Managing Your Online Professional Profile
Watch
Video credit: Managing Your Online Professional Profile – posted by The Digital Tattoo Project YouTube
Think
Managing Your Online Profile
- How can I make myself searchable online?
- Create your own website
- Write a very controversial tweet
- Create a professional social media profile on a website like LinkedIn
- Create profiles on many social media websites
- What’s the key to managing your online profile?
- Post your personal information online so everyone knows that you’re a real person
- Have consistency in the profiles that you want to be linked together
- Contribute to a community, such as posting in a Facebook community group or posting on community discussion board
- Only make posts that are consistent with the image of yourself that you want to exist in the wider internet world
- How do I know if I’m in good standing with my online profile?
- Google myself
- Question if your social profile is appropriate for your coworkers and parents
- Ask your friend to evaluate your online profile
- Is it important to maintain a consistent identity on all your social media platforms?
- Yes! It helps to build a consistent digital identity.
- No, I like to use my social media profiles for different purposes, so I don’t want them to all be the same.
- No, I think linking everything together will take away some of my privacy.
Explore
Why cultivate an online profile?
The fact is that even those of us who aren’t active on social media have a visible online presence. A quick Google search of your name will likely pull up a lot of information about you, and depending on what you have posted in the past, not all of it may match the image of yourself that you want the world to see. We all have a digital dossier and as we discuss on our “Overexposed” page, lots of employers perform cyber-vetting to weed out potential employees. Some universities in the United States have even started rescinding offers of admission based upon candidates’ past social media posts.
Taking control of your personal information allows you to shape your digital identity and to connect with others, and this is particularly important for students and new graduates. Social networking and social media can help you find jobs, meet people with similar interests to yours, or find out what’s going on where you live. Your strategies for social media depend entirely upon your goals. If you want a polished, professional set of profiles to help you land your dream job, you should keep your profiles consistent and connected by maintaining the tone of your posts, using the same, up to date profile photo, or linking your accounts across profiles. If you instead use different platforms for different purposes or want a little extra privacy, consider upping your privacy settings and creating profiles with distinct user names, looks, and feels. However, there is no guarantee that people won’t be able to realize your accounts are all by you, even if they aren’t linked.
You don’t even need to participate all that much (despite popular opinion); just do what works for you!
Things to consider:
- What is your purpose for cultivating an online profile and what do you want people to be able to see? Do you simply want to network online? Do you want to collaborate with others in your field? Are you looking to create and disseminate original content? This will impact what you post and where you post it.
- Who is your audience? Knowing who your content is directed towards will influence not only what you post, but your tone as well.
- Consider the intended use of each platform and think about how the platforms themselves influence expression. (Twitter’s 280-character limit seems to be the most commonly-cited example.)
- Depending on your professional interests, it may be wise to have both ‘personal’ and ‘professional’ accounts on certain social sites. This will allow you to be more ‘free’ on your personal account, while still maintaining a professional online profile.
- If you don’t want one of your social networks to be found by your employer or colleagues, consider improving your privacy settings on those sites that you wish to keep personal.
- Learn about e-portfolios and decide if they are a good option to up your academic online profile.
Links
- 12 Tips For Students To Manage Their Digital Footprints | Teach Thought (2019)
- Managing Your Personal and Professional Online Profiles | Lifewire (2019)
- How to Manage Your Online Reputation | Best Colleges (2019)
- 2020 Social Media Statistics for Digital Marketers | SupplyGem (2020)
- Global Social Media Research Summary 2020 | Smart Insights (Updated in 2020)
- 5 Ways to Create a Professional Online Presence | Inc. (2019)
Discuss
The Digital Tattoo Project encourages critical discussion on topics surrounding digital citizenship and online identity. There are no correct answers and every person will view these topics from a different perspective. Be sure to complete the previous sections before answering the questions.
- Do you think having an online presence is important when searching for employment?
- Have you googled yourself recently? Did you like what you saw?