Your digital footprint is about the traces you leave on online and that others leave about you. It includes
It relates to your work, volunteering, and your social life.While you may reserve certain behaviour for particular platforms, others won't make that distinction. We therefore recommend that you delete out-of-date profiles and posts/photographs that you consider inappropriate for colleagues/peers/family to see.
Search for yourself, a peer or supervisor to find out what the web says about them. If it is about you, are there any surprises? Is it current? Is there anything that you want to change/delete?
Or use duckduckgo.com, a search engine that doesn't track your searches, store personal information or follow you with adverts. Unlike Google it will deliver the same results to everyone, regardless of your search history.
Here are some tips when tidying up your profiles:
Check your settings to show:
Aim for consistency as there's bound to be someone with a name like yours:
When the profiles are up to date, you can increase traffic to them by adding links to your email signature.
As you are already on the web, it makes sense to improve the quality and quantity of that information so that visitors to sites get a representative picture of you.
Think about what it is that you want to communicate: personal life, current work, potential employment, wider set of skills, or content e.g. blog? Secondly, consider your potential audience: peers, colleagues, potential employers, academy, or the wider public?
Structure your entries by providing a headline to grab attention, a summary for more information and evidence to demonstrate it.
This is the way you engage yourself online in relation to your profession, including your attitudes, actions and your adherence to relevant professional codes of conduct. Developing a professional presence online requires (regular) reflection on the use of social media, the sites and language used and the (automatic) links between online accounts.
The University of Edinburgh, Managing your Digital Footprint
Your online conduct should be underpinned by integrity, respect, dutifulness, honour and accountability.
Remember that the world is watching you and consider very carefully the topics that you comment on and the language that you use.
Consider following an online code of conduct, such as this one from the University of Leeds.
I will:
I won’t:
If you have access to profile space on your departmental/faculty website, make use of it. This is free space to promote and link to your work. If anyone searches for you they will be able to see that you are a legitimate member of the university and it will add authenticity to posts you make elsewhere on the web. Write about your current research and showcase any talks you given or publications.
Linkedin is a networking site for all sectors which gives you the opportunity to create an online portfolio, which is useful at all stages of your career, not just when job hunting. Make sure it is up-to-date, now and in the future. It isn't a CV, though you can link to one. Instead make a readable and evidenced account of your activities to date. Include media (such as Powerpoint presentations - see Slideshare below) where you can. Look at peers for ideas. It is also useful to find out what others have done in their careers to help you plan your own and to connect with others. If you are contacting someone you don't know that well, make it personal; for example, include a reminder about which conference you heard them talk at.
Academia.edu and ResearchGate are profile sites which are geared towards researchers. They are, however, still for-profit enterprises. They work in a similar way to Linkedin to showcase your talents and connect you with other researchers. While they may encourage you to upload your research papers you should be wary of the copyright restrictions around your research and even if you upload a pre-print, which may be permitted by the publisher, they are not a recognised repository for Open Access that meets funder requirements. You should instead deposit in the University's repository, Apollo, and add links to your profiles. For more information about Open Access, look at our tab 'Publishing your research'.
Any published author can set up a profile on Google Scholar. Click on the menu and select 'My profile'. Fill in the details and select the articles that match your name (you can fine tune this later). Choose to make your account public or private. You will then have access to citations statistics about you, your articles and books, as indexed in Google Scholar. You can cite these on your web page profile. Find out more about citations on our Measuring the Impact of your Research tab
The informed researcher is both a consumer and producer. Engaging with social media is a way of following what is going on in your field, as well as talking about what you are doing.
Writing a blog is like creating a personal webpage, but generally the material is presented in chronological order. You could use this for promotional purposes or reflection on the research process. It may be that you want to share your thoughts and develop a following. Alternatively, it could be private journal that helps remind you what you have read and thought about when it comes to writing up. Also, just like Twitter you can follow others and receive a notification every time they publish. There are lots of different platforms, but more than quarter of all blogs use Wordpress.
If you are interested in reflective blogging, watch this short video from the Moore Library:
This can be used in three ways:
Promotion - tell people about your research, publications, talks. Link to more in-depth information on a departmental webpage, conference site or blog. There are lots of people going through the same process as you and they'll be interested to hear your approaches to dealing with the challenges of research.
Sociological research - there is a wealth of qualitative data available from individual subjects about current world events, and organisations such as NGOs, governments, and influential individuals.
Keep up to date - follow peers, key academics, conferences and hashtags specific to your field to monitor developments and publications.
You may have noticed entries in your bibliography relating to the same person, but where their name appears differently. The may have a first name and surname, or an initial and surname, or a first name, initial and surname. This can make it difficult for you to track their publications and for the author to track their citations. An ORCiD gets around this problem. This is a unique number that belongs to you and moves with you through your career, regardless of whether you change you name or it is printed differently by a publisher. Link your ORCiD number to your Symplectic profile.
Upload presentations that you deliver in college (such as at the Wolfson Research Event), your department, or at workshops and conferences as PowerPoint shows or pdfs. Provide a detailed description so that it can be found easily on search engines and Slideshare itself.
Remember that your notes will be stored with the slideshow and so you may want to edit the presentation before uploading it.
Showcase your research by linking to the show to from your profile on the University website or Linkedin (who own Slideshare).
Have a look at our guides to two of the most popular forms of social media for researchers:
Managing you footprint is not just about tailoring the information that you put online, it also relates to the information about you that others have posted on the web. There are several tools to help you keep an eye out this:
Set up a Google alert to inform you whenever you are mentioned online. Remember to carefully construct the alert in order to exclude false hits. This is especially important if have a common name. Be as specific as you can and include terms relevant to you and your research.
Me and My Shadow - rather ominously talks not about footprints but digital shadows. This ethical website contains lots of information on how data about you is being collected, what is being done with it and, most usefully, alternatives to mainstream services.
Social Profiling Tool for Graduates - Use this tool to find and delete old social profiles, lock down social media profiles (make invisible unless they know you), find which social profiles you’re lacking and carry out research for job seeking.
Apply Magic Sauce - created by the Psychometrics Centre at the University of Cambridge, this is a personalisation engine that accurately predicts psychological traits from digital footprints of human behaviour. Part of this is revealing where you appear on the web.
My permissions - a service to check which apps have access to your personal data