#CareerTok: I'm a recruitment expert - and these 4 viral TikTok work tips could destroy your career prospects
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- TikTok is rapidly becoming a hub for career advice, with over 183,000 videos under #CareerTikTok
- Many viral trends are offering āquick fixesā for work-life balance and career advancement
- But experts warn that some popular career tips could actually harm your reputation
- What seems like savvy advice could backfire with future employers or colleagues
- TikTok hacks may boost your visibility but risk damaging your professional credibility
- Recruitment professionals urge caution before adopting trendy career tactics shared online
TikTok, a bustling digital circus where career advice is dispensed with the same casual expertise as a teenager offering you skincare tips.
Some have even described it as the "new LinkedIn" for savvy millennials and Gen Zers.
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Hide AdWith over 183,000 videos under the #CareerTikTok hashtag, it seems thereās no shortage of experts and influencers - and possibly even a few mildly qualified people - offering their tips on everything from securing that elusive promotion to acing your 1:1 with the boss.
But, before you rush to update your CV with TikTok-sourced wisdom, consider that some of these oh-so-viral career tips might just tank your hard-earned reputation.
Thatās according to recruitment expert Adrien Kallel from RemotePeople, who says that these four trending career tips could actually put your career at risk.
While taking the power back from your employer, standing up for workersā rights and addressing your work-life balance is something to applaud, doing it publicly on a social media platform could affect future job opportunities.
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#BareMinimumMondays
Letās be honest, Mondays arenāt most peopleās favourite day. But the viral #BareMinimumMondays trend is taking the Monday blues to the next level, encouraging people to start the week by doing as little as possible.
āAlthough self-care is essential, regularly coasting on Mondays can easily give the impression of disengagement,ā Kallel warns. āIn the long run, it can make you seem indifferent to your responsibilities or career progression.ā
#QuitTok
If thereās a dramatic career moment to share, TikTok will hear about it, especially when it comes to āQuit Tok,ā the trend of posting resignation videos. While these clips might garner viral attention, they leave a permanent record of your departure.
āRecording your resignation may seem like an empowering moment, but itās also a public display of how you handle workplace transitions.
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Hide AdāFuture employers might view it as a signal that you could bring personal or company matters into the public eye, a potential concern for professional conduct.ā says Kallel.
#QuietQutting
āQuiet Quittingā has taken over TikTok, with people openly discussing their decision to meet only the bare minimum expectations at work.
Although some argue itās a way to maintain work-life balance, openly promoting quiet quitting can tarnish your reputation with current and future employers.
āTalking about āquiet quittingā signals a lack of commitment,ā Kallel points out. Employers are looking for individuals who are engaged and proactive, and this trend could make you appear disengaged or uninterested in growth.
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Hide AdāEven if youāre feeling burned out, discussing it in public might not be the best strategy for long-term career advancement.ā
#WhiteFonting
A TikTok hack known as "white fonting" suggests hiding job-related keywords in white text on CVs, making them invisible to the eye but still detectable by Applicant Tracking Systems (ATS).
Itās a tactic to game the system, boosting your CVās keyword score to land that all-important first interview.
āRecruiters have become savvy to this trick, and it often raises red flags.ā Kallel warns. āMany view it as dishonest, which risks damaging your reputation for integrity. Being caught out could harm your chances far more than a straightforward CV would.ā
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