Online Recruiting & Hiring:
Legal Risks & Best Practices
Do you Google candidates' names or check out their profiles on Facebook, Twitter or LinkedIn before you hire? Do you know the new legal risks of advertising on social media and online? And what if you learn that a current employee has tweeted racist comments – can you fire him?
The new tools of online recruiting and hiring have created shocking legal risks for HR, employers and management. Don't hire (or fire) another employee until you know the legal risks and best practices of e-hiring!
Online Recruiting & Hiring: Legal Risks & Best Practices will teach you how to use these online tools to hire smart and stay out of legal trouble.
You'll get definitive, practical answers to the challenges you're dealing with right now, including:
- What's the line between prudent due diligence and illegal discrimination or invasion of privacy?
- Which social sites you should be using in your hiring outreach – and why
- How to advertise openings via social media without triggering a lawsuit (the EEOC is targeting employers who inadvertently discriminate with their online ads)
- What you can and cannot do with candidate information you find online (based on actual court cases)
- The policies – and best practices – you need to make sure hiring managers aren't doing their own unauthorized searches
- What the EEOC, DOL, NLRB and FCRA say you can and cannot do
- The difference between Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, Instagram, etc. – and how to handle each one
- Which questions you can ask employees and applicants about their online activities – and which you shouldn't
- Are current employees' violent or racist postings mere "venting" … or warnings of workplace danger that you need to act on?
Discover how to draft a social media policy for all employees to follow – one that minimizes your legal risk and maximizes your chance of finding and retaining the best workers. You'll learn how to respond to common social media revelations (for applicants and employees) such as:
- Disclosure of criminal behavior, offensive conduct or extreme political beliefs
- Obvious disclosure of disability, race or other protected characteristics
- Offensive commentary that would violate your company standards (sexist, racist language and the like)
- Bad-mouthing present or past employers
The new rules of online recruiting include many legal landmines. In just 75 minutes, you'll learn how to navigate this brave new world to stay in compliance … and out of trouble!
Sincerely,
Pat DiDomenico, Editorial Director
HR Specialist
P.S. Your satisfaction is unconditionally guaranteed. If Online Recruiting & Hiring fails to meet your needs, we will refund every penny you paid – no hassles, no questions asked.
Online Recruiting & Hiring:
About Your Speaker:
Anniken Davenport is a noted employment law attorney and the editor of the HR Specialist state employment law newsletter series. She has authored several books, including Bullet-Proof Your Employee Handbook and Overtime & Other Tricky Pay Issues, published by HR Specialist. She is the co-author of the upcoming Labor & Employment Law for the 21st Century by Prentice Hall. Anniken has served as a professor at Penn State University, where she taught business law and HR management, and she directed the Legal Studies Program at Wilson College. Her legal career includes representing government units in discrimination and other employment law cases and representing school districts in labor negotiations.
Credit Hours:
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