Saturday, July 25, 2020

Social Media @Work - Workology

Social Media @Work - Workology Social Media @Work Social Media @Work Social media is no longer this new, pretty thing that we admire from afar.   It is now mainstream.   Throw your excuses, attitudes, and preconceived notions to the side.   Social media is not going anywhere.   Social media is a part of our every day lives even at work. Last week I debated with an attorney on the topic of  Social Media @Work.   We talked as professors, human resources and marketing students, and others watched us duke it out.   I called upon my social media community to help demonstrate the power of social media.   An eclectic community of human resource professionals, students, business folks, and others responded with almost 300 tweets using the  #smwork hash tag. I feel for attorneys I really do.   Employment attorneys especially.   They are driven by fear.   Fear for their clients, fear for themselves, and a lack of understanding into the every day use of social media and what it has become.   They see the ugly side of social media. An attorney’s view is not always reality. When discussing the topic of how to properly train and alert an employee to a company’s social media policy, there is no silver bullet.   Your attorney is there to advise you on the topic but not actually help you execute a full-scale information and awareness campaign.   My fellow debater suggested that company awareness should be more than an email from HR and a signed acknowledgment.   I agree, however, the role is not solely human resource’s responsibility.   It’s a team effort that goes beyond the human resource office.   One #smchat participant,  Dave Ryan (frequent guest blogger at Blogging4Jobs) suggested that we prepare for social media at work much like we do for a tornado. Social Media is more than Facebook, Twitter, and LinkedIn. Companies and attorneys need to realize that social media is a million different mediums.   Sites like  Glassdoor and  JobVent are common communities for disgruntled job seekers and employees.   Don’t forget blogs, YouTube, and chat rooms too. Social profiles aren’t private. This is an area that is currently being debated in the courts system.   Current court cases are requesting access to employee’s social profiles and private messages even your Google Search history.   The precedent changes daily.   This is like asking an employee for copies of their snail mail for the last twelve months.   Imagine if someone requested access to your Google Search history, your most private secrets for the purposes of an employment law case.   Do the rights to privacy not apply? It’s all about Mobile. Most recent data tells us that  91% of persons who access the internet from their smart phone socialize.   A personal mobile phone is a powerful computer that is unmonitored or undetected by corporate firewalls and IT.   While this scares attorneys as well as corporate executives, I’m not so sure.   A recent  Ad Age study tells us that 48% of workers who use social media would strong recommend their company’s product or service.   Good companies who treat there employees well are rewarded.   Those that don’t should be fearful of the online consequences. Unproductive people are unproductive with or without social media. One of the biggest misconceptions is that social media is extremely unproductive.   In general social media used for business purposes can help you do your job better in so many ways.   It allows for collaboration, access to a network of industry professionals, and trending news and topics.   For example, the #smwork chat allowed for sharing of tools, news, and resources.   One of those resources shared was from  Mark Vanbaale about a recent article in the WSJ “Employers Thread a Minefield.”   I challenge the notion about unproductivity as a result of Facebook.   Companies should look at other non-productive activities.   The average unproductive work time spent on  Facebook each day is 7.2 minutes vs. smoking which is 64 minutes. Social Media as everyday use. With Facebook approaching 600 million users and Twitter users posting  110 million tweets per day, social media is a part of our every days lives.   So it makes sense that things that are part of our every day lives would trickle into our work life especially since we spend more time at work during a week than we do with our family.   Social media is another tool that businesses and the workforce can utilize to their advantage.   But fear is what drives most corporate executives when it comes to social media use.   Fear that employees will say how they really feel about their organization publicly online or fear that they will post confidential information on the internet. Truth is those fears have been around since the beginning of business.   Until the internet was created, employees used public bulletin boards, town hall meetings, letters to the editor and the grapevine to air their personal and professional opinions.   The key for understanding social media @work is really simple.   It’s by following the old age concept the  Golden Rule.     Companies should act and treat their employees with ethics demonstrating trust while trusting their employees to do the same. Trust, ethics, and real relationships.   That’s the foundation of Social Media @Work.

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