Some social networks assume you will share everything with everyone unless you direct them otherwise. (Which means the photos you think you’re posting for your Facebook friends may end up in front of prospective employers.) Be vigilant about who you accept as connections, review the site features and applications that are authorized to access your data, and don’t let social networks “find people you know.” Finally, don’t be lazy with your passwords. Keep them difficult to guess and change them once a month to halt hacking attempts on your account.Mistake #2: Failing to Establish a Strong Personal Brand
 Universally and consistently—and whether you are hunting for a job or
 not—your social media brand should present you as a smart, mature, 
competent and enthusiastic person. Understand that the first thing 
people do when they meet you (or are preparing to meet you, as is the 
case with an interviewer) is Google your name. If what they see doesn’t 
knock their socks off, you’ll be out of contention before you can really
 show what you’re made of. If you find yourself competing with other 
people who have the same name, increase your share of online real estate
 by writing industry articles for third-party association websites or 
community blogs, setting up an eponymous website with basic professional
 information, building up your LinkedIn profile and setting up a Google+
 profile. (Get more tips on Google-proofing yourself here.)
Universally and consistently—and whether you are hunting for a job or
 not—your social media brand should present you as a smart, mature, 
competent and enthusiastic person. Understand that the first thing 
people do when they meet you (or are preparing to meet you, as is the 
case with an interviewer) is Google your name. If what they see doesn’t 
knock their socks off, you’ll be out of contention before you can really
 show what you’re made of. If you find yourself competing with other 
people who have the same name, increase your share of online real estate
 by writing industry articles for third-party association websites or 
community blogs, setting up an eponymous website with basic professional
 information, building up your LinkedIn profile and setting up a Google+
 profile. (Get more tips on Google-proofing yourself here.)Mistake #3: Oversharing
Social media sites are not, of course, the private havens for friends that they used to be. You can pretty much count on the fact that your boss, senior managers, colleagues and potential employers are looking at your online profiles. That’s not to say that you can’t have a little fun by including content that demonstrates you’re a human being, but beware of getting too personal. As I like to say: don’t share on social media anything you wouldn’t share with your grandmother (e.g. upload photos of friends, but leave out those of last weekend’s drunken soiree). And always think about who might see your post before you send it. Comments made in a fit of anger, or those made while you’re doing something you’re not supposed to be doing (e.g. tweeting from a baseball game when you’re supposed to be at work) are bound to land you in hot water.Check out the full article on the Levo League website.
 
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