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

Aside from hiring those with unique names, it is important to make sure that they spell a name correctly. I have a common name that has a unique spelling, and when someone has seen it 20 times, and still spells it incorrectly, that drives me crazy. It's rude, disrespectful, and shows how little they pay attention.

Specializes in Neuro ICU and Med Surg.
My friend wanted to name her baby cinnamin, and call her cin for short. Her husband did not go for it.

There are a couple of nurses who work in our ER named Cinnamon. I almost laughed when they told me their name.

Then there was Twinkles from the Detroit News who tried to sell me a subscription.

Specializes in Rehab, critical care.

Looks like I got mixed reviews on the issue. Without giving away the name, it is a more formal sounding, classic nick name if that makes any sense. I'll have to re-visit the issue when it's actually applicable, I guess lol. Thanks, though!

Specializes in Complex pedi to LTC/SA & now a manager.
Looks like I got mixed reviews on the issue. Without giving away the name, it is a more formal sounding, classic nick name if that makes any sense. I'll have to re-visit the issue when it's actually applicable, I guess lol. Thanks, though!

Again it depends on the name...using Bob, Bobby, Tommy, Mikey, Jenny, Jen, etc. very different than Meg, John, Nick, Maggie, Kate/Katie etc. that are now commonly used as formal first names.

It's all relative. Name bias is not uncommon, but for example if one lives in a community with a lot of Slavic and Latino immigrants it would generally be a non issue to hire someone named Katarzyna or Mania or Julio or Rodrigo. People look for the familiar which definitely varies by community.

Great article! It's very informative! I never thought of it that way but I do look at it the same way. You can tell lots about a person by their name. For instance, if their last name is foreign and first American meaning they were born in the states. Either that this person married to someone who is foreigner. My name altogether is unique and difficult to pronoun. I would not doubt it if a minute they see they toss it away in a not hiring pile.

Specializes in Public Health, L&D, NICU.

One of the Freakonomics books did a chapter on names. They really can affect you in later life. Names that scream "ghetto" or are too cutesy really can hurt your chances in later life. All my years in L&D, I don't think I ever tried to dissuade someone from a name, I would just cringe inwardly. But I think parents really should give it some thought. Yes, MaK'enZ'eeee, Corvoisier, L-A (ladasha) are all great and uneek and all, but when their resumes are laying in a pile with Elizabeth's and Katherine's resumes, who is more likely to get the interview? According to research, Elizabeth and Katherine are more likely to get the call. Freakanomics and More Freakanomics are fascinating reads, and did influence my child's name. I was never one that approved of trendy or unique names, or names that seemed to originate from someone flinging scrabble tiles against the wall and choosing the first 8 that landed face up, but the research confirmed my feelings. My child was born in 2009, but just by looking at his name, you couldn't tell if it was 2009, 1909, 1809, or 1709. It's not in the top 10, but it's not all that uncommon either.

I had to laugh when I read about names being generational. It is true!

Whenever I go to my husband's office party, I am introduced to a long list of one-syllable guy names from a generation slightly older than my own.

There was Don, Dan, Ed, Tom, Bill, Lou, John, Jim, Mark, Dave, Scott, Greg, and their wives all seemed to be named Pam or Sue.

The exception was the foreign born co-workers whose names were complex.

Specializes in Med-Surg, NICU.
HI. I am from Croatia, I am Tanja and we dont have such problems... We have some another problems... Politicals, and economys.My name is from Russia, and I have never been there, but it is very big problem, our parents give us names and name dont say that we are clever or not, good or bad...

Whoa! Your name is VERY much like mine. Creepy, lol.

Having an idea of the candidate's racial-ethnic background might help or hurt, depending on the circumstances. For example, résumés 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.

Well this sucks for me... I'm whiter than white (I don't tan, I burn type white) but my first name is an African-American name... Thanks mom and dad, lol.

I have a Russian first name with a German last name (my husband's) and I am Chinese/Filipina lol. I'm pretty sure I've confused people but I don't think it's had a negative impact on me. I also know who's educated and/or paid attention in history class if they are able to pronounce my first name (totally joking lol)

This is my 2nd post on this topic, because I am fascinated by it. I have always been a fan of futuristic science fiction (Yes, I'm a big Trekkie!) and sometimes when I drift off into a daydream, I imagine how people's names will change in the future, when human interbreeding will be common, and attitudes toward different cultures will be less egocentric. I imagine lots of cafe au lait people with a variety of types of hair and facial morphologies, but with interest names like Mei Li Gonzales or Vittorio Abadejo. I remember years ago I got a foretaste of this when I had a professor in grad school named José Rabinowicz, who happened to be a Mexican Jew, and an excellent human being.

My daughter has a unique first name, but not anything too far out there. Still, I gave her a very plain middle name so if she were to decide she didn't like being "unique" she could go by her middle name. I really don't see that happening though.

I make assumptions when I see the name "Blaze," which is really not fair since nobody picks their own name, but name bias is definitely out there!