Step 3Yourself in Pixels
- Facebook is used solely for socializing, and it's privacy settings are set to reflect this;
- Twitter, is an informal way to keep up with other young professionals, follow technologist, and post statuses about technology projects I'm working on. I like to think of twitter as a casual professional area, and that's partially because of the culture of the site;
- LinkedIn is used solely for professional connections;
- My website is a place to post more in-depth thoughts and write ups about projects that I'm working on;
- And all of these accounts are tied to each other, giving potential employers a deeper look at who I am, in a way that I can manage appropriately.
The single biggest advantage of creating your own site is that it gives you some control over what employers find when they google your name. Do you really want them to find a comment on a blog you wrote in early college about the advantages of mixing certain alcohol? Centralizing your online identity into a site you control is one way of minimizing this. That, and set your privacy settings appropriately on the sites you use.
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