Nowadays, hiring managers Google you. Getting hired involves more than a pretty resume or even a great interview. They skim your social profiles, photos, and comments to see if you’re a safe bet. A clean, consistent presence helps you pass that sniff test and supports your resume. You don’t need your socials to be polished and perfect, but anything you share publicly shouldn’t counteract your resume or interview. And it definitely shouldn’t be inflammatory or hateful. Do these quick sweeps before you apply, then keep them on a schedule.
1. Start With A Self‑Search

Open a private window and search your name, email, and old usernames. Check images and the first three pages of results. Note anything off and fix what you control. For more ideas on where to look, UPenn career services shares a checklist for cleaning up your online presence.
2. Lock Down Logins With MFA

Strong privacy settings only work if your logins are safe. Turn on multifactor authentication on email and every social app. CISA’s quick guide on requiring multifactor authentication is the fastest way to do it. Add a backup code and remove old devices.
3. Tighten Privacy And Tagging

Review who can see posts, who can tag you, and whether face recognition is on. Set review for tags so nothing goes live without your say‑so. Repeat after big life events or app updates. Take screenshots of your final settings.
4. Nuke What Doesn’t Age Well

Scroll back and delete posts that read as mean, reckless, or sloppy. Hide old memes, pile‑ons, and anything that clashes with the job you want. The University of Maryland Global Campus lists practical steps for a pre‑interview social media clean‑up.
5. Clean Up Photos And Tags

Remove yourself from photos you wouldn’t want on a projector in an interview. Ask friends to take down or crop anything that crosses your line. Replace your profile pic and header with clear, recent images.
6. Fix Bios So They Match Your Resume

Your headline and About sections should echo your resume and target role. Cut inside jokes, dated quotes, and vague job titles. Add a city, niche, and a contact email you monitor. Keep it the same across platforms.
7. Audit Likes, Follows, And Groups

Your likes and groups paint a picture, even when you’re quiet. Unfollow feeds that look unprofessional, and leave groups you don’t want a recruiter to see. Curate a few industry follows to show signal, not noise.
8. Polish LinkedIn First

Finish the basics: photo, headline, About, skills, and recent work. Use a few bullets with outcomes, not duties. The Labor Department’s CareerOneStop explains how to use social media in a job search so your profile helps recruiters find you.
9. Upgrade Passwords And Use A Manager

Short, recycled passwords are a risk. NIST’s authentication guidance favors long passphrases and password managers; see SP 800‑63B. Update the top five accounts you care about most. Turn on alerts for unusual logins.
10. Don’t Delete Your Rights

You can clean tone without erasing lawful talk about pay or working conditions. The NLRB confirms your right to discuss wages and work issues with coworkers. Keep screenshots if there’s a dispute and route concerns to HR.
11. Expect Background Checks—Know Your Rights

Some employers buy reports about you, with your permission. The FTC’s explainer on employee background checks spells out what consent looks like and how errors should be handled. Save copies of anything you sign and check your reports for mistakes.
12. Remove Old Docs And Oversharing

Search your files and cloud drives for public resumes with home addresses, phone numbers, or references. Lock down folders and turn off public sharing links. Delete screenshots that show client or internal info.
13. Trim Third‑Party App Logins

Open each platform’s “apps and websites” section and revoke anything you don’t use. Old quiz apps and games can still read your profile. Reconnect fresh only when needed.
14. Turn Off Location Histories

Disable public check‑ins and past location archives. Clear old map histories that show your home and routines. You control what’s visible; safety beats convenience.
15. Set A Name Alert

Create a search alert on your name and employer. Catch new mentions fast so you can correct mistakes or thank supporters. Revisit every quarter and after big news.
16. Make Cleanup A Habit

Schedule a 30‑minute sweep each month. The University of Wisconsin’s digital footprint guide explains why regular reviews prevent messes; start with this simple maintenance plan. Small, steady edits beat a weekend panic every time.











