The hidden danger of Facebook stalking…

One danger I didn’t mention for social networking in my recent articles is that us humble accountants at home quickly become aware of where our friends and former colleagues have gone tripping around around the world  – Facebook currently tells me I have a friend who’s moved from Australia to London to Singapore to England to Germany to England in the past six months, another who has ‘done’ Hong Kong, London & Morocco in the past week, another who is in Singapore, and another who spent the weekend in Vegas and is now going to Niagara Falls. 

Meanwhile I went to the shops to buy bread & milk…

Feedback from ‘Don’t be the Llama Loser’ presentation

Today I received the feedback from the ‘Don’t be the Llama Loer:  social networking websites, your business, and your career’.  Overall the feedback was good.  The ratings :). are provided below (5 is excellent, 4 is good, and so on):

Overall rating of the speaker:  4.38

The content of the program:  4.16

The duration of the program:  4.21

Overall rating of the venue:  4.37

Was the content in line with your expectations:  16 said yes, none said no.

There were some supplementary feedback comments as well in response to the question ‘List areas that could have been covered better or in more detail’:

Things about side-effect of social networking sites.
The interaction of real life social networking with on line social networking or how to use social networking site.
Organise interest groups around particular topics.

I was a little surprised that the duration still scored well – I’m sure it went over by half an hour.  Still it was always going to be optimistic to cover the material in half an hour.  I’m also quite said that my large array of ‘people kissing llamas’ pictures didn’t rate a mention. 

The one below probably says it best:

 

Social security

About this article

In about April I got a phone call asking me if I could write an article very quickly for the CFO Software guide of 2008.  This guide is produced in association with CPA Australia every year, and every so often the Information Technology & Management Centre of Excellence writes an editorial piece related to the topic of the moment (usually).  This time, though, because it was very short notice (I believe the phrase ’10am tomorrow?’ was used), I got to draw a fairly loose association with the topic.  I wanted to write something a little different to the normal business article – although a good and serious article is excellent, it doesn’t achieve much if it is never read, in my view. 

So as a result, I wrote an article on the topic of social networking, and called it ‘business socialism’ – it was subsequently retitled to ‘Social security’.  In an edition where the companion articles are fairly business-focused, my article probably has, as was described in unsolicited feedback, as a ‘tone’.  The Editor’s Letter for this edition notes that the theme of social software and tapping into the wisdom of crowds ‘is picked up enthusiastically by Micheal Axelsen, the chairman of the Information Technology and Management Centre of Excellence for CPA Australia, in his opinion piece’. 

I’m going to take that feedback as positive feedback.  I reproduce the article below as I submitted it, together with an attached scanned copy of the magazine.  If you think you may be the person who has their photograph in FaceBook giving a Nazi salute, perhaps drop me a line on my email. 

Oh, and thanks to Jenny for being very sporting about the fame of her cat, Stitch.

Social security

Once, ‘friends’ were people that you met regularly. Friends went to the movies together. Friends may occasionally have had one beer too many and woke up together on a park bench. Sometimes friends were workmates. Sometimes they were actually your significant other’s friends. You and your friends drifted apart when you changed jobs (or your significant other).

Today, the world is very, very different. The circle of friends expands and grows. Friends that move away can be ‘followed’ with social networking websites such as Facebook and MySpace. Because of Facebook, I know that a former colleague has just received a kitten called Stitch. A cute cat, but I have not met that colleague in eight years.

Today, people are Facebooked, MySpaced, and LinkedIn. They Flickr and Twitter and Qik. People blog and they YouTube.

Today’s workforce talks over the internet in myriad ways, at all times and at all opportunities. The line between ‘work’ and ‘leisure’ has become very blurred. Social networking sites can have a real business impact.

Social networking is positive in several ways. For example, searching on a candidate’s name will provide more background than a resume ever will. A footprint on the internet will exist somewhere. Potential employers can be better informed about the candidate. The same approach can be used for prospective suppliers of products or services to the business.

Candidates or suppliers with personal photographs in the Facebook group ‘embarrassing party photos’ may not like this. However, it is not only the young that can have unsavoury photos appear online. At least one Facebook user has shown poor professional judgment by posting a photo of their employer’s grey-haired managing director giving a Nazi salute. The poor fellow probably doesn’t know it exists.

A scan of blogs and other online tools for qualified candidates expressing frustration about their current job may be helpful when recruiting. Head hunting to fill specialist roles can be much easier in this digital world.

On the other hand though, customers with bad experiences services will likely retell their story on the internet. Today’s mobile technologies allow this to occur before the customer has even left the store. Many prospective customers today will perform a search on the business. These customers tend to believe an anonymous internet posting in preference to any information contained in a marketing brochure.

Employees’ activities ‘out of hours’ can also have an impact. The legal liability is at best murky when an employee stalks another employee using social networking tools. When businesses request employees to put their details on MySpace or Facebook as part of a staff recruitment drive, a legal problem may arise very quickly if an employee is stalked, attacked or has their identity stolen using this information.

Likewise, LinkedIn is a popular social networking site for professionals. This website provides a ‘newsfeed’ of the events occurring in your network of contacts. Secrets can be inadvertently given away by staff members setting their LinkedIn status to (for example): ‘Micheal Axelsen is developing a proposal for Can-Do Technologies’. LinkedIn also allows a contact to see their contact’s contacts, which can give an interesting insight into that contact’s marketing activities.

Business should respond in some way. In 2008, the CPA Australia Information Technology & Management Centre of Excellence is writing a guide for business with appropriate policies to adopt for social networking. At the least, we encourage businesses to understand their ‘internet footprint’. A regular search upon the business name, the names of key products, and the senior management team is essential, with Google Alerts a good tool that can alert you to such new content.

Staff should also be aware of the risks and issues for the business and their career when posting information online. At least one Facebook user has been astonished to see photographs of her in an inebriated state. She is desperately trying to get these ‘friends of friends’ to delete the photographs.

The social networking phenomenon is here to stay and will continue to grow. Businesses should review the impact of social networking on their business. There is a need to communicate to all staff the types of appropriate behaviour and content when living out their digital life. Businesses should monitor their ‘internet footprint’ and plan a response when the business is mentioned online. ‘Banning’ social networking is unlikely to be helpful for a company. A sensible and informed approach is important, with an awareness of the potential risks and problems.

Social networking: sometimes, it’s about business. And we mean business.

 

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Don’t be the Llama Loser: Social Networking Websites, your business, and your career

Yesterday I had the pleasure of presenting to the CPA Australia IT Discussion Group on the topic of social networking websites, and how they can affect your business and your career. If there’s one crucial message, it’s that you need to be judicious about what you put on the internet, use the privacy options on Facebook/MySpace, monitor the internet using tools like Google Alert, and be honest and transparent in your dealings with clients online.

Oh, and I think it is essential that all right-thinking adults reconsider their decision to vlog naked…

The presentation is provided below as a PDF. Astute members of the audience will note that I removed the photograph of my wife and I on top of a mountain – for the sake of the children.

This is a companion piece to two articles I have written for InTheBlack magazine (CPA Australia’s journal). The first article (“It’s about who knows you”) is in the June issue, and the second article (“Virtual water cooler”), which is scheduled for July 2008.

The presentation was a lot of fun – please feel free to leave feedback if you attended. I know we went a bit overtime – mostly because of a venue mixup and, to be frank, I had too much material :). It was great to present this on the day that I received notification that I’m now an FCPA.

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The Facebook Anthem

This is really old of course but it sums up a lot of people’s experience with Facebook (now must obsessively stalk facebook friends through status updates.  Bwa ha hahaha).

I’m writing an article on social networking and the pitfalls for young CPA’s – egad, there are so many ways.  Must not huddle in corner…

Billy Joel is probably rolling in his grave – except he’s not dead and hopefully gets some royalties sometime :).  Gotta love that song – the lyrics can be very adaptable.  Oh – and probably Not Safe for Work as it is loud and has some (bleeped) swearing. 

 

Facebook has become the biggest and ‘baddest’ social networking site on the block – it’s mostly fun but there are FAR TOO MANY APPLICATIONS ALLOWED.  And you should see what happens with your data when you click on these things.  I’ve gotten rid of almost all of mine…

And… Facebook is for friends, LinkedIn is for real work :).