Should you use a separate phone number for career fairs? Learn when it helps, when your regular number is fine, and how to manage recruiter follow-up without exposing your main line everywhere.
Using your work email at career fairs can expose your job search, create access problems if you leave your employer, and mix recruiter follow-up with company systems. Here is when to avoid it and what to use instead.
Should you use your personal email for career fairs? Learn when it works, when a separate inbox is smarter, and how to protect your privacy without missing recruiter follow-up.
Usually yes—if you want privacy and less spam without losing real recruiter follow-up. The key is using a burner-style address that stays available long enough for the hiring window.
Yes—using a separate email for career fairs is usually smart. Learn when it helps, what kind of address to use, and how to balance recruiter follow-up with privacy and spam control.
Should you use your college email for career fairs? Learn when it helps, when it creates follow-up risk, and why a stable job-search inbox is usually the better choice.
Usually yes. A separate browser profile can make networking events cleaner and more private by reducing autofill leaks, account mix-ups, and messy follow-up across event tools and recruiter forms.
Should you use your college email for networking events? Learn when it helps, when it creates privacy or graduation risks, and what to use instead.
A custom domain email can work well for networking events if it is stable, professional, and easy to monitor. Learn when it helps, when it hurts, and how to use it without missing follow-up.
Should you use a custom domain email for informational interviews? Learn when it helps, when it creates trust or privacy issues, and how to use it without hurting follow-up.