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Job Search Engines can Help you Find that Perfect Job

Posted in Job Search Engines    

Unless you have excellent networking skills, or access to a professional network, searching for a job may prove to be a daunting task without enlisting the aid of a job search engine.  In fact in today’s world, job search is nearly impossible without using the services provided by job search engines.  One could also go as far as to say that unless you are registered on a job site available through a job search engine, it is highly unlikely that you will ever find the job that you really want.

So what exactly is a job search engine?  How does it work to your benefit?  Will it turn you from someone just dreaming about a new job into an actual job finder?  To explain this, it might be better to provide an example for you.  Monster (www.monster.com) is probably the best known example of a job search engine.  What Monster does is to collect jobs from various sources (the bulk of which include direct advertisements by companies and recruitment consultants) and compile them all into one easy to find listing, or format.

Therefore, when you (or any other person trying to find a job) visit a job search engine like Monster, you can get access to thousands of jobs.  The difference between a regular search engine and a job search engine is that a job search engine seeks out only jobs and job ads.  A regular search engine, on the other hand, will display most documents with the keyword ‘job’ in the content.  This may prove useful at times, but more often than not, you will be left weeding through thousands of unrelated pages.

A job search engine is basically a customized search engine for jobs.  It helps you find jobs efficiently and effectively.  Monster is probably the best known example but there are other large job sites out there such as Yahoo HotJobs and CareerBuilder.  Various countries also have their own well known job search engines.  Workopolis for instance is the most popular job search engine in Canada that lists the latest and greatest Canadian jobs.  Similarly, Bayt is probably the best known job search engine for finding jobs in the Middle East.

Even recruitment agencies, especially the well known ones, host their own versions of the job search engine.  For example, global recruiters like Aquent, Hudson, and Hewitt Associates have their own version of job search engines.  They use these to offer specific services to job seekers as well as job posters.  Several other local or regional recruiters also have their own versions of the job search engine.  But these are more often than not aggregator sites for genuine postings on a variety of other sources.  In addition, online classifieds like Craigslist in the US and other parts of the globe have job listings on them and technically, can be considered to be one type of job search engine.  And if the number of people who access the jobs were a consideration, then Craigslist would be a shoo in.

A job search engine can also be a part of a publication like the Guardian in the UK. Guardian Jobs is the most popular job search engine in the UK that lists thousands of jobs each day.  Technically, it is nothing more than the recruitment section of the offline Guardian newspaper that has been modified to look and feel like a job search engine.  But as long as it collects, compiles, and presents lists of available jobs, it can fit snugly under the definition of job search engines.

Job search engines are here to stay and have grown immensely in popularity for finding jobs in the last several years.  Most of them are free to use for job seekers (at least the basic features).  They can also be a great place for employers to post jobs in order to find qualified candidates.  Whatever side of the fence you are on, ignoring the power of job search engines would not be a wise decision.

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New Article: Why Monster Leads All Other Job Sites

Posted in Job Search Engines    

If you could only post your resume (or job opening if you are an employer) to one job site, it should be Monster.com. As probably the most well know job site and the one with the most job postings, Monster is your best bet for finding what you need in the job market. For job seekers, you can try and let the large number of employers come to you or spend hours and hours viewing a variety of jobs at many different geographical locations. For employers, you can use Monster Job Postings to show your job opening(s) to hundreds of potential future employees, or use their resume search package to seek out and contact qualified candidates yourself.

Read more here about Why Monster Leads All Other Job Sites

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New Article: How to Search for Jobs

Posted in Job Search Engines    

Like most people, you need to eat well enough to be comfortable.  Eating requires money to buy food, unless you’re privy to some handy barter scheme.  And unless you’ve won the inheritance lottery, you’re going to need to work for your food money.  What this means of course is that you need to find a job.  Now sure, you could make do walking door-to-door and looking for help wanted signs, but the most efficient way to search for jobs is going to be through the Internet.

Read more here about How to Search for Jobs

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New Article: About Job Information

Posted in Job Search Engines    

It can be difficult to prepare for the “real world.”  That infinite maze of stress and bills can really take its toll if you never got a taste beforehand.  This is why college is such a great step for high school graduates to take.  If you can go live on your own for a little while, work at a job, pay some bills, and just flat out struggle, it can really help you later on in life.  You get in touch with that true sense of what life is and what it’s like to have to survive on your own.

Read more here about About Job Information

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New Article: Job Fairs - Worth it?

Posted in Job Search Engines    

Ah, the job fair.  It’s one of the least festive of festivals, where the desperate unemployed worker and the ruthless businessman meet and one sizes up the other.  Sorry for seeming to be so bitter, but I’ve done the job fairs circuit quite a bit, and have found it, well, trying to say the very least.  Even teacher job fairs, which target my area of expertise, have been quite difficult and unrewarding.  Ultimately, I did not find a job that I was actually happy with until I began avoiding job fairs all together.

Read more here about Job Fairs - Worth it?

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The Job Search Engines Blog is Now Live!

Posted in Job Search Engines    

Hello and welcome to my new blog about job search engines.  I hope to make this blog a great place to discuss not only what’s going on in the world of job search engines, but also to give everyone some great tips on how to improve their resumes and become a job finder instead of just a job dreamer.  So please check back often to see what’s new on the job search engines blog!

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Recent News about Job Search Engines and Jobs in General:
  • £8.8m investment brings 150 jobs (BBC News)
  • Army downplays partnership on jobs (Asbury Park Press)
  • Hundreds of meatworks jobs in doubt (TVNZ)
  • Philips growing plant in Shelby, will add 50 jobs (BizJournals)
  • Bank SA jobs safe, says SA Govt (ABC via Yahoo!7 Finance)


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