Usually no. Learn why a work LinkedIn account can create visibility, access, and boundary problems during job applications, plus the safer setup most job seekers should use instead.
Should you use your work LinkedIn account for job interviews? Learn why employer visibility, browser overlap, profile signals, and account-control issues usually make a work-linked setup the wrong choice.
Usually no. A separate LinkedIn account for job applications only helps in narrow cases; for most job seekers, cleaning up one profile and separating contact channels works better.
Using your personal LinkedIn account for job applications is often fine, but only if your profile is professional, intentional, and not exposing more than you mean to share.
Should you use your personal LinkedIn account for job interviews? Learn when it helps, where privacy and profile-activity risks show up, and how to keep your job search more controlled.
Should you use your personal GitHub account for job interviews? Learn when it helps, when it creates privacy risk, and how to present code professionally without oversharing.
A practical guide to deciding whether a separate GitHub account helps in job interviews, plus the privacy, screen-sharing, and portfolio trade-offs to weigh.
Usually no. Using a work GitHub account for job interviews can expose company ownership, SSO ties, commit history, and audit trails that are better kept separate from your job search.
Usually only if your existing GitHub mixes private experiments, messy public history, or work-owned access with the version of yourself you want employers to review. Learn when a separate GitHub account helps, when it backfires, and what to do instead.
Use a disposable inbox to request deck staining quotes, compare contractors, save the details you need, and avoid long-term follow-up spam in your main email.