Use, at least, different browser profiles to separate work and personal activities.
Maintaining multiple accounts on the same website is one of the things for which browsers have the capability to use multiple profiles/"people". At least for both Chrome and Firefox, setting up additional profiles/"people" is fairly easy, and should be something which people routinely do to keep personal and work browsing separate, if they aren't using stronger means to separate work and personal activities.
Really should use stronger separation between work and personal activities
There are, for both the company and the individual, substantial, complex issues, including, at least, security, privacy, and liability issues, with mixing personal and work activities on the same machine. What these issues are and the rights/responsibilities/liability for the company and individual vary quite a bit from jurisdiction to jurisdiction. It is in both the company's and the individual's best interest to keep these activities as separate as possible.
Employees and contractors should really be using separate machines for personal and work activities, ideally in different locations, or different designated areas (e.g. separate desks in a work from home environment). If they don't do that, then they should use separate virtual machines on the same physical device. If they don't do that, then separate browser profiles, at the very least.
Separating personal and work activities:
In descending order of effective separation:
- Use separate machines: one owned by the company; one owned by the individual. Ideally, the machines would be in different locations, at least clearly designated areas for the two activities.
- Use different virtual machines on the same physical machine.
- Use (these two have about the same level of effective separation)
- Different browsers on the same machine
- Different profiles in the same browser: Profiles are, generally, implemented such that the profiles are accessed by separate processes, so there's no sharing of data between them.
- The user's browser may have "containers", which are, generally, a lesser separation than profiles.
- Temporarily use an "incognito"/"private" window or tab within the same browser profile as is primarily used for the other type of activity.