Three quarters of UK employees claim not to access
Facebook
and
MySpace
during working hours, according to a survey by recruitment firm
Badenoch
& Clark.
This is despite the fact that Facebook, celebrating its fourth birthday
today, now boasts more than 62 million active users and MySpace over 200
million.
The survey found that 38 per cent of UK office workers are not even signed up
to a social network, while 22 per cent restrict their usage to out of office
hours and a further 12 per cent have had access blocked by their employers.
Only six per cent of respondents feel that social networks are a major source
of distraction to productivity at work, compared to instant messaging (eight per
cent), pointless meetings (30 per cent) and loud distracting colleagues (52 per
cent).
The survey also suggests that Londoners are the most prolific social
networkers compared to any other region, with 38 per cent signed up versus the
national average of 28 per cent.
"These days most of us have many elements to our online presence," said Andy
Powell, director of marketing at Badenoch & Clark.
"But they do not always necessarily show us in the best light and could even
land us in trouble when we're looking for that perfect next job."
The recruitment process has changed dramatically in recent years and more and
more recruiters are taking note of "internet reputations", according to Powell.
However, there are legal implications around how recruiters and employers use
information they find online, and legislation lays employers open to all sorts
of claims of discrimination.
A 2007 survey by social networking site
Viadeo
found that one in five employers already use the internet to search for
information on candidates.
Almost 60 per cent said that the information they found on the web would
influence a recruitment decision.
"If employers are tempted to research their prospective applicants on social
networking sites they must be careful not to use any information they discover
to unlawfully discriminate against the applicant," said Sophie White, an
employment solicitor at law firm
CMS
Cameron McKenna.
"However, apart from this, employers can use social networking sites as they
please to learn about job applicants.
"Applicants cannot challenge adverse recruitment decisions based on the fact
that the employer perceived that the individual was not serious enough."
Badenoch & Clark warned job seekers to create an online reputation that
emphasises positive attributes.
"As a benchmark, never publicly post something you wouldn't want your mother
to see," said Powell.
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