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Does a Lame E-Mail Address Really Matter?

theodp writes "Over at the Chicago Tribune, freelance writer Nancy Anderson makes an embarrassing confession. It's 2010 and she still has an AOL e-mail address. 'You've got to get rid of that AOL address,' her publicist sister told her five years ago. 'It's bad for your image.' Image, shmimage, Anderson thought. 'If I do good work,' she asks, 'does my e-mail address really matter?' Good question. Would an AOL e-mail address — or another 'toxic' e-mail address — influence your decision to hire someone?"

19 of 1,049 comments (clear)

  1. hell no! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    --
    turdeater@sexual-perverts.net

  2. Actually yes -- in some cases by weave · · Score: 5, Interesting

    If it's a technology person, that's a red flag. I'd expect them to at least have their own domain name. It doesn't cost THAT much and looks far more professional.

    Heck, even my cat has her own domain name.

    If it's a non-tech field, meh, I don't care that much. But I have to chuckle when I see a small business with a website and their own domain name, but still using @comcast or @aol on their business card for email.

    1. Re:Actually yes -- in some cases by fl!ptop · · Score: 5, Funny

      But I have to chuckle when I see a small business with a website and their own domain name, but still using @comcast or @aol on their business card for email.

      i can go one better - an attorney client has on his business cards name@laywers.com. except that the correct domain is lawyer.com. so every time he gives out a card he takes a pen and scratches out the 's'. yeah, that looks professional.

      --
      When you recognize love in another and realize how precious it is, everything else seems so insignificant.
  3. People aren't rational by 91degrees · · Score: 5, Insightful

    They will make judgements based on email addresses. They may be able to rationalise them. The rationalisations may or may not make sense but they will still make judgements.

    You can either change human nature or change your email address.

  4. Maybe by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Am I looking for a Cobol programmer or a .Net developer?

  5. Not the domain by Southpaw018 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Domain? No. Username? Yes.

    I really don't care if someone has an AOL email address, though I work in a non-tech industry, so it may be different for me. However, the username is important. Here in DC, if you're straight out of an internship and you still have an email along the lines of drinkingfiend01@gmail.com, that's a negative mark. Similarly, a friend of mine who works in HR in San Francisco gets resumes all the time with emails the likes of johnissogay@whatever.com. Yeah, it's SF, but that's still not work appropriate.

    --
    ACs are modded -6. I don't read you, I don't mod you, I don't see you. Don't like it? Don't be a coward.
  6. Re:yes by jimbolauski · · Score: 5, Funny

    Probably not as much as if you had your resume hosted on geocities.

    --
    Knowledge = Power
    P= W/t
    t=Money
    Money = Work/Knowledge so the less you know the more you make
  7. Re:yes by Moryath · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I see applications from people all the time that send in resumes with stupid email addresses. Right or wrong, we judge on this.

    Commonsense (and most recruiters or professional resume polishers) will tell you: Get a nice, professional-looking email address. Your.Name@SomeBusiness.com can work (though be careful of that, since if you leave your job it may go away). Your.Name at somewhere neutral (yahoo, hotmail, gmail, etc) works well. "Spicysluttybarbie@cheapdate.com" isn't going to look professional and unless you're applying for work as a stripper, isn't going to help you.

    An AOL email address, today, has you attached to a sinking ship. Right or wrong, people are going to judge by that. And right or wrong, having an AOL address will indicate to people that you aren't very good with technology, which does make it harder for you to convince them you can match the job's skills requirement later.

    My advice? Set your AOL address to a redirect, create a nice new, neutral/professional address, and go from there.

  8. hey! by potaz · · Score: 5, Funny

    Hey, I've actually done a comic on this subject! I'm firmly in the "I'd rather you have a cool email address then a suck-up one" camp.

    1. Re:hey! by Fanboy+Fantasies · · Score: 5, Funny

      holy shit it's you.

  9. Re:yes by 91degrees · · Score: 5, Funny

    Truly, You have a dizzying intellect.

  10. Re:yes by HangingChad · · Score: 5, Funny

    *@aol.com instantly kicks in my "dumbass...." reflex,

    And that was true at one time. But now it's almost like an internet antique. A retro fashion statement more than a declaration of internet arrested development.

    --
    That's our life, the big wheel of shit. - The Fat Man, Blue Tango Salvage
  11. Re:yes by mantis2009 · · Score: 5, Funny

    Excellent point. The labor market is so tight these days, workers can easily dictate their place of employment based on subtle criteria like email address prejudice.

  12. Re:yes by Rastl · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Your resume tells a prospective employer about you. An AOL address on your resume could tell the hiring manager that you are either slow to change or perhaps uncaring about what others think about you

    Or it could say that you've had an an e-mail address for a very long time and continue to use it because it's the one everyone knows. Yes, there's an institutional bias against AOL but I can't see where using the account that you've had for years should be any factor in whether or not someone looks at your resume.

    I know that one of the new 'job seeking advice rules' is to get a professional address on one of the main mail hosts but someone else said that Hotmail is an address they toss. So maybe another company has a bias against Yahoo. Or Gmail. You can't please everyone so I say just use the account you actually check and go from there.

    Then again if your address is IFeelPretty@AOL.com and your name is Frank then maybe, just maybe, you might want to consider getting another address for job seeking. There are some things the hiring manager doesn't need to infer. Really, they don't.

  13. Re:yes by TheLink · · Score: 5, Interesting

    On my CVs I use:

    <recipient tag>@<tag>.<mydomain>

    For example if I'm applying to Google it could be something like:

    googlehr@google.mydomain

    That way if my CV gets passed around later on, I might have an idea of who did it.

    My CV is also typically in html. It looks about the same on most browsers, but depending on the circumstances the reader might see different content. I might also get notification that someone is reading my CV :).

    So far I guess I'm lucky that it hasn't stopped me from getting jobs :).

    --
  14. Re:yes by plague3106 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Why is gmail better than hotmail or aol?

  15. Re:Oh please. by Alcimedes · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I think there's a misundertsanding as to how the hiring process works.

    First, you get a ton of resumes in. Far more than you could interview, so step one.

    Get rid of people.

    The first step in almost any hiring process is to figure out which people you don't want. This is where little stupid things screw you over. Depending on how many resumes a hiring manager has, having an @aol.com email address just might be enough to get your resume thrown in the "don't bother" pile. At the end of the day they still have 30 good, qualified people to start phone interviews with, what do they care if they had 31?

  16. Re: easier to have a webmail address by webreaper · · Score: 5, Interesting

    And more importantly, if you have a domain name you're not tied into the webmail provider OR your ISP.

    I have firstname@lastname.com as my email address (yes, it's a bit generic - ha!). All my email accounts on my domain are consolidated within a gmail account, but now they allow me to properly use my own SMTP server via GMail, I can completely invisibly do this. So nobody sending mail to or receiving mail from me knows it's all done by Gmail.

    Not only am I completely decoupled from my ISP, I'm also decoupled from my mail provider. If Google does something I don't like, or something better comes along (unlikely, but possible) I can switch my email instantly at no cost. Likewise, if I'm unlucky enough to have my mail suspended for some reason, again, I'm not at GMail's mercy.

    Complete lack of reliance on mail provider and ISP is the only way to be sure.

  17. Re:yes by adamdoyle · · Score: 5, Funny

    you are a genius... I'd hire you just for that