Thursday 24 April 2008

Targeting passive candidates

Jobshout brings you the best and most relevant CVs for your job. Because using Jobshout you can post your jobs on targeted niche sites, you're less likely to get unqualified and irrelevant job responses and more likely to reach qualified, passive candidates.

Besides, automated world class and effective natural SEO, an integration with Broadbean - Jobshout can be setup really easily to post jobs on other sites for example indeed.co.uk, Google base using SOAP, XML and RSS technology. It can even be further extended to meet needs of different industry sectors and we are open to make
this process even easier to mash up and share the information on different and relevant websites as per different needs.

For example, if you publish IT jobs in a specific industry or skills we can customise Jobshout to publish jobs on niche sites relevant to that industry. Now doing it all from central place saves time, remove chances of errors, and increases productivity. And in this way, Jobshout will keep your staff happy.

Try yourself by clicking Jobshout trial! or drop us an email info@jobshout.co.uk to find out more about Jobshout.

Thursday 17 April 2008

Online ad spend increase 238% year on year

According to the Internet Advertising Bureau, online advertising in 2007 cost £2.8 billion. Of this, £286.8 went on 'online recruitment classifieds' - job boards to you and me.

Most jobseekers go online

This is another bit of research, this time from Borrell Associates in the US. "Opportunity abounds online: nearly half the jopbseekers who have internet access are not using online media to look for a job", it says. Well, that may mean that there is a lot of opportunity for growth, but it also means that right now, over 50% of internet-enabled people looking for work go online.

Interestingly, the report also comments on the use of video by employers and recruiters as being "the hottest new tool". Total ad spending on online video was $522 million in 2007 and this is predicted to rise nearly twentyfold by 2012. Of this a "significant portion" is going to job- and employer-related video. So if you want to steal a march on your competition, get yourself an online vid!

Wednesday 16 April 2008

Invite Google to index your pages

To invite Google to come and index your page webmasters will generally add a ‘robots.txt’ file. This file tells the Googlebot that you want it to read and index your page.

Now most people will not know how to write a ‘robot.txt’ file or maybe have never even heard of it. Well Google have come up with an ingenious translator that turns your requests into ‘robot.txt’ file, it is called generate robots text. Now you don’t even need to learn the language used all you have to do is know what you want indexed.

There are however some problems relating to privacy that some robots from other sources will just ignore the file and search everything. To overcome this you should protect private information by passwords and not rely on the ‘robots.txt’ file.

For more information have a look at Google Webmaster Blog.

Friday 4 April 2008

Ever wondered how many recruitment companies there are in the UK?

Well, we certainly have. Here, courtesy of the International Confederation
of Private Employment Agencies (CIETT)
is the answer, as well as the figures for nine other countries. It makes intriguing reading:
Japan: 30,600
UK: 10,462
Germany: 7,885
USA: 6,000
South Africa: 2,739
Netherlands: 2,100
Czech Republic: 1,707
Poland: 1,541
Brazil: 1,250
France: 1,200
You can get a copy of the whole report, which is worth reading, here.

Thursday 3 April 2008

Five minutes to enhance your brand


Surprisingly – to me at least – about 80% of our clients choose to publish their job board using the jobshout.co.uk domain. That means that the address you promote is xyzpeople.jobshout.co.uk.

That’s fine as far as it goes. But how much more impressive – how much better for your brand – is it to direct people to a subdomain of your own site – such as jobs.xyzpeople.com? After all one of the main advantages of publishing your own job board is to enhance you standing in the eyes of clients and candidates, and using your own domain name for your job board just looks so much better.

And if it looks better to people, the chances are that it is going to look better to search engines too. Publishing those jobs under your own domain will tend to enhance the ranking of your whole site in relevant searches; and any standing that your site already has in the eyes of Google & Co. will, conversely help the search engine performance of your job ads.

And the good news is that the whole job should take about five minutes at the outside, though it does sound technical and, therefore, scary. But it should be really easy. Just get whoever it is that looks after your site's Domain Name Server (DNS) records (very often it's your ISP) to create an entry for a new subdomain. All this means is that, as well as the www. subdomain (www.xyzpeople.com [or whatever]), you would now have a DNS record for jobs.xyzpeople.com as well. This would be a CNAME entry (...I know, but don't worry...) pointing to www.jobshout.co.uk.

Having done that, go into your Jobshout setup and specify your site’s domain name (jobs.xyzpeople.com).

What if you have been promoting the address of your job board as being a jobshout.co.uk address? No problem – both addresses will work now.

It’s easy, and will richly repay the little bit of effort involved.

(XYZ People is the name of our demo site, in case you were wondering.)