Once You've Seen It, It Becomes A Danger

Source Newsletter for Business and Operations Header Image
Source Newsletter for Business and Operations Header Image

Business and Operations//

February 25, 2010

As resumes come pouring in, it's tempting to log onto the hot social sites for a quick glimpse. It's certainly faster than making a ton of phone calls, or scheduling a week's worth of preliminary interviews. You might be thinking, "With LinkedIn and Facebook alone I can virtually trim my preliminary interviews down by a third just by getting the scoop on people, and if I throw Twitter into the mix, I could essentially narrow my first-interview efforts down to a selective core of applicants."

However, tapping into the social media world to gain personal information could cost your school thousands from a discrimination lawsuit.

Using social media sites to scan candidates or conduct background checks should only be done with great caution. Before you start investigating candidates, stop and think about the information you might find. Much of what is shared on social media and networking sites is protected information under federal law. Most profiles include information that indicates a person's race, religion, ethnicity, national origin, etc. All of these are protected classes, and can't be used in the hiring process. Once you've seen the information, you can't pretend you haven't—you're now at risk.

In the same way that you wouldn't ask a potential new hire to disclose their religion (unless you're a faith-based school), age, sexual orientation, or a slide show of their last family gathering, you don't want to seek that information out online. A rejected candidate can claim that the reason he/she wasn't hired was because of personal, protected information you found online (i.e. about their race, ethnicity, religion, etc.), not because he/she wasn't the most qualified for the job.

ISM's Human Resources Consultant, Michal Brisciana has a Webinar on Behavioral Interviewing Techniques and Tools coming up on March 17, 2010. Join him and fellow private-independent school colleagues for a 45-minute presentation focusing on specific interviewing techniques.

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