Wednesday, November 30, 2011

Social Media and Physician Recruiting

There is no doubt that the advent of social networking has been nothing short of prolific.  The world has grasped on to the network and friendships have been spawned all over the globe.  People meet on-line, in organized dating forums, people get married from those encounters, and people exchange ideas which spawn other connections.  There are no more agoraphobics thanks to the web because no one is afraid anymore.  Just look at the human statement that is YouTube and you will see for yourself everything that is the human condition.  So where do the networks go from here?  In my world they start to creep around the edges of how people find jobs and specifically how doctors find opportunities.  Nearly 90% of physicians reported that they used at least one social media site personally, according to a survey by the online physician learning collaborative QuantiaMD.  By those numbers, physicians are well ahead of the general adult population -- 65% of the general public use social media, according to a study published in August by the Pew Internet & American Life Project.  According to QuantiaMD, 87% of physicians make personal use of social media, but a lesser amount, 67%, use it professionally. And one thing that hasn't changed during those 18 months is the lack of patient-physician communication on social media.  One-third of the QuantiaMD survey respondents said they had received a friend request from a patient on Facebook. Three-quarters of the physicians declined those invitations. 


So how do physicians look for jobs?  Zeldis Research Associates was commissioned by the New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM) to do a survey in December 2010.  4,008 Surveys were sent out and 376 usable surveys were returned.  The results were as follow:
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  • 89% rated professional/personal referrals as useful in finding a job  
  • 15% rated social media as useful during a job search 
  • 50% used classified/recruitment sources in print 
  • 50% used classified/recruitment sources on-line 
  • The most important factor online was job quality 
  • 60% rated print and online versions as equal 
  • 70% use a mobile device & 67% of them are interested in using a job app 
  • Interest is highest for permanent positions at a hospital or group 
  • 97% of respondents were 40 years old or younger 
  • 50% were practicing physicians 
  • 88% started looking just prior to or during their last year of training.
As you can see the social networking "medical edition" is not a mainstream construct yet.  Physicians don't friend you, they don't invite you to their LinkedIn inner circle and they don't follow you on Twitter.  Why?  Because they have professional standards to uphold.  A recruit is not going to let you into their inner most space and allow you to rummage through their proverbial under wear drawer.  The wall between us is high and wide but not insurmountable.  If we cannot get into their private world then we are just going to have to invite them to our public world of hospital sites and group Facebook pages.  The information superhighway has new billboard space and it runs of the freeways of the social network.

Next topic:  How can hospitals use social media?............................

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