Jobs Magazine January 29 – February 4, 2016 | Page 9

JOBS RESOURCES this question, “No.” Respondents justified their answer with rationale ranging from “I have a right to privacy” to “the blog entries relate to their personal life.” How stupid can these people be? One of the reasons any employer – whether the CEO of a company or a homeowner seeking a reliable dog-sitter – performs background and reference checks is that a person’s behavior tends to be consistent and predictable over time. Unlike a mutual fund or stock, the past performance of a person is a reliable predictor of future results. Prior learning, established habits and values coalesce to determine behavior, and unless a person gains insight into their motivations and behaviors and exerts their will to override reflexive behaviors, then their behavioral patterns won’t change. If this were not the case, psychologists, psychiatrists and life-coaches would be unemployed. In short, this means once a criminal, always a criminal. If, in the mind of a person, it were perfectly acceptable to steal music or vandalize property, what would stop them from stealing money or sensitive information from an employer? No reasonable person would leave the door open if they knew a burglar was outside, and no intelligent employer would knowingly hire someone who has no regard for the law or the property rights of others. Another point raised was “the right to privacy.” When someone voluntarily publishes something on a web page, they have put their information within access of potentially one billion eyeballs. Where does “privacy” come in? This would be like someone stripping naked in the middle of Times Square in New York City during rush hour, and then being upset because a lot of people stop and stare. The bottom line is, if something needs to be private, don’t share it, period. Perusing a blog is a little like observing a person from a distance and when they are less guarded in their actions. This can provide more information to a prospective employer than would those overly-rehearsed, cut and dried answers given by eager job applicants. Imagine reading a profanity-laced, irrational blog authored by someone seeking a customer service or sales position. Would anyone want to turn a potty-mou Y[