Fascinating report into the current US job market sparked my interest. I’m usually careful about reblogging or assuming that what goes in the US is relevant to my UK clients, but this report By Jobvite (PDF) contains lots of food for thought.
It stands to reason really when you understand that referrals are still fundamentally the most common way to secure a new job.
Young professionals build their networks faster and generate more referrals online (when compared to previous generations still using more traditional methods) and social media is the arena for that networking more and more.
The astronomical growth of social networks has created a new way for companies and candidates to connect online. Nielsen calculates social network traffic grew by 43% from June 2009 to June 2010, and social network activity is now the single largest activity online, dwarinng online games, email and search. And Americans are now turning to their social networks to find jobs.
I’ve seen so many articles recently about complex mothods of getting your jobs ‘fed’ onto Twitter.
It’s so simple and there are a few sites / providers out there with vested interests giving people all manner of complex advice about how to automatically display your jobs on Twitter.
It’s so simple to do and I feel the overpowering urge to tell you how before someone else tells you a more complex way.
Oh… and don’t forget the bit that people so often miss out on… PRMOTE YOUR CHANNELS – make sure people know they can digest your content in whatever way suits them.
aggregators analysis analytics Analytics & Conversion anchor text architecture Candidates Candidate Supply Code conversion copywriting domain names facebook Flash Fun goals Google inlinks Job-Descriotions job boards job descriptions keywords Linked in Links Long Tail Meta Offline Marketing on-site optimisation organic search ppc Recession recruitment advertising Retention roi rss feeds seo copy Social Media Social Search Technical Titles tweet twitter URLs Visitor Quality Workcircle
WP Cumulus Flash tag cloud by Roy Tanck and Luke Morton requires Flash Player 9 or better.