Wednesday, April 15, 2020
The One Lesson of the RBS Chair Snapchat Embarrassment
The One Lesson of the RBS Chair Snapchat Embarrassment Unless youâre employed in the global banking industry you probably missed the recent announcement that Royal Bank of Scotland chairman Rory Cullinan will soon be leaving his post. Bloomberg, the Guardian, and other media outlets attribute the departure to a clash with other execs over strategy. One intriguing footnote to the story, however, puts it in âThere but for the grace of Godâ¦â territory for any working stiff who uses social media for non-business purposesâ"or, for that matter, any parent who struggles to stay connected to his or her social-media-obsessed teen. Thatâs because about a month ago, British tabloids published screenshots of Cullinanâs Snapchat selfies captioned with âBoring meeting xx,â ânot a fan of board meetings,â and âAnother friggin meeting.â The Sun reported that Cullinan had sent the messages to his teenage daughter, who posted the screenshots to her own Instagram feed last spring using the hashtag #daddylikestoselfie. Compared to other notorious career-damaging social-media blunders, Cullinanâs gaffe seems pretty mild. Some might even be charmed by this high-powered bankerâs efforts to bond with his daughter. Still, the Snapchat incident couldnât have helped Cullinanâs relationship with his employer or coworkers, as Bloombergâs Matt Levine humorously points out. Even if the chairmanâs departure is largely unrelated to his Snapchats, thereâs a lesson in the whole episodeâ"and for once, it doesnât have to do with managing the security settings on your accounts. Sure, itâs always a good idea to keep privacy settings high on any social media accounts. But the truth is you canât always maintain control over your messages. Both Instagram and Snapchat have recently seen huge breaches involving images users thought were private. Recruiters report digging deep into the online profiles of potential hires, all the way down to their grammar and spelling. And the latest incident just goes to show that even if you are circumspect, your friends or family members might not always be so careful. The thing to do: Wait a beat before publishing words or images, no matter the audience. Remember that something that looks innocent in one context could burn you in another. From the perspective of a potential employer, what you write is indicative of your character. âWhen youâre hiring for a job, you have very little data about candidates, so every piece of data that you do get carries an enormous amount of weight,â says former hiring manager Alison Green, who runs the career blog askamanager.org. On one hand, itâs frustrating that a minor lapse of judgement can negatively impact oneâs livelihoodâ"and that even well-meaning people have to worry that an old Tweet or photo could cast a shadow over their careers. On the other hand, the transparency of certain forms of social media can be a force for good, pushing people to choose their words more carefully, kindly, and responsibly. In Cullinanâs case, that might have meant swallowing his work gripes until after hours, and opting for a simpler message like âI miss you.â
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