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

Excellent topic! I think some nicknames can backfire in adulthood.

A friend I know was named Danny at birth. It was fine when he was young, but as a 6'4" police officer he wishes he had been named Daniel. So he goes by Dan which defeated his parents purpose of using the nickname to begin with.

Another friend was named Michael at birth. All through school he was called Mike. When he got out into the work world he was known as Mike, until a few co-workers began calling him Mikey which he hated and thought was very juvenile. A very wise person in Mike's office said that he should go back to Michael in his professional life because the shortened version of Michael is Mike, while the shortened version of Mike is Mikey. And we all know how people like to simply shorten formal names. So now he goes by Michael, but I call him George because that is how I first met him.

And so challenging honoring our children with their names.

A mom in my community named her daughter "Abcde". Oh, I think HR people will stand on their heads trying to figure that one out. I will cut through the suspense, it's pronounced Ab-ce-dee.

My husband's middle name is Scott and that's what his parents decided to call him since he has red hair. He grew up as Scotty and the whole community knows him as that and still calls him that. He doesn't mind.

Our son is Daniel and we call him Danny after my husband's best friend, who is called Danny by everyone except his wife, who hates the name Danny. But her husband is fine with it and that's what we call him.

You are damned if you do, and damned if you don't. :blackeye:

Specializes in Emergency Room, Trauma ICU.

I've got a very Irish first middle and last name, pasty white with red hair and green eyes. Sometimes you do fit the stereotypes!!!

Specializes in Critical Care (ICU/CVICU).

I have a VERY ethnic first and last name, it's actually Nigerian. Although the way myfirst name looks and is pronounced, people always ask if it's french haha. But I have never gotten the impression that my name has stopped me from getting any job. But I wouldn't be surprised if someone passed me over because they didn't like African foreigners. (But I have heard that I speak very articulate and clear with no accent...me and my name can confuse people)

Specializes in ICU.

This is a very interesting topic. I also have a very ethnic first name but a very common last name. I don't think it has stopped me from getting a job. At least, I hope not.

I agree! I had been looking for a job for one month to the day after I NCLEX. I had previous healthcare experiencel nearly fiteen years worth and still; no calls. My husband and my father suggested that my name on the top of my resume was causing the problem. I am an African American female named Sharnette. It is pronounced just like it looks (Shar-net). I ended up going to a job fair to inquire about a position that I had pereviously applied to online and got a job offer on the spot. So I do think that race, and your name can help or hurt you. I kept thinking that if I could just get in front of someone; I could at least get a second interview. The online systems ask for your gender as well as race. Usually the race is optional. I don't even think that most people will get past the recruiter if they go off names alone. If they can't pronounce it or it is isn't gender specific. (Like perviously stated)

I wonder if parents realize that, by giving their children currently trendy names like "Dakota" or "Madison" they're ensuring that said children will eventually have streotypical "old people" names.

"Agatha" and "Dorothy" were trendy, hip names once upon a time, too.

The responses on this thread make me sick. I'm AA w/ kids that have neutral names but folks who complain about the uniqueness of a name are those who believe in conformity. We were made to be individuals! Ridiculous!

I would argue that the African-American parents who give their children overtly "ethnic" names like Quandella or Lakeesha ARE the one's who are being conformist.

Specializes in Case mgmt., rehab, (CRRN), LTC & psych.
I would argue that the African-American parents who give their children overtly "ethnic" names like Quandella or Lakeesha ARE the one's who are being conformist.
I disagree, Brandon. I would say that these names are totally nonconformist.
Specializes in Going to Peds!.
I disagree Brandon. I would say that these names are totally nonconformist.[/quote']

No. They're overtly AA ethnic sounding. So, they "conform" to an AA culture.

Specializes in Case mgmt., rehab, (CRRN), LTC & psych.
No. They're overtly AA ethnic sounding. So, they "conform" to an AA culture.
There's not a single AA culture. Rather, there are multiple AA subcultures in the US.

I'm an AA with a plain, 'mainstream'-sounding name (think of something similar to Carrie, Kelly or Lindsay). Since my name is not overtly black-sounding, would you say that it does not conform to a so-called AA culture?

There's not a single AA culture. Rather, there are multiple AA subcultures in the US.

I'm an AA with a plain, 'mainstream'-sounding name (think of something similar to Carrie, Kelly or Lindsay). Since my name is not overtly black-sounding, would you say that it does not conform to a so-called AA culture?

Now I'm confused, Commuter. Aren't we saying the same thing? That, for example, your parents were being actually being non-conformist by giving you a relatively neutral name, as opposed to "conforming" to the AA norm of a distinctly "black" name?

Specializes in Going to Peds!.
There's not a single AA culture. Rather, there are multiple AA subcultures in the US.

I'm an AA with a plain, 'mainstream'-sounding name (think of something similar to Carrie, Kelly or Lindsay). Since my name is not overtly black-sounding, would you say that it does not conform to a so-called AA culture?

I guess my point is that to many white people, those names are not mainstream, white names. They immediately stand out as ethnic minority. Perception. The perception is that they conform to AA culture because they are AA sounding names.