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Ex-Google, Amazon recruiters advise job seekers: Don't use 'open to work' badge on LinkedIn

'It is the biggest red flag' in a job candidate, Nolan Church, former Google HR executive and current CEO of salary data company FairComp said. Agreeing with him, career coach Lindsay Mustain, who had worked with Amazon as a recruiter, explained that when it comes to recruiting...

April 21, 2024 / 19:08 IST
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LinkedIn users can add the 'open to work' badge to their profiles by clicking their profile picture and then frames to choose the badge. (Image credit: Unsplash)
LinkedIn users can add the 'open to work' badge to their profiles by clicking their profile picture and then frames to choose the badge. (Image credit: Unsplash)

Two former HR executives from Google and Amazon have a piece of advice for job seekers--don't use the "open to work" badge on LinkedIn. While the platform had introduced the feature to help recruiters connect with possible candidates, using it may keep job seekers from getting better opportunities and better pay, they said.

“It is the biggest red flag” in a job candidate, Nolan Church, former Google recruiter and current CEO of salary data company FairComp, told CNBC Make It. “There is a truism in recruiting that the best people are not looking for jobs,” he said, adding that recruiters perceive that such people would not be advertising that they’re looking for work.

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Church, who spent almost three years at Google, told the publication that the green "open to work" badge on profile photos suggests that the individual would consider taking any role whatsoever.

"It actually feels to a hiring manager like desperation," he said, adding that "recruiting is like dating" and that "you have to make the other side feel like you're exclusive." In a post on X, Church also called it "the worst social media feature ever pushed to production".