+ All Categories
Home > Documents > Social Media… and employment Dr Simon Haslam FMR Research Ltd.

Social Media… and employment Dr Simon Haslam FMR Research Ltd.

Date post: 26-Mar-2015
Category:
Upload: lily-miles
View: 218 times
Download: 0 times
Share this document with a friend
Popular Tags:
28
Social Media… and employment Dr Simon Haslam FMR Research Ltd
Transcript
Page 1: Social Media… and employment Dr Simon Haslam FMR Research Ltd.

Social Media…and employment

Dr Simon Haslam

FMR Research Ltd

Page 2: Social Media… and employment Dr Simon Haslam FMR Research Ltd.

Our research

• Four lines of enquiry

- checking up on/vetting employees

- as a recruitment medium

- impact on organisation’s rules/policies

- as a route to community cohesion

• Over 70 publications, 12 interviews

• February to April 2011

Page 4: Social Media… and employment Dr Simon Haslam FMR Research Ltd.

‘Why’ – 1 It’s here!

28m UK users

13% of UK

85% UK online, of which 64% have their own profile and 43% post messages/chat

Page 5: Social Media… and employment Dr Simon Haslam FMR Research Ltd.

‘Why’ – 2 Game changer

Page 6: Social Media… and employment Dr Simon Haslam FMR Research Ltd.

‘Why’ – 3 fashion/adoption

Page 7: Social Media… and employment Dr Simon Haslam FMR Research Ltd.

Blogs (<2)

Wikis (2-5)

Microblogging (2-5)

Mobile social networks (2-5)

Social profiles (2-5)

Social analytics (2-5)

Crowd sourcing (2-5)

Social media 2010

Page 8: Social Media… and employment Dr Simon Haslam FMR Research Ltd.

‘Why’ – 4 Culture

Apollo Role Athena TaskTask

PowerZeus Dionysus Support

Page 9: Social Media… and employment Dr Simon Haslam FMR Research Ltd.

‘Why’ – Generations

• Matures (1945+)

• Baby boomers (1946-1964)

• Generation X (1965-1979)*• Generation Y (1980 – 2000)

Page 10: Social Media… and employment Dr Simon Haslam FMR Research Ltd.

‘Why’ – 5 ethics

• Who’s ethics?

- HR, research, media/journalism

• Old ethical paradigms “grey areas”

- public/private distinction

- online indefinability/validation

• ‘Contextualised Ethics’

Page 11: Social Media… and employment Dr Simon Haslam FMR Research Ltd.

For checking up/vetting…

• Not equal opportunities (TUC)

• Open to discrimination charges

• If ‘supplementing’ a search

- screen specifically, openly + uniformly

- neutral party does search

- do not ‘friend’

- be able to explain hire/non-hire (counsel)

- allow candidate to explain

- later in the process

Page 12: Social Media… and employment Dr Simon Haslam FMR Research Ltd.

Vetting… happens

• 45% of hiring professionals used social media (2009) – 29% Facebook, 26% LinkedIn, 21% Myspace, 11% blogs, 7% followed on Twitter

• Candidates disregarded

- 53% provocative/inappropriate content

- 44% posts about drinking and/or drugs

- 35% bad mouthed

- 29% poor coms skills

- 24% lied about qualifications

- 20% shared confidential info

Page 13: Social Media… and employment Dr Simon Haslam FMR Research Ltd.

• LinkedIn robust? (recommendations, quality, role dependent)

• Got the right person? (Facebook especially)

• Value of social media is role specific – e.g. digital new media, hospitality

Page 14: Social Media… and employment Dr Simon Haslam FMR Research Ltd.

Checking up on your staff

• No-one admitted to doing it

• Have a Social Media policy…

… and make it clear

Page 15: Social Media… and employment Dr Simon Haslam FMR Research Ltd.

For recruitment, increasingly• LinkedIn, 3m graduates, 250k sign/month

• MI6 (Facebook, 2008)

• Saatchi and Saatchi (summer scholarship 2011)

• T-mobile (Facebook, 300 grads for 42 positions)

• Royal Opera House (YouTube, non-performing roles)

• Executive recruiter (job alerts, RSS feed)

• Outsourcer (blogging, targeting linguists)

• LinkedIn Recruiter – service offer

Page 16: Social Media… and employment Dr Simon Haslam FMR Research Ltd.

A recruitment model

1. Source/communicate with talent online

2. ‘Talent pipelining’ – building up a community by adding people to the Careers group on LinkedIn

3. Recruitment

(mobile phone company, now with 5,000 people in the Careers group)

NB Online means Smartphone compliant

Page 17: Social Media… and employment Dr Simon Haslam FMR Research Ltd.

Impact on policies“… a change in attitude and confidence… from the ‘stop and block’ mentality that many businesses adopted in previous years to an appreciation that Web 2.0 is good for business and should be implemented more fully.” (2010)

• 29% of orgs have no policies (higher in private sector/SMEs, 75% of these trusted employees though 81% restricted the use of at least one Web 2.0 tool - concerns

• The new ‘Generation Standby’

Page 18: Social Media… and employment Dr Simon Haslam FMR Research Ltd.

Ask yourself…

Are you happy for your employees to set up a LinkedIn account without any guidance?

Is it ok for employees to mention they work for your organisation on their personal Twitter account?

What are you happy that your employees say about customers/clients on Facebook?

US Army – policy for Twitter on the frontline

Page 19: Social Media… and employment Dr Simon Haslam FMR Research Ltd.

Social media policy?1. Clear company philosophy

2. Definition of social media/networking

3. Disclosing oneself as an employee

4. Recommending others

5. Referring to clients and partners

6. Proprietary and confidential information

7. Terms of service

8. Copyright and legal issues

9. Productivity impact

10.Disciplinary action

Page 20: Social Media… and employment Dr Simon Haslam FMR Research Ltd.

Practical guidance Have a policy… but accept it might constrain Build the policy into induction/staff briefing If you have designated employees, others

have the usernames and passwords More than one person knows how to do the

uploading and backroom functions (blogs) Have a system to monitor what is said about

you online (e.g. Google Alerts, Tweetdeck) Equip the ‘monitorer’ to react/deal with Be prepared for negative/critical comments Avoid online fights

Page 21: Social Media… and employment Dr Simon Haslam FMR Research Ltd.

Towards company cohesion• Upscaling and working pattern trends

cause disconnection

• BT, McDonalds, O2, IBM, Hewlett Packard, Pfizer, KPMG, Westminster CC (HP

‘Watercooler’, 3,000 active, voluntary English, engineering or marketing)

• Helping HR facilitate the employee voice

• Helping HR deliver the development agenda (YouTube, forums, blogs, webinars)

• Performance – the strength of weak ties (Granovetter)

Page 22: Social Media… and employment Dr Simon Haslam FMR Research Ltd.

• 89% of 700 respondents have a system in place (USA data, 2010)

• Only 10% ‘successful’

• Most used – online directory (22% ‘heavy)

• 33% - no single sign-on for internal systems

• 39% - no email integration with internal social networks

• 8% (only) approach it by coordinated, multi-discipline team

• 71% of market – Microsoft SharePoint

• Many moving to Facebook but “platform is a nightmare” in this context. And ‘brand fit?’

• Be clear/serious – or its another channel for…

Page 23: Social Media… and employment Dr Simon Haslam FMR Research Ltd.

For us, as employees

• Understand the concept of personal branding and executive presence…

… and how social media relate to this.

• Accept the direction of flow.

• Take the next step

Page 24: Social Media… and employment Dr Simon Haslam FMR Research Ltd.

Executive Presence ModelProfessional

image

Social skills

Inspirational presenter

Future orientation

Corporate view

Clarity

Stories

Politically aware

Courage

Self belief

State management

Passion© DTC Ltd

Page 25: Social Media… and employment Dr Simon Haslam FMR Research Ltd.

Executive Presence ModelProfessional

image

Social skills

Inspirational presenter

Future orientation

Corporate view

Clarity

Stories

Politically aware

Courage

Self belief

State management

Passion© DTC Ltd

Page 26: Social Media… and employment Dr Simon Haslam FMR Research Ltd.

For ‘employability’ bodies• Encourage the understanding of personal

branding/presence and the role of social media in this (Facebook and employer behaviour)

• Support social media skills development – LinkedIn, Twitter

• Trial YouTube as promotional channel for candidates

• Questions – capability (technically and infrastructure) and permission?

Page 27: Social Media… and employment Dr Simon Haslam FMR Research Ltd.

Next steps

Reflect and digest – copies of slide deck and summary paper of case studies on www.learningorganisation.com

Employer perspective

• Develop a Social Media Policy v+1 (social media audit, third party help)

• Develop practice next step

Employee perspective

• Consider personal branding

• Take a social media next step

Page 28: Social Media… and employment Dr Simon Haslam FMR Research Ltd.

Recommended