Companies interfering in employees’ usage of social

Social media is a collective term for interactive networks and applications which facilitate communication, interaction, and exchange of ideas, information, and content. Social media is essential for both personal and professional use. Employees may use social media for various reasons such as to share their ideas and thoughts, to connect with their friends and families, and to find a job. For professional use, they may use social media to engage with colleagues, provide customer service, and promote their brands to attract potential customers and conduct competitive analysis. However, the boundaries between those activities are becoming extremely blurred. 

Many times, employees’ social media activities result in severe consequences for both the employee and employer. Though they may be posting through their handles, they are still associated with the company and their actions can damage the company’s reputation.

Are employees still answerable to the company even after their work shift ends? While individuals have their rights, they can share their viewpoints, thoughts, and opinions on various matters online, but, since they represent a company, their negative actions can harm the company’s image and result in major consequences for the company. Employers may find themselves standing in front of customers and clients and giving them justifications for what their employees post.

So, problems arise when employees’ personal social media activities are not in line with their company’s expectations. Not having a social media policy for employees may increase the possibility of all kinds of risks. To strike a balance and avoid the negative impact of employees’ personal social media activities, companies should adopt a full-fledged social media policy that ensures employees who are active on social media (either for personal or professional use) have a set of guidelines as to the company’s expectation of their behavior and communication on social networking sites.

Outlining social media policy will help articulate the company’s expectations on what’s allowed, to understand what’s right and right and wrong, and what will be repercussions of posting defamatory, threatening, obscene, or hateful content online. It will also provide employees with a clarity of the company’s values and culture for their prospects, existing customers, and clients. Social media policy will help organizations reduce the time lost for dealing with the damaging use of social media and its consequences.