MAJ Private RallyPoint Member104890<div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>What are the good, bad and the ugly aspects of informal social media relationships with those in your chain of Command, up and down. Do you Facebook your subordinates?How do you best use social media within your command and remain professional?2014-04-17T22:38:00-04:00MAJ Private RallyPoint Member104890<div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>What are the good, bad and the ugly aspects of informal social media relationships with those in your chain of Command, up and down. Do you Facebook your subordinates?How do you best use social media within your command and remain professional?2014-04-17T22:38:00-04:002014-04-17T22:38:00-04:00LTC Jason Strickland104900<div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>Leaders must be very careful in this regard. That's one of the things that makes RallyPoint unique - this is a professional social media site. LinkedIn serves the same purpose. Facebook friendships should be scrutinized because you can both expose your personal life (if you share that much on Fb) and learn more than you want to know about your fellow troops.Response by LTC Jason Strickland made Apr 17 at 2014 10:43 PM2014-04-17T22:43:32-04:002014-04-17T22:43:32-04:00CPT Ryan B.105114<div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>Jacob, my rule of thumb is to not have a facebook connection with anyone in my current chain of command. It has worked out nicely so far. The most people I have ever connected with afterwards, though, were my old Company Commanders (most of which are MAJ now-and provide good mentorship across great distances) and my old Platoon Sergeants and First Sergeants (most of which are now First Sergeants and Command Sergeants Major-also still providing great counsel).Response by CPT Ryan B. made Apr 18 at 2014 6:26 AM2014-04-18T06:26:54-04:002014-04-18T06:26:54-04:002014-04-17T22:38:00-04:00