Red flags: How agency execs weed out bad hires

Hiring the right candidate has always been a challenge. But agencies are now competing for talent at a time when unemployment is low — and they are strapped for cash, grappling with extended payment windows and companies offering project work or taking marketing in-house. Sussing out who might be the best fit for a job depends a lot on the in-person interview. Digiday caught up with agency executives to find out their interview red flags — the signs of who’s not right to hire.

‘Jumpers’
My biggest red flags [are] related to how “jumpers” annotate their accomplishments on resumes. While I acknowledge that it’s natural in our industry to hop around, there are red flags in a candidates’ resume where they make claims to launching departments or growing businesses – all in less than a year. I believe it takes six months at least to get comfortable in any new job. So when I see candidates boasting solving or building something in such a short time, my alarm bells go off. — Gila Wilensky, Essence’s svp and head of media activation

Low risk-taking
When we recruit, we think in terms of “casting” versus filling a specific role, the intention being that just as when casting a play, you have to look at how the individual fits in with the other players as well as the overall narrative. In our case that narrative is about leading change versus following it. So a red flag for us is someone who seems to be married to a linear, obvious path, [who] isn’t comfortable with taking informed risks, or who doesn’t demonstrate interest about the broader economic and cultural issues that influence our clients’ business. —Stacy DeRiso, PHD’s U.S. COO

There is no ‘I’ in team
I ask each candidate, “What’s the best use of your time and talent at an agency like ours?” Most of the time, upon being asked that question, candidates will pause and say something along the lines of “Wow, no one has ever asked me that.” And then they will proceed to give a clear, thoughtful and true answer of how their specific talents could help us here, based on the research they’ve done. If a candidate launches into a prebaked, work-life history, I can tell right away they aren’t very nimble thinkers. If a candidate is an “I”-driven storyteller when it comes to relaying successes, it’s a pretty safe bet that collaborating ain’t their strong suit, which is a deal breaker in a creative-first agency. The candidates who don’t ask real-time (versus preplanned) questions let me know they are likely too rigid to be happy and successful in an environment as fast and iterative as ours. —Sue Gillan, OKRP’s chief talent officer

Lack of curiosity
Here’s my big interviewing “red flag”: I learn more about a candidate by listening to what they don’t say, as opposed to what they do say. My biggest red flag is [a] lack of curiosity in our agency and their career pathway. I love it when candidates ask me a ton of questions about the agency, [its] culture, the work and what their career pathway would look like at DNA. I look for candidates [who] are curious, humble and hungry to build on their careers.
—Charlene Short, director of talent and culture for DNA in Seattle

Evidence and hard data
The older I get, the more disloyal I am to my instincts. What I mean by that is that it’s not just about enjoying someone’s company and liking their resume. Evidence and hard data are key. I heard a speaker recently note that before hiring someone, it would be really valuable to see the candidate’s reviews by Uber drivers, for example. I love that idea. In an interview you want to challenge and probe to see what’s behind the words on a resume and make sure that the individual’s experiences match expectations. Of course, we look for some signs of the things we as a company hold dear — honesty, integrity, fairness, creativity, general open-mindedness and an interest … in the world.
—Joe Kelly, IPG’s svp of talent.

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WTF is Chrome’s SameSite cookie update?

On February, 4, Google is set to roll out a new Chrome update that promises a bunch of new features designed to make the browser faster and more secure — including a new approach to cookies.

The SameSite update will require website owners to explicitly state label third-party cookies that will be used on other sites. Cookies without the proper labelling won’t work in the Chrome browser, which has 64% of the overall browser market, according to Stacounter.

What is the change?
Google first announced in May last year that cookies that do not include the “SameSite=None” and “Secure” labels won’t be accessible by third parties, such as ad tech companies, in Chrome version 80 and beyond. The Secure label means cookies need to be set and read via HTTPS connections.

Right now, the Chrome SameSite cookie default is: “None,” which allows third-party cookies to track users across sites. But from February, cookies will default into “SameSite=Lax,” which means cookies are only set when the domain in the URL of the browser matches the domain of the cookie — a first-party cookie.

Any cookie with the “SameSite=None” label must also have a secure flag, meaning it will only be created and sent through requests made over HTTPs. Meanwhile, the “SameSite=Strict” designation restricts cross-site sharing altogether, even between different domains that are owned by the same publisher.

Mozilla’s Firefox and Microsoft’s Edge say they will also adopt the SameSite=Lax default.

Why is Google making this update?
Third-party cookies can make people vulnerable to malicious tracking, data leakage and can also make them susceptible to what are known as cross-site request forgery attacks. A user might click on a nefarious link in an email that allows a bad actor the ability to log into their banking website, for example.

“In order to move the web ecosystem to a more healthy place, we are changing the default behavior for when SameSite is not specified to automatically default to a more secure option rather than a less secure option,” said a Google spokesperson.

What do publishers need to do in order to get ready for February?
Publishers can begin testing whether their sites are affected by going to chrome://flags and enabling #same-site-by-default-cookies and #cookies-without-same-site-must-be-secure to see whether anything breaks. They should also migrate to HTTPS secure pages, if they haven’t done so already.

Google is encouraging publishers to review the alerts in their developer tools to check whether vendors, including ad tech and analytics providers, are setting or accessing third-party cookies on their sites without the correct labeling.

What are the risks?
Sometimes publishers use third-party cookies for logins and remembering user preferences when they should really be using first-party cookies, according to Kevin Joyner, director of planning and insight at digital marketing agency Croud. This tends to happen when a publisher owns a number of different websites and domains — so publishers looking to maintain single sign-ons spanning multiple domains would need to ensure their cookie configuration is compatible.

The biggest potential fallout could be for vendors who have built up cookie-reliant audience databases. Adobe, for example, has warned in a blog post that cookie matching might decrease for its Audience Manager customers as there’s a possibility some of its partners might not make the necessary changes in time.

“The issue is the new standard cookies will not be compatible with the old cookie,” said Joyner. “It means that marketing pool is suddenly useless.”

Is this the beginning of the cookieapocalypse?
Not quite. Experts are split as to whether the SameSite update is a precursor to Google further tightening its wider cookie policies, in a similar direction as Apple’s Intelligent Tracking Prevention and Firefox’s Enhanced Tracking Protection — not least as Google has an advertising business of its own to protect.

Chrome already offers users the ability to block third-party cookies and to clear all their cookies. The SameSite change should allow users more nuanced control of their privacy settings as first-and third-party cookies will be more accurately designated — so they can clear ad-tracking cookies but leave their on-site login details and preferences unaffected.

But further down the line, Google has already been hinting at what a cookie-free web might look like. At last year’s Chrome developer conference in November, Michael Kleber, a Google software engineer who works on privacy and tracking prevention in Chrome, spoke about shifting from cookies to “more right-sized APIs” that don’t allow for unfettered tracking of individuals across the web. Chrome is also exploring techniques such as federated learning of cohorts to continue to allow behavioral ads to work.

The post WTF is Chrome’s SameSite cookie update? appeared first on Digiday.

Orangetheory Highlights Benefits Beyond the Gym in New Global Campaign

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The #1 Reason to Fire Your #1 | LinkedIn TalentConnect Keynote

The #1 Reason to Fire Your #1 | LinkedIn TalentConnect Keynote
Company culture is the most important metric when it comes to the business’s overall performance. Even one toxic employee can bring down the efficiency of the entire company and can go unscathed because they are a “top-performing employee”. The truth is that “top performer” is actually a hidden cost and while it may appear that they are doing better than the others, it’s really because their toxicity is bringing down everyone else’s performance and if that toxic employee was let go everyone else would be happier and more efficient. Make employee morale the #1 priority of your business and the profits will follow.

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Instagram’s US User Growth Rate Dips In Latest eMarketer Report

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Despite Uptick in Holiday Sales, Don’t Expect Retail Bankruptcies to Subside

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