This document discusses the importance of developing a professional digital profile for job seekers. It provides the following key points:
- Employers are increasingly using social media to evaluate candidates and find potential hires. Having an online presence that highlights skills and experiences can help applicants stand out.
- Students and recent graduates should curate an online brand through platforms like LinkedIn, blogs, and content sharing to demonstrate their digital literacy skills to employers.
- Building connections, collaborating with others, and creating/curating digital content can boost one's reputation and skills in areas valuable for future careers. Maintaining an appropriate online profile is important for future employability.
2. Building a professional digital profile
• What are employers doing?
• What can job seekers be doing during their
studies?
• Tools that I use
• Digichamp case studies – past and present
4. Finding me online
www.about.me/lisa.harris
www.twitter.com/lisaharris
www.linkedin.com/in/lisajaneharris
http://www.slideshare.net/lisaharris
https://www.vizify.com/lisa-harris
http://digitaleconomy.soton.ac.uk/people/lisa-harris/
5. Did you know…?
Digital marketing principles can also be applied to
ourselves to networks and attract potential employers
Creative videos produced by candidates now play an
important role in the job application process
As do blogging, tweeting and participating in relevant
online communities such as LinkedIn
38 million students and recent graduates are now on
LinkedIn, its fastest-growing demographic.
Socialnomics 2014 by Erik Qualmann
6. According to the British Computer
Society…
Employers increasingly require validation of digital literacy skills
and employability can depend on it.
Why is Digital Literacy important to employers and employees?
• Digital literacy is required in 77% of all employment
• Digital literacy is expected to be required in 90% of all
employment by 2015
• Employability for graduates increasingly requires a broad
range of digital literacy skills
• Employers expect graduates to be able to communicate using
digital media”
(http://www.bcs.org/category/17854)
7. Digital Literacy
• “Digital literacy is the ability to locate, organise, understand,
evaluate, and analyse information using digital technology. It
involves a working knowledge of current tools and an
understanding of how they can be used”
• “The active management of online activities such as
collaboration, networking , content creation and curation in
order to “stand out from the crowd” in today’s job market”
• “an ability to respond positively to change”
8. “Life-wide” and “life-long” learning
Contacts
Teachers
Experts
Classmates Friends
Family
Coworkers
Video
Conferencing
Synchronous
Communication
Mobile
Texting
Microbloging
Instant
Messaging
RSS
Wikis
Subscriptions
readers
Blogs
Podcasts
Social
Networks
Social
Bookmarking
Information
Evaluating
Resources
Scholarly
Works
Library/ Management
Texts
Open
CourseWare
Locating
Experts
Wendy Drexler (2008)
9.
10. So what are employers doing?
• According to a recent study by Jobvite
– 92% of recruiters use social media in the hiring process
– 80% had been positively influenced by a candidate’s
professional social network profile
– 78% had been negatively influenced towards a candidate’s
inappropriate use of social media
• The best candidates might not be actively looking for
a new job (up to 90% of the workforce)
• Social media can identify the best talent , encourage
conversation and build relationships with them
• Enables recruiters to promote their company as “a
great place to work”
11. Why should you care?
A standard CV is no longer sufficient to stand out from the crowd in a
global and rapidly evolving job market.
“We are currently preparing students for
jobs that don’t yet exist, using technologies
that haven’t been invented, in order to
solve problems we don’t even know are
problems yet.”
- Karl Fisch, “Did You Know”
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YmwwrGV_aiE
12. So what should job seekers do?
• Recognise that building an online personal brand is
now a critical aspect of career development
• It boosts our reputation and gives us new skills in
communication, creativity and reflective thinking.
• The information we display on social networks
should actively encourage rather than discourage
potential employers
• Don’t “opt out” - finding NOTHING about a person
on a Google search creates a negative impression too
13. The Future of You
“Welcome to a new era of work, where your
future depends on being a signal in the noisy
universe of human capital. In order to achieve
this, you will need to master three things: self-branding,
entrepreneurship, and
hyperconnectivity.”
By Tomas Chamorro-Premuzic, in the HBR blog
16. Using social media to get a job
• Connect (LinkedIn, FB, Twitter)
• Collaborate (Skype, Dropbox, Google Drive)
• Create (Wordpress, Soundcloud, Pinterest,
YouTube/Vimeo)
• Curate (ScoopIt, Delicious, Slideshare)
17.
18.
19. Blogs: pulling it all together
• Use the blog framework as a central point pulling in your
other social media content:
– Tweets – Flickr – LinkedIn – Vimeo - Slideshare – Pinterest -
Soundcloud - YouTube
• You can also embed other social media within individual
blog posts
• Video is increasingly important, especially authentic user
generated content
• Provide sharing buttons
• These activities provide a regular supply of “googlejuice” to
the blog
20. Google likes blogging
• Social media interaction with digital content is
the *biggest influence* on its search visibility:
1. Facebook shares
2. Facebook comments
3. Facebook likes
4. Tweets
http://www.socialmediastrategist.co.uk/blog/1-
news/175-social-media-seo
21. Digital Footprints: the practicalities
• It requires a long term strategy to develop a digital
“footprint” which demonstrates our skills, and build
an appropriate network of contacts.
• The successful author and speaker Chris Brogan talks
about “paying it forward” – meaning we should give
before we receive.
• For a more negative view of “digital tattoos”, see this
TED video presented by Juan Enriquez of Harvard
22.
23. Reppler
• Go to http://reppler.com and check your own social
media profiles. The tool highlights any inappropriate
content, and shows you what aspects of your
information are publically available. Then you can
connect directly to Facebook to edit your privacy
settings and adjust the visibility of your content as
necessary.
• This exercise does require you to allow Reppler access
to your social media accounts as explained in their
privacy policy
• “Every potential candidate for 2040 presidental
election is now unelectable due to Facebook” - satire
24. Digital Champions
Sam Su
Oliver Bills
Panos Grimanellis
Marina Sakipi
George
Georgi
ev
Hamed
Ayhan
Hame
d
Ayhan
Farnoosh Berahman
Manish Pathak
Ivan Melendez
Ahmed
Abulaila
Lucy Braiden
Alessia
Fiochi
25
25. Digichamps: Ivan Melendez
• KISM MSc @ Southampton 2012
• Helped out with employability workshops and
university events
• Now working for Hootsuite in Vancouver
• http://moocs.southampton.ac.uk/digital-marketing/
2014/10/10/building-professional-online-
profile/
26. Digichamps: Flo Broderick
• Took Digital Marketing and CI modules, learned
interviewing skills and video editing
• Helped out in a big way at Digital Media Europe
• Masterminded student contribution to Digital
Literacies Conference
• Provided student perspective on our research into
online learning MOOC filming in Portus
• Now in Madrid working for Telefonica Digital
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27. Getting started: useful resources
• Social media for the terrified (by Sue Beckingham,
Sheffield Hallam)
• http://www.southampton.ac.uk/careers/students/even
ts/online.html - webinar on digital footprints (8 mins)
• Time spent online to exceed time watching TV in 2014
(eMarketer research)
• A recruitment agency perspective
• The digital revolution is still gearing up (Marketing
Week)
• A collection of relevant articles on Scoopit
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