Assuming that if the cubicles next to yours are
vacant, it is safe to use a normal conversational tone on the phone for
your job search discussions: Sound travels
in strange ways, depending on the structure of the building, time of day,
etc. Someone sitting two rows over from you might still be able to hear
your conversation.
Confiding in co-workers at your company about your
plans, even if you have reason to believe those people are also “looking”:
People you think you know can become unreliable. Maybe you have known them
for years and trust them implicitly. Unfortunately, that doesn’t
necessarily mean you can depend on their discretion. Whether or not they
mean to reveal your secret to the company, it can still happen through a
slip of the tongue. Ask yourself whether having them know is worth the
risk of exposure.
Asking for copies of your past performance
evaluations without a solidly plausible excuse:
If you have been receiving performance reviews, you should have kept a
copy of them at the time they were given and stored them where you had
easy access to them (at home, not at work). However, if you didn’t do
that, asking for them can raise a red flag unless you can give a good
reason, such as preparing for an upcoming review and wanting to go over
past reports to refresh your memory.
Posting your CV/resume on Internet job boards that
are accessible to all companies, including your own:
Generally speaking, job boards will not guarantee
confidentiality—even those that offer some kind of confidential option—and
there are few limitations on access except a company’s willingness to pay
a search fee, if there is one. You can try removing readily identifiable
information from your resume before posting it and also using an innocuous
email address, but that’s not an ironclad protection.
Failing to emphasize to recipients of your
CV/resume the fact that your search is highly confidential and your
information must be protected: You might
want to assume that intelligence and commonsense rule the actions of
recruiters, company HR staff, etc., but it is a dangerous assumption in a
confidential search. You need to tell them in plain English—and in
writing—that it is a confidential search and your current employer is not
to be made aware of it.
Contacting your company’s customers and
competitors without careful forethought and discretion:
It may well be that your employer’s customers and competitors are some of
your prime targets for the job search, because your current experience and
knowledge could be very useful to them. However, it is important that you
exercise caution in selecting and approaching both the companies and the
individuals you want to contact, especially if you work in an industry or
market-area that is a close-knit community.
Not keeping family members “in the loop” about
what’s going on and about the importance of maintaining secrecy in front
of “outsiders”: Close family members have
a right to know about something that is likely to affect their future as
well as your own. However, if they don’t realize the sensitivity of the
search, they may inadvertently reveal your activities to someone whom you
definitely prefer to keep in ignorance—such as your employer!
Giving your company phone number—landline or
cell—as a contact point, even if it is a direct line used just by you:
Company communications media (including voice mail) are risky tools in a
confidential search, partly because they are not totally
private and secure. Companies can and do access them if they feel they
have a reason to. Your personal cell phone, if you have one, and/or your
home phone number are much safer tools. There are also potential ethical
issues about using company resources for your search (this applies to
points #9 and #10 as well).
Using company email to send and receive job-search
communications and doing Internet searches at work:
The same argument applies about company access to these items as for the
phone system. You can’t protect them against scrutiny by the company, and
even if you delete email messages, they can be retrieved in a variety of
ways. As many people know by now, sites you visit via your company
computer can also be tracked, and job-search sites would be a complete
giveaway of your activities.
Storing copies of your job search materials on
your office computer or anywhere at work in physical (hard-copy) form:
It is a big mistake to have your confidential information even potentially
discoverable at work, no matter how careful you think you’re being about
it. Over-cautiousness on all fronts is a decided virtue in a confidential
job search!