Companies Should Assess Social Media Profiles in the Hiring Process
The debate is finished. The distribution of the voting points and the winner are presented below.
After 1 vote and with 5 points ahead, the winner is...
- Publication date
- Last updated date
- Type
- Standard
- Number of rounds
- 3
- Time for argument
- Three days
- Max argument characters
- 5,000
- Voting period
- One month
- Point system
- Multiple criterions
- Voting system
- Open
Full Resolution: Companies Should Assess Social Media Profiles in the Hiring Process For Applicants
What does this mean? It means companies may ask to look at a person's LinkedIn, Facebook, Twitter page and judge by their posts to see what kind of person they are outside of work.
Burden of proof is shared.
Framework is net balance considering the positive and negative effects to society, companies, and persons.
Social profile: "Social profiles are a description of individuals’ social characteristics that identify them on social media sites such as LinkedIn and Facebook, when using tools such as digg and Delicious as well as collaboration applications such as Jive, IBM Connections or Socialtext. Profiles describe any number of characteristics about individuals, such as interests, expertise, professional affiliations, status, recent activity and geographic location. Profiles are the digital DNA of a person, and where tagging of people-related content will occur. A social profile also displays information that helps to understand the type and strength of an individual’s relationships with others; for example, their level of participation and contribution in different initiatives, projects, communities, or conversations; their reputation among other participants, and so on. Creating a robust social profile allows individuals to be discovered by people who could benefit from an association with them. Companies are also beginning to experiment with social profiles as a means of reinforcing their organization’s brand identity." --https://www.gartner.com/en/information-technology/glossary/social-profiles
Pro had the upper hand on this debate from the outset, but won it appropriately in the last round by the blockbuster argument that SMC is not "the *sole* instrument to judge persons." It was a point Con never addressed, particularly given the opportunity having the final frame to rebut it. Pro offered good arguments otherwise that SMC had efficiency and cost-saving considerations that Con could not successfully rebut, choosing instead to argue points that SM can be a minefield for posters posting false information about themselves. However, Pro's final argument mentioned above settles that matter in many instances.
Pro also had the upper hand in supportive sources demonstrating the efficiency and cost effectiveness of SMC. One of Con's sources said 40% of employers say they find little use for SMC. Con does not explain why that is not even a plurality, leaving this voting thinking the majority of employers do find SMC effective.
Both legibilty and conduct were well done by both.
Thank you very much, my friend! I sincerely appreciate it, and I must say you've done quite well yourself. For as steadfast as I may be in my belief here, you caused me to question myself more than once. I hope I delivered on your expectations, haha.
Excellent job. Not the way I would have argued it, but interesting.
Indeed so, haha. While of course I can't show research that goes against my position, in a lot of debates I've had to avoid dismissing such research for the sake of my personal understanding.
After I posted that round I almost forgot why I was Con in the first place, hah. Research does that sometimes.
I've been looking forward to the day I can challenge you, haha.
Best of luck! But, knowing you, you won't need it.
With LinkedIn on here, it's basically a truism. LinkedIn is a job hunting website; with it on there the question could likewise be if employers should look at resumes... Therefore I advise not only removing LinkedIn from the list, but further specifying that it is outside the scope.
ah, there's the rub, isn't it? The first question would ultimately decide on how forgiving the company is. As for hiring vs environment, I think that'd be an entirely different debate...
Why the hiring process? Shouldn’t we seek person social media profiles in order to create a personalized environment for the employee?
If I made a racist and homophobic comment years ago and I am long from discriminating anybody yet the employer is checking my social media, would that be subject in my ultimate failure of getting this job?