Managing your personal social media
platforms is an important thing for any young adult coming into the workplace.
So I have prepared a guide on exactly how to make your Facebook profile private
and manage which content you want to share with which friends, to ensure it
ready to be analysed by future employers. This is very important as
increasingly employers are checking potential employees Facebook pages before
they make the final decision on whether they get the job.
Before I started investigating for this
blog, my profile was completely public, it was available for anyone with a
facebook account to see. So my first step was to change this.
To change your privacy setting you first go
to the tab in the right hand corner (next to the “Home” tab) and select
“Privacy Settings.”
Then in “Privacy Settings” under “Control
Your Default Privacy” change from “Public” to “Friends” or you can customise
your settings.
Now your profile can only be viewed by your
“Friends” or the “Close Friends” that you choose to allow.
Next we learn to manage your friends’ lists
so that you can pick and choose which friends are in which groups, and can view
which content.
Facebook already has three groups made for
you; “Close Friends,” “Acquaintances” and “Restricted.” You may wish to create
more based on what you want certain people to be able to access. For example
you may create a special folder for your boss or your mum so that you can
control what aspects of your life through your Facebook page you wish to show
to these particular people.
To get to these lists start on the “Home”
page.
On the left hand side next to the “Friends”
tab click “More.”
As I said there should already be the
following lists there; “Close Friends,” “Acquaintances” and “Restricted,” and
whatever groups you may have created.
You can either use the groups created for
you or create some of your own. You do this by clicking on the “+ Create List”
button to the top of the screen. You can simply name the list now, and add
members later, once you have figured out all of the groups and the amount of
access of each to your profile.
Once you have figured out your groups you
may then click on each of the groups and edit them accordingly.
Click on “Manage List” in the top right
hand corner of the screen. From here you may edit both what updates are shown
to those in the list (“Choose Update Types”) and what friends you want in the
list (“Edit List”).
In the restricted
group they will only see what you make public, so this is a great place to put
your boss or grandmother or anyone you wish to carefully monitor which content
they see and don’t see. For example it may not be a good idea to make public
those photos from a wild night on the town.
Back to the “Privacy Settings” Page. Below
the “Control Your Default Privacy” section there are further options to
customise who can see what on your profile.
First in the “How
You Connect” section, you can decide who can look you up using your email
address or phone number, who can send you friend requests and who can send you
messages. You may choose either “Everyone,” “Friends of Friends” or only
“Friends.”
You may also edit
the “Timeline and Tagging” section in the same way.
And the “Ads, Apps
and Websites” section.
There is an option
to “Limit The Audience for Old Posts on Your Timeline.”
“Blocked People
and Apps” is where you can block friends, apps and events as well as another
place you can add friends to your restricted list, without blocking them, as
this way they will never know.
Finally you have
the option to choose who sees what you post as you post it now that you have
created these groups. Simply choose from the drop down menu to the left o the “Post”
button.
You may also go
next to each post you have posted on your timeline and change the particular
audience you want to see it. You do this by clicking on the image directly
after the post and choosing an audience from the drop down menu.
After my day of researching the privacy
settings and friends lists of Facebook I can confidently say that my profile is
a lot more private. I also have a better understanding of which friends I
want to see which content on my Facebook and have grouped them accordingly. And
most importantly I have learnt the importance of thinking and choosing
carefully which friends see what posts and trying to keep my personal and
professional life separate, especially as I begin my career.
No comments:
Post a Comment