Recommendation for Online Job Searches

FergieTCat

I am serious. And don't call me Shirley.
Joined
Jun 10, 2000
Messages
5,738
I am job hunting, and am trying to take advantage of the online job sites. I've already registered with Yahoo Hotjobs, Monster and CareerBuilders. I am regularly searching the New York Times Job Market.

Is there any other website of which I should be aware? Does anyone have any advice for these websites? I've been sending out resumes, and they seem to be disappearing into cyberspace, never to be seen or heard from again.
 
You want a major piece of advice? Don't give up hope!

Last summer I spent about 6 months on CareerBuilder, Monster, and NY Times searching for any job. It is very discouraging, I know.

Some tips:
-Search for ANYTHING relating to jobs you are looking for. For example, I was looking for a job in the Computer Science field. If I only searched for jobs that way, I was missing out on half the listings. I also searched for databases, networking, programming, etc. Widen your search.

-Put your resume in for ANYTHING that seems close enough to what you want. Even if you don't fit all the requirements. Give a resume to anyone that will take it.

-A lot of places will never get back to you. Trust me, I found that out the hard way. But you will hear back from some. I actually got interviews from jobs listed on CareerBuilder. One happened to be a head hunter who still calls me to see if I want a job. (I am no longer jobless though.)

-Don't limit yourself to those search engines. If you see a great sounding company/job there, go to that companies website. Most companies have a will allow you to post a resume or to email them one directly. It doesn't matter how many resume's you send them. They'll get the hint eventually.

For awhile, I never thought I'd get a job. I kept at it, and after 6 months of job searching I finally got an interview at the company I had been wanting to work at. They seriously had about 12 copies of my resume. They told me I would hear from them in 2 weeks. A week later (while on vacation in Disney no less) I get a call from them offering me the job! So see, it will all work out in the end. Just keep at it. I know it seems like a lot of work and painful disappointment. After hearing how well my job market was doing and how engineers were wanted, it was tough not finding a job. But I stuck it out and now have the best job. GOOD LUCK! :wizard: :wizard:
 
I used to work as a recruiter for one of the big accounting firms. Unless a resume was sent directly to our office, I never saw one. Anything submitted online was sent to a resume database which I then searched using key words. I also spent alot of time on a few of the databases you mentioned, searching for resumes. That being said, my advice for when you post a resume to one of those databases, like Monster, is to be sure to include "buzz" words for your field of interest.

When you email your resume or submit it online to a firm, try to tailor it specifically to the job you're applying for. If the ad uses a particular turn of phrase or term, try to include it in your resume. If the firm is using a database like my old job is, there's a better chance your resume will get flagged for a human.

Hope this helps.
 

Craigslist, craigslist, craigslist.org
 
Thanks for the advice, and thank you for the "Craigslist" lead. I didn't realize they had an employment section.

I have 2 different resumes, each of which highlights different aspects of my job.

6 months huh? I've only been at this for 4 weeks!!
 


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