Weak Demand for Companies’ Core Products and Services Contributes to Slow Jobs Growth
Category Archives: Workforce Trends
ManpowerGroup’s perspective on the BLS’ Employment Situation Report
Posted in BLS, Karen Miller, Manpower News, Unemployment, Workforce News, World of Work
Tagged BLS, Economic Crisis, Manpower, Recession, Unemployment, USA, Workforce Trends
Oddball Interview Questions
People ask peculiar questions of one another all the time. When the person asking the questions is a potential employer, however, there may be more riding on your response than mastering off-the-wall chitchat.
One of my favorite old Stephen Wright comedy pieces (paraphrased below) illustrates that point.
“I was at a job interview, and I stopped the interview and asked the guy ‘If you were in a car traveling at the speed of light, and you turned on the headlights, what would happen?’ He said ‘I don’t know.’ I said ‘Well then I don’t want to work for you!’”
The folks at glassdoor.com have compiled their list of the top oddball interview questions of 2009. How would you do if your next job depended on your response to one of these questions?
1. What was your best McGuyver moment? – view answers
Asked at Schlumberger. More Schlumberger Interview Questions
2. How many tennis balls are in this room and why? – view answers
Asked at Yahoo. More Yahoo Interview Questions
3. If you were a brick in a wall which brick would you be and why? – view answers
Asked at Nestle USA. More Nestle USA Interview Questions
4. How would you move Mount Fuji? – view answers
Asked at Microsoft. More Microsoft Interview Questions
5. If two cars are traveling in a two lap race on a track of any length, one going 60 mph and the other going 30mph, how fast will the slower car have to go to finish at the same car to finish at the same time? – view answers
Asked at Morgan Stanley. More Morgan Stanley Interview Questions
6. Are your parents disappointed with your career aspirations? – view answers
Asked at Fisher Investments. More Fisher Investments Interview Questions
7. Tell me how you would determine how many house painters there are in the United States? – view answers
Asked at Acquity Group. More Acquity Group Interview Questions
8. What should it cost to rent Central Park for commercial purposes? – view answers
Asked at Bain & Co. More Bain Interview Questions
9. If I put you in a sealed room with a phone that had no dial tone, how would you fix it? – view answers
Asked at Apple. More Apple Interview Questions
10. If you could be any animal, what would you be and why? – view answers
Asked at Pacific Sunwear. More Pacific Sunwear Interview Questions
11. How many hair salons are there in Japan? – view answers
Asked at Boston Consulting. More BCG Interview Questions
12. If both a taxi and a limo were priced the exact same, which one would you choose? – view answers
Asked at Best Buy. More Best Buy Interview Questions
13. How to measure 9 minutes using only a 4 minute and 7 minute hourglass? – view answers
Asked at Bank of America. More BOA Interview Questions
14. What are 5 uncommon uses of a brick, not including building, layering, or a paper-weight? – view answers
Asked at Kaplan High Education. More Kaplan Higher Education Interview Questions
15. What is the probability of throwing 11 and over with 2 dices – view answers
Asked at American Airlines. More American Airlines Interview Questions
16. What is your favorite food? – view answers
Asked at Apple Store. More Apple Interview Questions
17. Say you are dead- what do you think your eulogy would say about you. – view answers
Asked at Nationwide. More Nationwide Interview Questions
18. Given a dictionary of words, how do you calculate the anagrams for a new word? – view answers
Asked at Amazon. More Amazon Interview Questions
19. How many lightbulbs are in this building? – view answers
Asked at Monitor Group. More Monitor Group Interview Questions
20. Given a square grid of numbers, considering all the numbers at the boundary as one layer and numbers just inside as another layer and so on how would you rotate each of the layers of the numbers by a given amount. – view answers
Asked at Microsoft. More Microsoft Interview Questions
21. How would you sell me eggnog in Florida in the summer? – view answers
Asked at Expedia. More Expedia Interview Questions
22. Develop an algorithm for finding the shortest distance between two words in a document. After the phone interview is over, take a few hours to develop a working example in C++ and send it to the manager. – view answers
Asked at Google. More Google Interview Questions
23. Given a fleet of 50 trucks, each with a full fuel tank and a range of 100 miles, how far can you deliver a payload? You can transfer the payload from truck to truck, and you can transfer fuel from truck to truck. Extend your answer for n trucks. – view answers
Asked at Palantir. More Palantir Interview Questions
24. You are in a room with 3 switches which correspond to 3 bulbs in another room and you don’t know which switch corresponds to which bulb. You can only enter the room with the bulbs once. You can NOT use any external equipment (power supplies, resistors, etc.). How do you find out which bulb corresponds to which switch? – view answers
Asked at Goldman Sachs. More Goldman Sachs Interview Questions
25. If you saw someone steal a quarter. Would you report it? – view answers
Asked at Amazon. More Amazon Interview Questions
See more at the glassdoor.com blog
As if interviews weren’t already stressful enough!
Posted in Employment, Humor, Interesting Internet, Interviewing, Uncategorized
Tagged Glassdoor.com, Interview, oddball interview
2010 Workforce/Workplace Forecast

1. Cutbacks and Re-Engineering will continue into 2010 Expect ongoing reductions in force as some employers continue to optimize their workforces and eliminate “redundancy”. We caution these employers to be very careful, because we know that 54 percent of today’s employees are ready to jump, as soon as the economy improves. They are currently “Corporate Cocooning”.
2. Shortages of Certain Skill Sets will become More Acute As the economy begins to recover, certain skill sets will be more critical and difficult to find. These high-demand workers will be more demanding about their work schedules, environment, etc. The wisest employers will embrace not only flex-time, but flex-place as well.
3. Employers will embrace Innovative Ideas to Reward their Valued Workers This innovation will include non-financial ways and even non-reward (recognition only) ways to add value for their top talent; these innovative ideas will come from the employees themselves. Employers that do not mine the collective intelligence of their workers will find themselves unable to optimize profits.
4. Fear and Apprehension continue to reduce Productivity A significant percentage of employees continue to worry about the future. These negative feelings will persist, unless addressed. Transparency, besides being one of those elements employees seek, will be imperative.
5.More Employers will invest in a Variety of Healthcare Cost-Cutting Strategies Besides wellness programs to address expensive unproductive behaviors (like smoking and over-eating), more large employers will embrace ideas like onsite clinics and health coaches. For some candidates, the cost of not complying with the prospective companies’ wellness programs will change their employee value propositions so drastically that they will choose to work elsewhere.
6. Focus on Engagement will replace the Focus on Retention Recognizing that with engagement comes not only retention, but greater productivity and profitability, too, employers will change their focus. We will see Directors of Retention morph into Directors of Employee Engagement. The next step (coming much later than 2010) will be to recognize the importance of the total “Internal and External Customer Experience”.
7. Increasing Attention to Succession Planning Around the globe, we see an increasing attention to succession planning and management. However, the issue of succession preparation continues to take a backseat to succession planning. This big mistake will begin to be felt in 2010, when Baby Boomer retirements combine with the lack of trained people becomes a critical problem. Succession management continues to be critical to long-term success.
8. Employers that did not build Bench Strength will pay More to hire Experience Organizations that did not take the opportunity presented by this business slowdown to send their people for more training, will have to pay more to hire trained, experienced people.
9. Some Employers will eliminate Reward Programs Misunderstanding Dan Pink’s new book, “Drive: The Surprising Truth about What Motivates Us”, some employers will abolish their reward programs altogether. This ill-advised shift will cause significant, negative, unintended consequences.
10. Burned out Employees will begin Leaving Employers Over 80 percent of today’s employees feel overworked and under-appreciated. Too many organizations have survived and maintained some level of profitability by over-loading their long-term employees. Once we begin to see positive job growth in the second half of 2010, some employees will feel confident enough to leave their companies.
11. Employers will accommodate Older Workers like Never Before The exodus of their long-term employees will challenge some employers to get the work done, without resorting to hiring expensive contract help or paying high fees to recruiters. Enlightened employers will mine the rolls of their retired workers and hire them back on a part-time, temporary, or seasonal basis. These seasoned professionals will be welcomed back, in spite of the fact that they will dictate their own terms.
Original Source: Joyce Gioia
Posted in Workforce Trends
Tagged 2010 Workforce Trends, Future of Work, Workforce Forecast, Workplace Forecast
Report: December Hiring on the Upswing
Manufacturing and service-sector companies plan to hire in December, a turnaround from their plans in the same month a year ago, according to the leading indicators of national employment report released by the Society for Human Resource Management.
A survey for the report found that 28.2% of manufacturing companies plan to hire in December while 17.5% plan to cut staff for a net increase of 10.7%. This compares to a net decrease of 10.9% in December 2008.
In the service sector, a net 18.8% plan to add staff in December compared with a net decrease of 9.1% in December 2008.
The SHRM report is based on a survey of private-sector human resource professionals at more than 500 manufacturing and more than 500 service-sector companies.
Employment Trends Index Jumps Up – Hiring is Imminent
The Conference Board’s U.S. employment trends index rose in November for the fourth month in a row and job gains appear “imminent.” The index stands at 90.8, up 1.8% from October’s revised level.
“The very small number of job losses in November was to be expected given the increase in the employment trends index in recent months, and this month’s large increase in the [employment trends index] suggests that job gains are imminent, said Gad Levanon, associate director of macroeconomic research at The Conference Board. “However, the pace of hiring is likely to remain subdued because the economic recovery is expected to be weak throughout the first half of 2010.”
On Friday, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reported the U.S. lost only 11,000 jobs in November. The Associated Press reported economists had been expecting a loss of 130,000 jobs.
Compared to a year ago, The Conference Board’s employment trends index is down 9.4%.
Posted in Workforce Trends
Tagged Employment Trends Index, Hiring Trends, The Conference Board
Contingent Staffing Levels Expected to Rise in 2010
Garry Mathiason, of labor law firm Littler Mendelson, is convinced the U.S. workforce is shifting to mirror that of the film industry, where crews of contingent production workers are assembled for a movie and then disbanded once the project is finished. In a recent study, 73 percent of employers queried anticipate some level of increase in their contingent workforce between now and late 2010, with nearly 35 percent planning increases of 50 percent or more.
Posted in Workforce Trends
Tagged Contingent Staffing, Contingent Workers, Manpower Inc., Temporary Staffing
CareerCast Employment Index Improves – November 2009
Although there was a slight increase (+5.9 points) in the November 2009 CareerCast.com/JobSerf Employment Index, job seekers might be in for a long wait until hiring improves enough for unemployment to drop back into the single digits.
Released today, The CareerCast.com/JobSerf Employment Index, which measures U.S. managerial recruitment activity, found that the number of online job postings in November 2009 rose to 73.7, which is 3.4 points below the level of last November, but slightly higher than the Index last month (67.8).
Some parts of the country are faring better than others during the current job shortage, with Washington D.C. having the greatest hiring activity (135 points) per capita as compared to Riverside (13). This month shows San Francisco (70) having twice as many jobs per capita as Los Angeles (35). Atlanta (+14 to 62), Pittsburgh (+14 to 57) and Boston (+14 to 107) showed the most growth since last month.
While all regions experienced gains in November, the Northeast was the only region of the country to show a slight gain from 2008. And while Chicago had the biggest drop (-3), both major Florida metro areas — Miami (28) and Tampa (27) — are lower than almost all other metropolitan areas in the United States.
Although there was a slight increase (+5.9 points) in the November 2009 CareerCast.com/JobSerf Employment Index, job seekers might be in for a long wait until hiring improves enough for unemployment to drop back into the single digits.
Some parts of the country are faring better than others during the current job shortage, with Washington D.C. having the greatest hiring activity (135 points) per capita as compared to Riverside (13). This month shows San Francisco (70) having twice as many jobs per capita as Los Angeles (35). Atlanta (+14 to 62), Pittsburgh (+14 to 57) and Boston (+14 to 107) showed the most growth since last month.
While all regions experienced gains in November, the Northeast was the only region of the country to show a slight gain from 2008. And while Chicago had the biggest drop (-3), both major Florida metro areas — Miami (28) and Tampa (27) — are lower than almost all other metropolitan areas in the United States.
Posted in Workforce Trends
Tagged CareerCast.com, Employment Index, Hiring, JobSerf, Most Job Openings
Poll: A Majority Hire based on ‘Chemistry’
A majority of human resources professionals (54%) make their final decision to hire a person based on “chemistry,” according to a poll released Tuesday by the Society for Human Resource Management.
It found that 15% of human resources professionals said chemistry accounts for 75% of the final decision to hire, and 39% said chemistry amounts to 50% of the final decision to hire.
The survey also found that 30% of human resources professionals made a decision not to hire within 15 minutes of meeting the job candidate. And 28% made a decision not to hire within five minutes.
Respondents to the survey included 498 randomly selected members of the Society for Human Resource Management who are recruiting professionals.
Posted in Interviewing, Workforce Trends
Tagged Hiring, Hiring Chemistry, Job Interviews, SHRM
Up and Coming Leaders Lack the Skills to Lead
Click on picture to enlarge
A glaring gap exists between the leadership skills organizations have now and the ones they will need in five years, according to new research from the Center for Creative Leadership (CCL).
Executives in the U.S., India and Singapore surveyed by CCL, a provider of executive education, identified the four most important leadership skills for the future as: 1) leading people; 2) strategic planning; 3) inspiring commitment; and 4) managing change. However, the survey showed that all four areas are weak points among today’s leaders.
“When it comes to leadership talent, organizations do not have what they need to handle their biggest challenges in the very near future. At CCL, we call this the ‘leadership gap,’” said Sylvester Taylor, a CCL director who helped devise the study. “The good news is companies still can develop these skills in their people, but they don’t have any time to waste.”
CCL surveyed 2,200 leaders from 15 companies for its “Understanding the Leadership Gap” study. Researchers asked executives and managers from an array of corporations and government agencies to consider a set of 20 leadership skills. Respondents then ranked those skills in terms of how important they will be for success five years from now and how accomplished their colleagues are at them today.
The study found that organizations in the U.S., India and Singapore share many of the same gaps. Globally, executives and managers rated “leading people,” or knowing how to hire, direct and motivate talented staff, as the most important leadership skill for the future. “Strategic planning,” which involves translating vision into realistic business strategies, ranked second in importance. It was followed by “inspiring commitment,” which calls for recognizing and rewarding employee accomplishments, and then “managing change,” which includes dealing with resistance to change and involving colleagues in the design and implementation of change.
Based on these research findings, CCL created the Leadership Gap Indicator, an assessment tool that helps organizations define and measure the leadership characteristics most important for their success.
“Identifying gaps in leadership capacity brings a focus to hiring and development decisions and can improve return on talent investment,” Taylor said. “Without hard evidence to rely on, there is a risk that the skills gap will simply widen and that your organization will not have the leadership resources needed to survive and thrive.”
For more info: http://www.ccl.org/leadership/pdf/research/leadershipGap.pdf
Survey: Seasonal Work is Top Reason for Hiring Contingents
The most-cited reason for using contingent labor by companies around the world is to complete work during peak seasonal periods, according to a survey released by Manpower Inc. (NYSE: MAN). Nineteen percent of firms surveyed cited it as the primary reason they use contingent labor.
The next-most cited reason was as cover for employees who may be on leave; it was cited by 7% of firms.
Fifty-four percent of firms said they do not use contingent labor.
In addition, the Manpower survey found that 62% of firms around the world did not view contingent workers as a key element of their workforce strategies. Thirty-four percent of employers said they did, and 4% were unsure.
Manpower CEO Jeffrey Joerres said employers’ natural instinct in the upturn will be to bring in contingent workers first and be cautious about hiring permanent workers. “But, the winners in the post-recovery world will be the companies that leverage contingent workers as ‘workforce accelerators,’ having mastered the art of managing a dynamic mix of permanent and contingent workers to optimize their performance, increasing their speed of execution, building talent capability, keeping fixed costs low and doing more with less,” Joerres said.
The survey included more than 41,000 employers in 35 countries.
Economic Downturn Leading to Decline in Employee Commitment, Morale
The cost-cutting actions that employers have been making to deal with the economic crisis have contributed to a sharp decline in the morale and commitment of their workers, especially top performers, according to an annual survey by Watson Wyatt, a leading global consulting firm, and WorldatWork, an international association of human resource professionals.
The 2009/2010 U.S. Strategic Rewards Survey found that employee engagement levels for all workers at the companies surveyed have dropped 9 percent since last year, and close to 25 percent for top performers. Additionally, 36 percent of top performers say their employer’s situation has worsened in the past 12 months, and the number who would recommend others take jobs at their company has declined by nearly 20 percent. Compared with last year, top-performing employees are 26 percent less likely to be satisfied with advancement opportunities at their company. They are also 14 percent less likely to want to remain with their company versus take a job elsewhere.
The survey also found that top-performing employees are 29 percent less confident in management’s ability to grow the business. And 41 percent believe that pay and benefit changes made by their employer in the past year have had a negative effect on work quality and customer service. The survey was conducted in May 2009 and is based on responses from 1,300 full-time workers at large U.S. employers.
“The fallout from the actions employers have taken in response to the recession is now coming to light, and it is significant,” said Laura Sejen, global director of strategic rewards consulting at Watson Wyatt. “Having less engaged and committed workers is a major concern for employers. This could have a long-lasting and detrimental impact on productivity, quality and customer service, as well as an increase in the risk of companies losing their best employees.”
The survey also found that most top-performing employees say they aren’t expecting to receive the same bonus or pay increase as they have in the past, even though historically companies have rewarded them with pay commensurate with their performance. More than 6 in 10 (61 percent) say their companies have reduced or suspended bonuses, while only 35 percent agree their employers reward top employees for performance. Additionally, 43 percent of top performers said individual performance expectations have increased since last year, while one-third (32 percent) say their company’s financial performance goals have increased.
“One of the many challenges employers will face as the economy recovers is how to re-engage employees, and especially top performers,” said Ryan Johnson, CCP, vice president of research at WorldatWork. “Taking a total rewards approach and looking at all of the ways companies can motivate and retain — including compensation, benefits, work-life initiatives and career development — is going to be essential.”
Other findings from the survey include:
• Regardless of whether companies downsized, 89 percent of employers report taking at least one or two actions to minimize the extent of workforce downsizing. On average, survey participants report taking 3.5 different actions.
• Nearly 3 out of 4 (72 percent) employers have gone through a restructuring or made layoffs since the economic downturn began last year.
For more info: http://www.watsonwyatt.com/StrategicRewards2009
Survey: 20% Say Firms Will Hire in 4th Quarter
Are we inching back to normal?
About 20% of human resources professionals said their companies plan to hire in the fourth quarter, according to the labor market outlook quarterly survey by the Society for Human Resource Management.
Another 14% planned to cut jobs, and 59% said their firms would maintain staff levels.
“HR managers are optimistic that the economy is inching towards a recovery but are crafting cautious hiring plans with more aggressive recruitment not expected until 2010,” said Jennifer Schramm, manager of workplace trends and forecasting at SHRM.
Fewer companies planned to cut jobs in the fourth quarter than in the third-quarter survey when 30% said they would make cuts. However, more human resource professionals, 24%, said they planned to increase staff in the third quarter.
The survey included responses from 402 human resource professionals.
“Contractor” Employee Misclassification is Costing Companies – Again
As a cable-television installer in Massachusetts, Fritz Elienberg drove a van and wore a shirt emblazoned with “Comcast.” He installed equipment from Comcast Corp., and customers paid the cable provider for his work.
Mr. Elienberg wasn’t a Comcast employee, but a so-called independent contractor working for a separate company. This month, Mr. Elienberg sued both companies, for allegedly depriving him and other contractors of overtime pay and benefits by not considering them employees.
The case highlights a perennial issue for employers that is gaining new prominence during the recession. Lawyers say employers are trying to avoid hiring full-time employees by tapping contractors, as workers seeking better pay and benefits turn to the courts. Employment law firm Ogletree, Deakins, Nash, Smoak & Stewart PC has seen a 13% rise in misclassification claims this year, compared with the same period in 2008, attorneys estimate.
Meanwhile, revenue-strapped government agencies are cracking down, seeking unpaid taxes. Last month, the Internal Revenue Service said it will audit 6,000 random U.S. employers beginning in February, marking its first attempt since 1984 to quantify how many employers misclassify workers.
Employee, or Contractor?
The Internal Revenue Service considers three types of factors to determine if a worker is an employee or independent contractor:
- Behavioral: Does the employer dictate how the work is done?
- Financial: Does the employer provide tools? Does it pay by the job or the hour?
- Relationship: Is the work ‘key’ to the employer’s business?
Source: Internal Revenue Service
The Full U.S. Unemployment Picture – September 2009
Below is the A12 chart from the Bureau of Labor Statistics. This chart gives the full unemployment picture of what is going on in the United States. These numbers cover a lot of varying categories and are often referred to but not always shown in full.
Unfortunately at this point it is still not a pretty picture, I do not expect to see any decrease in these numbers until the first half of 2010. That said, I.T. and Manufacturing are two burgeoning sectors of growth albeit they are not wide spread across every state. We are beginning to build toward hiring trends that will go beyond state borders, once that begins there will definitely be more companies willing to put both feet in and start hiring again.
Click Picture to enlarge.
Will All Our Needed Talent Go Down The Drain?
More than 50 percent of the science graduate students in the United States are foreign-born. Due to a lack of emphasis on the STEM (Science, Engineering, Technology, and Math) subjects and the fear that the curricula will be too challenging, native-born students have passed up these post-college options. Filling the void have been the foreign-born for whom a US graduate degree was and is a meaningful ticket to a prosperous future.
A trend we forecast numerous times is now official: Within the next five years, hundreds of thousands Chinese and Indian immigrants who in the past would have stayed and worked for US companies will go home permanently. This history-making trend was recently revealed in a recently released study, Professor Vivek Wadhwa of Duke University. The Brain Drain is already affecting US companies and will have increasingly devastating consequences.
There are several reasons why this homecoming is taking place. First, there are increasing job opportunities for them at home. In the last two years, the economies in India and China both grew much faster than the US. Not only are they welcomed with open arms, but because they have studied abroad, they have a better understanding of how to do business in the US. China even offers financial assistance and housing incentives to lure skilled workers home.
Second, because the Asian cultures are so different from those of the US, there is a strong comfort factor that is missing for workers choosing to stay. They miss their loved ones and rarely enjoy the same support systems.
Finally, US immigration laws and attitudes (fueled by 9/11 and recent economic challenges) discourage immigrants from staying. The now long and arduous process of obtaining one of the relatively few H1B visas or applying for green card status dishearten even the most enthusiastic. Though Wadhwa only studied students from Asian countries, the same situations apply to graduate students from South America, Africa, and the Middle East.
The good news is that we believe that once the US economy really recovers, the rate of departure will slow somewhat; however the cultural and home economic factors will remain.
Posted in China, Workforce Trends
Tagged China Workers, Duke University, Foreign Born Workers, H1B, The Brain Drain, Vivek Wadhwa
Exec’s Pick Facetime over Facebook for Employees
In a recent survey Executives were asked, “How comfortable would you feel about being ‘friended’ by the following individuals on Facebook?” Their responses:
- 19 percent said they were very comfortable being friended by their boss; 13 percent for co-workers, 12 percent for people they manage; 7 percent for clients; and 6 percent for vendors.
- 28 percent said they were somewhat comfortable being friended by their boss; 38 percent for co-workers, 32 percent for people they manage; 34 percent for clients; and 23 percent for vendors.
- 15 percent said they were not very comfortable being friended by their boss; 13 percent for co-workers, 15 percent for people they manage; 17 percent for clients; and 24 percent for vendors.
- 32 percent said they were not comfortable being friended by their boss; 28 percent for co-workers, 33 percent for people they manage; 33 percent for clients; and 38 percent for vendors.
- 6 percent said they weren’t sure about being friended by their boss; 8 percent for co-workers, 8 percent for people they manage; 9 percent for clients; and 9 percent for vendors.
“The line between personal and professional has grown increasingly blurred as more people use social networking Web sites for business purposes,” said Robert Hosking, executive director of OfficeTeam. “Although not everyone is comfortable using sites like Facebook to connect with professional contacts, it’s wise to be prepared for these types of requests.”
Hosking advises employees on Facebook to be sure they are in compliance with their employer’s social networking policy. They should then familiarize themselves with privacy settings and create different friend lists to control how — and with whom — information is shared.
“Individuals should classify their professional contacts into a ‘work’ list and limit what personal details this group can view,” said Hosking.
Following are some common Facebook situations professionals may encounter and how to handle them:
- You’re tagged in an embarrassing photo. Untag yourself and change your privacy settings so photos are viewable only by your close friends.
- You’re friended by someone you don’t want to connect with. It might be best to accept friend requests from colleagues to avoid slighting them, but add them to a work list and adjust your privacy settings so you can effectively separate your job from your personal life.
- You’re considering friending your boss. It may seem like a natural extension of amiable office small talk, but think twice before proactively friending your boss. It could become awkward for both of you.
- You want to join various groups. You should join groups that interest you. But if you have colleagues in your network and don’t want them to see the groups you join, remember to adjust your application settings.
- You would like to be a fan of certain pages. Becoming a fan of pages on Facebook is visible to anyone who can view your profile, so you should avoid becoming a fan of any page you are uncomfortable sharing with co-workers or business contacts in your network.
- You love quizzes. Stop and think for a moment before taking online quizzes and posting the results to your Facebook page, unless you want professional contacts to know which “Gilligan’s Island” character you most resemble.
Posted in Social Networking, Workforce Trends
Tagged Boss Friending, Facebook, Facetime, Friended, Social Media, Social Networking Policy, Survey
















