Search
Recommended Products
Related Links


 

 

Informative Articles

Behavioral Interview Techniques
Below are some behavioral interview techniques that you'll find useful: 1. Be prepared for the interview by analyzing and making an educated guess as to which skills are most desired by the employer. You can study the job description of the...

How to Dull the Sting of Increasing Tuition Costs
At a time when unemployment is high, personal income is flat, and college-level education is a requirement for most well-paying jobs, U.S. public colleges continue to become less affordable for students and families. According to a recent report...

Local Job Search - Tips For Success
Tips for a Successful Local Job Search If you are seriously searching for a local job, but you have no idea where to look, you may be just one of the thousands of unemployed people in the country. However, finding a job is easy when you...

The Modern Freelance Worker
Life Before Freelancing When I first quit my job as a full-time Product Specialist at one of the World's leading XML software companies, all my friends and family thought I was insane. I was making a lot more money than most people and I...

When The Job Search Is Over, Be Sure To Say Thanks
Using a job acceptance letter when offered a position shows true professionalism. It is a way of saying "thank you" to the person who hired you, and giving them assurance that they made the right decision. You have presented yourself to them as...

 
Search Engines and Open Source, Primed to Take-Over Online Recruitment Game

Not too long ago, job boards like Monster, CareerBuilder and HotJobs were primed to put newspapers out of business. Surprisingly, now it seems that search engines such as Google, MSN and Yahoo! are set to dethrone both newspapers and job sites.

As revenues and readership for newspapers have been on a consistent downward spiral since the birth of the Internet, their grip on classified advertising has been a major contributor.

Particularly job postings.

Since 1995, job sites have done an effective job of steadily taking dollars away from a once almighty print monopoly. As a result, online job classifieds were poised to take down print listing who could never compete with bargain basement price-points.

However, another revolution was quietly occuring that today is poised to put job sites on the defensive.

Search engines and Craigslist happened.

Craigslist is, for the most part, a free service for online classifeds. By allowing to post jobs for free in all but three of its local markets, Craigslist has quickly become a site of choice for local job seekers and employers alike. Even in markets where employers pay - New York, Los Angeles and San Francisco - prices remain well under $100 per listing.

Despite its low pricing scheme, Craigslist remains a very profitable business, generating millions of dollars with only 18 empoyees.

Search engines like Google, likewise, have discovered that providing free search content pays off as long as you provide targeted pay-per-click advertising.

In light of this model, vertical search for jobs is taking off. First, with players like FlipDog and GrassIsGreener, and now with players like SimplyHired and Indeed.com. Yahoo! - utilizing its HotJobs offering - is now aggregating job listings from all over the Net.

As a result, most experts predict Google


will soon launch a similar offering that allows users to access job listings from a variety of sources, including job sites like Monster and corporate site listings.

Google will provide the content at no charge, while making money from its AdWords, pay-per-click model.

Both Craiglist and search engines paint a picture of commoditized job listings that eventually no company will have to pay big money to have accessed. Most likely, job postings will be driven to zero. Additionally, job seekers are primed to have a central point to access a large number of listings.

As a result, it seems that search engines (Google, Yahoo!) and low-priced open source solutions (Craigslist) hold the key to accessing job information in the future.

Where newspapers and job boards fit into this equation is anyone's guess.

***************************************************************

© 2005 Cheesman Group, LLC - All Rights Reserved

Reprint Rights: Ezine publishers may reprint this article, as long as the following information is included:

* the summary about the author and his company (see below)
* all links are active
* all key words above the links below are included as part of the active link when you publish it on your site

This permission does NOT extend to trainers, speakers or consultants with competitive services or companies that want to place articles on their intranet. Contact us directly for permission.

About the Author

Joel Cheesman is a blogger of online recruitment topics, speaker, agent of change and entrepreneur in the world of Internet recruitment advertising and employment. His company, HRSEO, helps employers leverage search engines in their Internet recruiting and online recruitment strategies.

 

 

 

Our Partners

Online Matrimonial Website
http://www.ManMel.com

Online Free Job Portal
http://www.EJobPost.com

Online free Video
http://www.IndiaStudio.in

Software & Web Development
http://www.AasthaComputers.com

Online free Video
http://www.SmartVideoClips.com

Social Networking Site
http://www.IndiaZone.in

Domain and Hosting Solution
http://www.AasthaInfoMark.com

Free Dating
http://www.IndiaExperts.in

Graphic & Web Designing
http://www.Aastha.in

Online Matrimonial Website
http://www.HastMelap.com