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Ask HN: Does my Twitter handle belong on my resume?

4 points by ByteMuse 14 years ago · 5 comments · 1 min read


I am an aspiring web developer and have recently started getting active on twitter, posting mostly about development and nothing incriminating. Should I put my handle on my resume?

On one hand, it shows that I am active in the community and some things that I have been working on.

On the other hand, it may be distracting on a resume and I am unsure how an employer might view it.

Any advice would be greatly appreciated!

AndrewGCook 14 years ago

If you were applying to work at my start-up, chances are I would try to find you on the Internets anyway, and I would greatly appreciate you saving me time by just providing me your information up front.

If you provide me links, it also ensures I find the right accounts for you, and not someone with the same name. Finding the wrong accounts and thinking it's you could mean the difference of me actually calling you or not.

StackExchange accounts relevant to the position you're applying for are also good to include (if you use the service).

  • ByteMuseOP 14 years ago

    Thanks for the advice! I definitely want to work with startups and small teams, so this seems quite applicable.

    I am pretty active on Stack Overflow and Github, so I think I'll put those on my resume as well.

Joakal 14 years ago

The resume is not a single statement of your career. The closest metaphor is a personalised advertisement flyer to a business for the position. In other words, would showing social links on your resume assist the 'customer' to want to hire you?

If I was hiring a web developer; Yes, it would help to put it on the resume because there may be conflicting account names or save me some effort because I'd check anyway.

In fact, put down hobby projects (eg github) as it will show them that you're also active with source control, delivery, etc.

davidandgoliath 14 years ago

You would save them the effort looking -- I'm sure anyone responsible for hiring these days would search nonetheless. Like you mentioned it shows you're active in the field & interested in development 'outside' of work, too.

joshontheweb 14 years ago

Nowadays when Im looking for work I just refer people to my homepage which links to my twitter, github, resume, and portfolio items. I think people are much more interested in your social accounts than your resume alone.

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