Recruitment Advertising Agency specializing in career site design, optimization and recruiting video production.
The Archives
New JobSearchMarketing coming soon
Friday, August 21st, 2009Win clicks and influence candidates
Saturday, August 15th, 2009I’ve got some news coming on the direction of Job|SearchMarketing.
Get smart. Be a Genius recruiter.
Thursday, July 24th, 2008
SalesGenius immediately alerts users whenever a customer or prospect
opens their emails and visits the company website; provides detailed
activity reports; and presents a page-by-page instant replay of every
website visit.
Wow. Imagine your Jeff Hunter of Electronic Arts. You worked with Sean Rehder of TalentLogics to get your global sourcing and recruiting teams operating on Salesforce. You immediately see gains in productivity and effectiveness and here comes along a tool that integrates with salesforce and can make these teams even better.
With SalesGenius, your recruiters and sources can be updated as soon as a candidate opens your recruiters’ emails or engages in your organization’s career site.
Imagine how much stronger your recruiting team would be if rather than waste time dealing with people whom aren’t interested, they investing their time with passive candidates at that precise moment that candidate chooses to research your organization. Image how influential your team could be?
Like many great sourcing tools, SalesGenius was not intended to be used for recruiting but it looks like its funcationlity could be key to a well run team. I think you should check it out if you have sourcing and recruiting teams using salesforce.
If you would like to get a demo or more info, keep it in the recruiting family and reach out to former HotJobs sales rep, JC Hobaica, (650) 931-1381.
Fyi, JC does not know I’m posting this. We worked together a while ago. I happed to learn about SalesGenius today and by chance, noticed JC’s name at the bottom of the email. Small world.
If you have used it or do so after reading this, please share your expereice in the comments below.
If you would rather not be smart or be a genius recruiter, you can always be Kanye.
Frevvo…possibly simple career site heaven
Wednesday, June 11th, 2008I may have just found the an awesome tool for creating simple but functional career sites and landing pages(a must for employers executing paid search engine marketing campaigns)…frevvo.
…more to come after I check it out completely.
5 Simple Ways to Recruit Passive Candidates with Your Career Site
Monday, May 5th, 2008Is your candidate pool looking a bit shallow lately? If you want to recruit more passive candidates, take a good look at your career site. It is possible that a few minor changes could quickly increase your prospects. Below are just five simple ways to boost your employment brand and draw in those highly coveted passive candidates.
1. Start Recruiting on the Home Page – Don’t bury the career section deep within your official company site. You want to appear welcoming to those who otherwise don’t realize you are hiring. If you do link to a career section from the homepage, make sure that link is visible and not placed at the bottom on the page in a tiny font size.
2. Be Transparent – Are you using ambiguous terminology when leading people to the career site? Being clever here could actually hurt you, as people are scanning the page for the words "Job" and "Career." A link that reads, "Become Part of the Crew!" could be easily overlooked.
3. Avoid Generic Stock Images – Do you have a stock photo of two businesspeople shaking hands on your career page? People are now design-savvy enough to spot a stock image when they see one. It looks insincere and can be a turn-off for candidates. You should use images of happy employees, but go the extra mile and obtain pictures of people who actually work for the company.
4. Display Job Openings – Don’t tease candidates with a career site and then fail to post available job openings. Passive candidates who are casually surfing your site need to be enticed with something tangible. Ensure that this section is regularly updated and does not go stale.
5. Post Salaries – Never post a job opening without an accompanying salary range. This is quite possibly the best way to entice passive candidates to make a move. Companies often omit this bit of information, perhaps in hopes that they will negotiate for a lower pay scale. However, top professionals demand to know what they are getting into and will often ignore a job posting without a salary.
* This post was contributed by Heather Johnson, who is an industry critic on the subject of becoming a pediatric nurse. She invites your feedback at heatherjohnson2323@gmail.com.
Jobs2Web clone intros service with video [VIDEO]
Friday, January 18th, 2008OptiJob, a Jobs2Web clone brought to market by GetTheJob, is using YouTube to promote its service.
OptiJob’s micro-sites are almost exact copies of Jobs2Web’s sites. Don’t believe me? Check out Xerox-Jobs.com (Jobs2Web) and bose.getthatjob.com (OptiJob).
Jobs2Web is super expensive but to Doug Bergs’ credit his company built the service at the request of some major customers. So the high price tag must be fair market value for the on-demand web development that Doug’s team provided.
Considering the fact that GetTheJob didn’t have to eat the costs for being first to market, OptiJob had better not cost more than $20k. Even that is high. From what I understand they are giving it away for free right now to choice employers.
Here’s OptiJob’s video. I’m convinced no one is in the room.
For a slightly more entertaining video, check out former Hotjobber Pete Chelela’s promotional video for his new site GourmetDude.com.
Pete is the same guy who wore a speedo in the Yahoo! HotJobs office for a cube makeover from CubeFabulous (check out beach bum). Ironically enough, CubeFabulous went on to partner with Monster for some promotion and pics of the NYC Yahoo! HotJobs office were published on Monster’s site.
Yahoo! News is good career site design
Wednesday, January 16th, 2008Givin’ props to Sodexho for innovative recruiting
Thursday, January 3rd, 2008
Check out the Sodexho Careers blog. Check out the Facebook page, the YouTube page and…if you’re into this sort of thing…the SecondLife career fair. (blog | facebook | youtube | secondlife)
I’m not big on the SecondLife thing but when it comes to Web 2.0, its hard to deny Sodexho is taking steps in the right direction and it’s working.
Look at how much more engaging the company’s Web 2.0 efforts are than it’s existing career site.
Which gives a more accurate representation of the org’s culture and people? The company’s career site or its blog and YouTube page?
It’s blatantly obvious. Which cost more? Again; obvious.
Sodexho VP Talent Acquisition Arie Ball and her team are off to a great start in ‘08. Hopefully the company will ride this momentum and do big things this year.
Moving forward I would consider the following:
- Put as much energy and resources into social media as you are SecondLife. It may not be as fun to you as exploring a virtual world but there is far more low hanging fruit.
- Consider using MoveableType as the blogging platform. In addition to being a more robust blogging platform, it will serve as a means for easily creating well branded landing pages. These pages can be used to enhance performance and extract more value from search engine and email marketing efforts. Companies often pay between $1,500 and $5,000 for similar landing pages. Over 12 months those charges can add up.
- Get more employees blogging. The blog will grow faster, be more influential and attract and engage more relevant talent. Try to have each department represented. The content contributed by each department will attract passive talent searching the web for similar info.
- Add a phone number to the blog. Why not encourage passive talent to pick up the phone and have a private and confidential phone call with a member of your recruiting team? With phone analytics you can now track where phone calls are coming from, play them back and calculate an ROI.
- Install Google Analytics. It’s easy to do. It will give you an idea of where your traffic is coming from.
- Get a sitemap. It’s technical but important. Keep it updated with Yahoo! Site Explorer and Google Webmaster Tools. (xmlsitemaps.com)
- Pick a good domain name.
- Get an rss feed of your jobs. Indeed seems to have this covered for you. You can get that feed here.
- Publish the jobs feed on the blog. This way blog traffic is always in a position to apply to jobs that you have open.
- Keep embracing diversity and new media. The two are working well together for you.
Ok, that’s it for now. Gotta run. Well done. Please keep it up.
Btw, its freekin freezing in NYC today! 14 degrees!






