What is a suitability application?

What is a suitability application?

A suitability statement, or personal statement, is used to depict the reasons you believe yourself to be a suitable candidate for a job role. This is an essential part of the job application process since it will highlight the characteristics and qualities that make you stand out from the crowd.

Can my employer see my text messages on my personal phone?

Your employer may monitor your personal text messages on your company cell phone. Employees of private companies should have no expectation of privacy when using company-issued hand-held communication devices.

Can my employer see what apps I use on my phone?

Technically speaking, a company can see the wireless carrier, country, make and model, operating system version, battery level, phone number, location, storage use, corporate email and corporate data. The company can also see the names of all the apps on the device, both personal and work-related.

Can my work WIFI see what I’m doing on my phone?

Yes, they can monitor any type of unencrypted traffic. They could potentially interfere with encrypted traffic to monitor that, as well, but for most workplaces, that’s not likely. They would not want HTTPS to break on their networks, for instance.

Can my employer see my Google searches?

Short answer: no, your Google Apps admin can NOT see your web search or YouTube history. Web/search history is certainly not something that Google Apps admin are alerted about or be able to view logs of, even in aggregate.

Can your employer look through your phone?

Here is the rule: an employer cannot violate an employee’s reasonable expectation of privacy. So if an employee has a reasonable expectation in the privacy of their cell phone (or any other mobile device), the employer cannot search it.

Can my employer see incognito?

Unfortunately, your employer can access your browsing history even if you use incognito mode. When you browse via Incognito Window, your browser doesn’t store your history, that’s true. But the owner of the network that you use (in your case, this is your office WiFi), can access the list of websites you’ve visited.