The Chartered Insurance Institute has warned its members to be wary of linking their social media accounts to their professional status.
The professional body with 125,000 members – including 40,000 in the PFS – says that members should ensure that their posts are conducted in a “professional manner” to avoid damaging their own reputation, that of their company and their professional bodies.
In a new 14-page guide, ‘Using social media professionally and safely’, the CII urges members to be aware of any conflicts of interest when expressing personal opinions.
Members should also ensure that any statements and content are ‘fact-checked.’
{loadposition hidden2}
The guide also includes advice on what to do when a post generates a negative response and how the CII’s Digital Companion to the Code of Ethics could help ensure insurance and personal finance professionals do not find their career “cancelled” due to a hasty Tweet.
Kathryn Knowles, managing director of Cura Financial Services and author of the guide’s foreword, said: “Financial services has always had the stereotype of being boring and full of middle-aged men. Social media allows us to show that this image is far from the truth. But even though it can be a wonderful place, it can also be negative.
“It’s easy to read a ‘tweet’ in an aggressive tone or write something in all innocence that is seen in a completely different context to what you intended. This can lead to anger and to-ing and fro-ing of point scoring, sometimes boiling into insults or more.
“It’s not nice when this happens, for anyone that is involved. It can change people’s perception of you and can potentially affect your professional image, and in more extreme cases your current and future work opportunities. It is great to see the CII putting together a social media guide, to help people within our sector to have more confidence in these platforms.”
Matthew Connell, director of policy and public affairs of the CII and Personal Finance Society, said: “Using social media can open a whole new world of opportunities but also places the user on an instantly exposed platform for the whole world to see.
“While corporate social media policies can help to navigate the purpose of a social media account, this is only beneficial in a professional capacity rather than a personal one. Users should feel able to be themselves online while remaining respectful of others. We hope our guide helps members feel empowered to make the most of social media.”
• The guide can be found here: https://www.cii.co.uk/media/10127251/cii-using-social-media.pdf
{loadmoduleid 444}
Leave a Reply