Wednesday, May 20, 2020
Still On MySpace Its Time to Delete Your Old Profiles - Personal Branding Blog - Stand Out In Your Career
Still On MySpace Its Time to Delete Your Old Profiles - Personal Branding Blog - Stand Out In Your Career When MySpace was big, did you have a profile on the site? (Donât be shyâ¦Iâm sure a lot of folks did!) But then Facebook came along, and a few years later, Twitter reared its headâ"so you probably left that old profile out in the dust. Did you ever go back and delete your MySpace profile? What about your profiles on other websites, such as an old blog or photo-uploading site? Here are a few compelling reasons to spend some time deleting those old profiles: Avoid inconsistent information. If you signed up for a blogging platform in college, you probably werenât too concerned about the information you shared on it at the time. But now that youâre a career professional looking to maintain your online brand, you probably want to take a second look at those profiles and delete ones that convey an inconsistent image of you. Even if your interests have just changed or your career path has gone in a different direction, you should either update the information (if you plan on using the site for the future) or delete your presence on it altogether. You wouldnât want to confuse anyone looking for information about you. Get rid of inappropriate or unprofessional content. Before your professional online presence was an important part of your job search and career, you might have signed up for sites based on your interests that donât exactly share your most professional side. For example, in the beginning days of MySpace, many people had public profiles with pictures of partyingâ"probably not something you want a potential employer to see (no matter how old the pictures are). Tighten up your online brand. A lot of us are quick to sign up for a new website or platform without knowing how much weâll actually use it in the future. By deleting inactive or inappropriate profiles, you can focus your online brand to the few sites you actually use on a daily basis and direct your followers to those. So, when you have some downtime in your day, search for old profiles you might still have lurking around on the web and try to remove content that may not line up with your existing online brand. After all, you wouldnât want an employersâ, clientsâ or potential networking connections first impression to be from one of those profiles, would you? Have you deleted old profiles that no longer aligned with your brand? How did you find your account on these sites and was it difficult to delete your profile? Author: Heather R. Huhman is a career expert, experienced hiring manager, and founder president of Come Recommended, a content marketing and digital PR consultancy for organizations with products that target job seekers and/or employers. She is also the author of Lies, Damned Lies Internships: The Truth About Getting from Classroom to Cubicle (2011), #ENTRYLEVELtweet: Taking Your Career from Classroom to Cubicle (2010), and writes career and recruiting advice for numerous outlets.
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