Is Your Name Important?

So, what's in a name? Is the name that appears on your employment applications, resumes, and cover letters that big of a deal? The purpose of this article is to discuss the possible impact of first and last names on a person's career trajectory in nursing and non-nursing fields. Nurses Announcements Archive Article

For starters, I will reveal that I am an African-American female with a very common anglicized first and last name. I am also friendly with a small handful of nurse managers, staff development personnel, and others who have at least some responsibility for hiring candidates. The tidbits that I have learned during my time in the nursing profession are nothing short of eye-opening.

To quickly get to the point, a person's name can affect his or her career trajectory, either positively or negatively, due to a myriad of reasons. First of all, first names in the United States are largely generational and can shed some light on a person's approximate age range. Secondly, certain first and last names can reveal a candidate's racial-ethnic background. Lastly, some small-minded recruiters, human resources personnel, and hiring managers might skip the employment applications with names that are perceived as too difficult to pronounce.

Names are generational.

A person's name might give clues about her age. First names such as Sadie, Lucille, Norma, and Pauline were popular more than seventy years ago, and as a result, women with these names are more likely to be elderly. Linda, Deborah, Pamela, and Judith were common during the Baby Boomer generation, which is why many middle-aged women have these names. In fact, one of my previous places of employment had multiple workers named Pamela, and all of them were middle-aged.

Jennifer was the number one name in America between 1970 and 1985 according to the Census Bureau, so many females from Generation X and Generation Y will have this wildly popular name. I was born in the early 1980s and many of the girls in my age range were called Amanda, Nicole, Melissa, Megan, and Alexis. A fair number of Millennial generation applicants will be named Emily, Kayla, Emma, Nevaeh (Heaven spelled backwards) and other names that are trendy today.

Names might reveal one's racial-ethnic background.

I'm an African-American female with a very common anglicized first and last name, so anyone who sees my name on a resume or application would not be able to determine my race unless they've seen me. However, names such as Tameka, DeShaun, and Tanisha are stereotypically 'black-sounding.' Names like Margarita, Miguel, and Armando are 'Latino-sounding.' Names such as Chang and Thuy sound Asian.

Having an idea of the candidate's racial-ethnic background might help or hurt, depending on the circumstances. For example, resumes with white-sounding names have a 50% greater chance of receiving a callback when compared to those with African American names, according to a study performed for the National Bureau of Economic Research by the University of Chicago's Marianne Bertrand and Massachusetts Institute of Technology's Sendhil Mullaina (Dickler, 2009). However, the recruiter or HR director who is purposely seeking a diverse group of candidates might call the applicants with ethnic-sounding names.

A job application with a difficult-to-pronounce name might be skipped.

If the name on your resume looks hard to pronounce and/or isn't gender-specific, it's quite plausible that a hiring manager might (consciously or not) reject it for that reason, alone (Pongo Blog, 2012). It does not stop there. Evidently, those with easy-to-pronounce names benefit from their name's pronounce-ability at work with more positive performance evaluations and higher status in the hierarchy (Paggi, n.d.).

So, is your name that big of a deal to your overall success? Although the impact of names cannot be ignored, I believe that other factors, such as work ethic, interpersonal skills, ambition, educational attainment, willingness to learn, and personal drive, are major contributors to a person's career trajectory.

Work-Cited / References

Dickler, J. (August 27, 2009). Does the name on your résumé affect your job search? CNN. Retrieved October 27, 2012

Pongo Blog. (2012). Good Resume But No Interviews? It Could Be Your Name. Retrieved October 27, 2012

Many years ago, I was given the following bit of advice - Before you actually name your child, go to you back door, and shout out that name as loud as you can, at least 3 or 4 times. Because that's what you'll be doing for the next 20 years! If it still sounds good, then okay!

And names do account for more than we realize. I worked in the nursery when 'Roots' came out, and many people started using African and Muslim names without knowing their meanings. Many girls were given masculine names, because the long 'e' sound sounds feminine to the American ear, such as Kareem, or Shareef.

I have a name that can be either masculine or feminine, and was given reminders to sign up for the draft!

And my older son has a Hebrew name that is totally masculine, but was usurped by Disney to use in "The Little Mermaid"!

He has done very well for himself, so far!

I make few assumptions based on names!

Specializes in cardiac CVRU/ICU/cardiac rehab/case management.

I like to joke around with my patient's a lot so sometimes I will say "My name is "Julie " but if you don't like me it's Mary ".

Sometimes I will do the same thing if I'm standing with my manager who is name 'Carol" . In front of her I will say "My name is 'Julie' but if you don't like me it's Carol .Just remember ,I love to sing at Christmas "

Seriously though I work in a hospital that has 104 languages spoken in a 10 mile radius. (which can be exhausting ) It usually takes me about 2 weeks to get the new co-workers name down pat. I long to work alongside a Tom, Joe, Michelle or Pat.

Thankfully pt are forgiving and it is a continual source of amusement to them when I try to pronounce their names. Then after they have a laugh at me I usually follow it up with "Ah...there ya go...another grand Irish name "

I got a call the other day from a pt who said her name was "Rdasha". I had never heard of it so I asked 'Is that spelled like it sounds?". "No" she replied "It is the letter R followed by a dash ('Like the dash key ' ) then an A . Spelled " R- A"

Okay, I officially give up ! I have only just mastered that Xiang is pronounced 'Sho " . I'm either too old or rigid but "7", "apple""Tuesday" or "R-A " are probably not names that to me scream "Hire " .

I like my name, because it's a name that I've seen used by multiple ethnic groups. My name is Indian, with Sanskrit origins, but I've met Israeli, Chinese, German, and Mexican women with my name.

Specializes in cardiac CVRU/ICU/cardiac rehab/case management.

My son has an Irish first name followed by an Italian last name. For the sake of discussion make it Brian D'Angelo. He came home from kindergarten graduation rehearsal and said "They are saying my name wrong". I thought he meant the pronunciation and as I was used to that I didn't pay much more attention to it.That is until Graduation came and they called out "Brian O 'Connolly "with that our Brian got up marched over and collected his certs So, It seems no matter what your name is people take one look at you and make their own conclusions.

I am Italian and my first name is definitely uncommon, Nella, but it's easy to pronounce. My last name, however, is not! People are always calling my chinchilla since it sounds that way :lol2:

Specializes in Med/Surge, Psych, LTC, Home Health.

"If the name on your resume looks hard to pronounce and/or isn't gender-specific, it's quite plausible that a hiring manager might (consciously or not) reject it for that reason, alone (Pongo Blog, 2012). It does not stop there. Evidently, those with easy-to-pronounce names benefit from their name's pronounce-ability at work with more positive performance evaluations and higher status in the hierarchy (Paggi, n.d.)."

Well, my daughter is doomed. However, I did give her a very common, pronounceable MIDDLE

name and have even told her that she is welcome to start going by it, if she ever wants to.

Not that *I'm* going to call her that. =)

I myself have a boring first name; wish I had something more interesting.

I have never had an issue with my name (Allison) but my husband has an unusual name. Many years ago, I had just started a job and after a few weeks brought some pictures of my daughter in to put on my desk. I kept seeing my coworkers going over to look at them and I thought they were just admiring my gorgeous daughter. Nope, later one of them told me "Hey, your daughter is white". And my reply, "Well, duh" The coworkers had wrongly assumed that my husband was black because his name is Durel. I guess that there are more African American men with that name than 40+ balding, white guys..... Who knew???

With today's melting pot we will continue to have people of various races and ethnicity's that will borrow names from other cultures. Using a person's name to make assumptions is fast becoming a way to make oneself look foolish.

I , also, am somewhat of a name nerd, too. My own name is very common for my generation (baby boomers) and is the same as one of the Kings of Israel. It means "beloved". The crux of my annoyance with some names is that some parents choose them for the "sound" and not the meaning. I am (allegedly) a caucasian male, but have been fortunate enough to have friends and acquaintances of all sorts of ethnic backgrounds, and some have unusual names. I feel concern for some of the children who are given names because the parent likes the phonetic sounds of the name (e.g. one child I knew named VaShae), but with no built-in clues of how to pronounce it. I also note the use of unnecessary and improperly used accents, apostrophes, and diacritical marks of all sorts: I once knew a young girl who was upset that the teacher couldn't pronounce her daughter's name at first sight--"Anybody knows that Roc(apostrophe)(capital K)iya spells "rockKEEya" " I'm sorry, but no, everybody doesn't know that. On the other hand, another friend named her daughter "Jamilah", which is of Arabic origin, and a very pretty name, meaning "beautiful". And then there are the names that are the result of miss-reading or miss-spelling, e.g. "Oprah" instead of "Orpah", and a football players name spelled "Laveranues" but pronounced "la-VERN-ee-us". I am concerned for the development of children who must always be defending their names, and who wonder why they can't find their name on a little license plate at the dollar store. But, as the Romans said, "De gustibus non disputandem est."

Specializes in geriatrics.

I would agree that names may affect a candidate's application, dependent on the bias of the hiring manager. My name also would not reveal that I am biracial, which in my opinion, shouldn't matter one way or another. Interesting article.

Specializes in ER, ICU.

Good article. I think it is incumbent on parents to give a good first name to their children. Obviously the last name usually isn't changed. But intentionally giving a "creative" first name that results in a lifetime's worth of headache is not good parenting. A name should be easy to use, and with a little thought it can be more individual than a common name.

Specializes in Med-Surg, Geriatrics, Wound Care.

I wonder if my name has had an effect on my career. I have a uniquely spelled name. People usually mispronounce and spell it. I didn't really consider until recently that it could be considered an "ethnic" name. I wonder if I spelled it a more common way if my job prospects would change. Something to think about, I guess.

Specializes in FNP, ONP.

My parents did me a great favor by giving me a traditional, rather patrician name. It certainly hasn't hurt me. We did our children similar a kindness. No one will ever misspell or mispronounce it, or take them for the wrong gender. They will not be bullied or mocked due to their name. They will probably be the only one in their class, but not definitely. Simple, classic, elegant, straight forward. Not the least bit "trendeigh."