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Tech Jobsites

Spring High Tech/Green Tech Virtual Job Fair

It’s that time again, and we have scheduled our Spring virtual job fair for March 15-19, online at www.nmvirtualjobfair.com. We held our first virtual high tech fair last fall and it was well received by job seekers and employers. The venue was created to help both busy employers and job seekers find each other without having to stand in line or in a booth.

We also wanted to provide that personal attention to the potential employee, and to do this we asked the hiring company to acknowledge and respond to the applicant right away, letting them know how their resume stacks up and where the company is in the hiring process.

This mode has been used in other areas and some of the media groups hold online job fairs to keep it simple but also maintain a personal connection. As there are more and more job fairs the job seeker has to make choices according to their time limits, and this virtual fair eases that pressure while giving information on what’s happening right now in the tech industry.

Job seekers might also make a better online presentation by using the social network pages to film a self interview, or contact companies that can help with that product. If that isn’t possible, addressing the reasons why you would be the perfect applicant as it relates to the open position helps give the recruiter a little better picture of your abilities. There is one caution we would offer to the applicant. Read the job descriptions carefully and make sure you fit with the type of candidate the company is looking for. It doesn’t’ help your cause to apply for jobs that you aren’t qualified for.

Get your job description/resume ready and sign on on March 15 – 19 to participate in this exciting event. See you (online) there.

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Tech Jobsites

Roadblocks to Hiring Talented Folks

When your company decides to add a new position or fill an old one there needs to be some thought given to how they will notify potential job seekers of the opportunity. Here are three things to think about as you or the company starts the hiring process.

1. Where are you going to find the candidate you want? The sources change as the market for jobs changes. Running ads, online or otherwise, has evolved to posting on job boards, to posting on the company site and select professional site boards, to attending professional society meetings and job fairs, and finally to social networking sites. As the number of job seekers increases, the company may not publish the job information too broadly, but rather do their own search through Facebook and MySpace and other popular sites. Research published by the Society for Human Resource Management found that 46% of staffing professionals felt the social networks were effective in finding executive talent. The jury is still out on the legal issues of screening applicants through their social network postings, but there doesn’t seem to be an issue with identifying potential candidates this way. Above all, don’t forget your internal sources, both for referrals and for candidates.

2. How will you describe the job? The more precise and clear you are in the posting the more relevant the resumes submitted will be. THIS IS NOT A JOB DESCRIPTION! This is a summary or overview of the job offered. Skills or education required, the level of authority and responsibility involved, benefits of working at the company and the nature of the industry (a good company description) are all important. Try to make the title for the job relevant to the general public and not just to your internal group.

3. What is your application process? According to a Job Seeker Attitudes report on Staffing.org, the company is better served by making the process simple. The major complaint of job seekers that didn’t apply for a particular job was that the process was too frustrating or lengthy. Admittedly if one wants a job badly enough they will struggle through, but it doesn’t make a good first impression if your company is perceived as being "difficult". Some companies have included aptitude tests and personality surveys in the application process. This may be overkill as it does self-select for candidates that love to take tests, and the recruiters will need to have a method to evaluate all this extra data. Collect the information you need to make the initial cut from the applicant pool, and then drill down.

Hopefully these tips will help your company connect with the best available candidates in the most efficient manner, and that everyone involved in the process will have a positive experience.

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