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Posts Tagged ‘recruiters’

Featured Job of the Day: Sr. Java Developer, NYC

Friday, June 25th, 2010

This is for a Sr. Java Developer who has experience with mobile apps. Amazing benefits, great quality of life company. Check it out here: http://www.hirefinders.com/jobdetails/?jobID=68488 Do a search on HireFinders for Programmers, Developers, Software Engineers and see how many opportunities come up around the country. Not in Information Technology? HireFinders has all kinds of jobs, they only have to be located in the US to be on our new job board.

If you are a Recruiter you can post your US jobs for free on our site. If you are looking for a new recruiting job yourself, I have two openings for Technical Recruiters in Boston and one in Reston, VA. The jobs are on HireFinders.com.

The HIRE Act and Summer Temps Offer Incentives For YOU to Hire Again!

Monday, May 24th, 2010

The following article is by guest blogger, Anne Kathrin Dammel, a marketing coordinator at Complete Personnel Services, Inc. Her blog can be found at http://completepersonnel.com/news.html with the latest news for employers.

Hiring is encouraged and we encourage you to post your jobs whether temporary or direct hire to http://www.hirefinders.com for free. This job board in now open to both agencies and direct employers. We are crawled frequently by Simply Hired and Indeed among others, so your jobs will be found on all the major search engines. Post as many jobs as you need to and search for candidates on our board. Questions? You can write to us at info@hirefinders.com. Her article follows:

 

The HIRE (Hiring Incentives to Restore Employment) Act was signed on March 18th and went into effect last month. It features two incentives for employers who hire and retain new employees. The act was put into place to attempt to accelerate the hiring of unemployed workers. Without an increase in the economy, businesses have been reluctant to hire new employees due to the cost imposed on them. The below incentives should serve beneficial for this new employment opportunities within the US.

IRS Commissioner Doug Shulman believes that “these tax breaks offer a much-needed boost to employers willing to expand their payrolls, and businesses and nonprofits should keep these benefits in mind as they plan for the year ahead”.

Incentive #1: As of February 3, 2010, if an employer hires someone who has been unemployed the previous 3 months for a new position then the employer does not have to pay the employer portion of social security on that person’s wages.

Incentive #2: Employers will receive a $1,000 income tax credit for every newly hired employee as of February 3, 2010, who is not a replacement for a previous employee and who is employed continuously thereafter for 52 weeks (1 year).

Your company’s situation may be such that you are not in a position to hire at this time. This should, however, not deter you from hiring summer temporary workers. There are several important aspects to consider that would help your company over the summer months.

1. Permanent Employees go on vacation leaving work that needs to get done.

2. Hiring Students will Invigorate Your Organization.

3. Temp hires enhance the bottom line.

To read more, visit: http://completepersonnel.com/news.html

                                                                                                   

HireFinders Produces Results for Recruiting Agencies

Friday, May 7th, 2010

We have gotten great feedback regarding HireFinders, www.hirefinders.com  and from time to time we will publish these amazing responses to our job board. Adam Goldstein, the Executive Vice President of AlignSource, www.alignsource.com had this to say:

“Utilizing HireFinders services; in one month our firm was able to place a Top Level Financial Executive with a large Home Health Organization as well as a Clinical Liaison with a Regional Nursing Home Company. The candidate quality was very high with Placement fees totaling around $50,000! We are a firm that engages in direct sourcing as our primary method of Executive Search and had never found any of the Job Boards to have much of any value for our search assignments. HireFinders was a pleasant surprise. We have found the site very easy to navigate, and job postings go in and up in a flash. We will definitely be using HireFinders in the future as an ancillary source of quality candidates.”

Are you a recruiting agency or a hiring manager? Why not give HireFinders a try? It is still free to post your jobs and thousands of job seekers visit our site every day.

Once you sign up, you can do a keyword and location search and see short, anonymous profiles and invite these candidates to apply for your position. Even if you just post, you will be surprised at the quality of candidates you receive. Our jobs are posted to Simply Hired and Indeed and other job aggregators.

While the site is very easy to navigate, if you need assistance, you can contact me, Audrey Chernoff, at audrey@hirefinders.com. We hope to see your job postings here and let us know your feedback.

 

Great News about HireFinders

Monday, May 3rd, 2010

We now have over 11,500 new jobs across the US on www.hirefinders.com. If you are looking for a new job, or know someone who is, please spread the word. Last Friday, we had over 7900 visitors to the site.

If you are a recruiter or a hiring manager, you can post your jobs for free and refresh them as often as you like. Post as many jobs as you need to, there is no limit on postings. Hope to see you on www.hirefinders.com !

Bullet Point to the Head–How Recruiters Scan Resumes

Thursday, August 6th, 2009

I read this on ERE, a site for recruiters, and probably found this article because of twitter. Written by Matthew Charney, I am republishing it here because it is so funny and true, unfortunately. If you are seeking a new job, read this carefully as it will give you tips on what to leave in and remove from your resume.  Matthew’s bio can be found here: http://www.linkedin.com/in/mattcharney and I hope this helps him find his next great position soon.

As a (once and future) corporate recruiter “actively looking for his next opportunity,” (translation: unemployed and hitting refresh on Indeed.com), I’ve had the opportunity, for the first time in my career, to experience life across the desk, as one of the unwashed masses yearning to breathe free.

Interesting paradigm shifts have occurred. An interview has gone from a job function to an event worthy of a phone call to mom; I no longer screen my calls, and in fact, am excited when the phone rings; and, of course, the worst of it all: I’ve become the target of a billion-dollar industry of profiteers who promise to give my search the winning edge, but they’re no longer contingency recruiters on biz dev calls. That, at least, would represent a career opportunity.

Let me be clear: I actually admire those who have figured out a way to monetize providing services to the unemployed. Most marketers would probably, conducting a SWOT analysis, point to the fact that categorically, those without jobs who are “actively looking” likely lack disposable income. But, you see, that’s capitalism in action.

Perhaps the most common service offered is professional resume writing. These services promise that, for anywhere between 400 and 800 dollars, a professional resume writer will not only critique your resume, but also work with you to create a resume guaranteed to “break through the clutter” by using better verbs to craft the “story of your career.” Corporate recruiters, apparently, have very strict guidelines for formatting on a resume, and a secret code known only to them and somehow cracked by the Professional Resume Writer’s Association. I must have missed that workshop at ERE, but I suppose so too did a lot of my colleagues, who I have seen commit such violations to code as cut and pasting resumes off of Monster into Word or forwarding horrifically misformatted LinkedIn profiles to hiring managers.

Since there seems to be an interesting amount of conspiracy theory around how recruiters read resumes (if they do at all, since apparently, talent acquisition systems are to candidates what the Meadowlands are to Jimmy Hoffa), I hope to add to the body of knowledge and present, from first-hand observation, how recruiters read resumes. And we do. Hundreds of them, every day, but there’s a method to our madness: overstaffed, overworked, we’ve developed a short-hand to get through that resume. It involves a few simple steps.

  1. Recruiter tears off cover letter (or, more likely, doesn’t bother opening the attachment in the ATS). Since most resumes lead with an objective statement (which are always subjective, in a nice bit of irony), we can only handle so much generic doublespeak in one sitting. Recruiters also don’t normally read objective statements, because the objective is pretty apparent when you send in a resume … to get a job. Everything else is window dressing.
  2. Recruiter looks at the candidate’s mailing address. If it’s going to require relocation or there’s any chance the commute is going to come up during salary negotiation, then on to the next candidate. Many resumes do indicate that the person will pay out of pocket to relocate and interview, which raises an immediate red flag as to why. We have enough desperation in our lives already. We’re recruiters, for heaven’s sake. This rule, of course, only applies to applicants, not passive candidates. If you’re top talent with a niche skill set, we’ll relocate you from Zanzibar, if that’s what it takes. Unless, of course, you require visa sponsorship. We have our limits, you know.
  3. Recruiter looks at company name. If we, in our infinite wisdom of all companies, do not recognize the company, we will move on, because there’s so much truth that branding is everything. You’re only as good as your last company, unless you have the letters CPA, MD, or JD after your name. Conversely, if the company has been in the news as either an acquisition target or a source of corporate scandal, on to the next resume (assuming the recruiter reads anything BUT resumes, which most do not). So it goes.
  4. The candidate’s most recent title must be in the same ballpark as the job for which they are being considered. There are some notable exceptions: candidates coming from the financial services industry, for instance, where we well know that interns are Assistant Vice Presidents, or consulting, where the titles are intentionally vague (Analyst, Associate, etc.) and flat so that everyone can be billed out at the same exorbitant rate. Traditionally, though, if you’re a Marketing Manager applying for a Marketing Manager job, then we’re still reading. If you’re looking for a step up, well, best of luck to you, because we promote from within, which will later be transformed into a selling point when offered a lateral move. If you’re looking to gain experience and aren’t title conscious, and are willing to lop off silly corporate constructs such as the word “Senior” or “Executive” from your title for a clearly better opportunity, you are the ideal candidate. But not for our corporate culture, which as a heavily matrixed, hierarchical organization, is obsessed with titles as a designator of worth. Without them, how would you know your place?
  5. If you don’t require relo, work for a brand name company and have the same title as the position you’re applying for, then it’s on to the first listed experience on the resume. Then we become Goldilocks … too heavy or too light? Here’s a rule of thumb. Refer back to the job description. Take the number of years of experience and add two … postings are a lot like dating in reverse. If the job’s looking for five years, the recruiter is looking for seven; 10 years means 12, and so on, until you hit the 20-year mark, whereby it’s onto the next resume because you’re “overqualified.” Besides, anyone who began their career prior to 1985 likely wears cardigans, talks about Andy Rooney around the water cooler, and will complain incessantly about how cold the office is when they’re not using their Dictaphones to compose correspondence. It’s a strange new world out there … and your Facebook page does little to convince the recruiter otherwise. Although interesting Matlock widget … It’s all about millennial now, which is why recent college grads are so successful in finding immediate, meaningful employment.
  6. Education check: Recruiters assign a baseline value of zero for a bachelor’s degree in a related discipline, which is to say, none of you crazy liberal or fine arts majors who spent your way doping through college while the rest of us were studying differential calculus need apply. We’re still bitter. A.A. on a resume? Take 12 steps back. Add one point for a Master’s, add two points for an M.B.A. (2.5 if it’s from a top-25 program), and subtract one point for a PhD. You’re probably either too smart to function here, or you’ve come crawling back from the Ivory Tower with a foiled plan B and the debt to prove it. Subtract the term “viable candidate” if secondary education has come from an institution whose admissions criteria involve clicking through pop-up ads or calling an 800 number on the side of the bus. While you’re obviously easy to close, we’ve got our shareholders to think about, and you’ve demonstrated little knowledge of the concept of “ROI.” The Phoenix will rise from the ashes only in myth. In reality, you should have saved those 30k for the premiums you’re about to pay on our “comprehensive” health benefits package. Oh, yeah. And we offer tuition reimbursement. Eh, too late.

Average time for these steps for an experienced corporate recruiter: 15 to 20 seconds. If you pass this initial scan, maybe then we’ll drill down past the keywords, unless you’re so impressive you’re out of our price range.

Alternatively, if you have a funny name, or if there’s obvious irony (a “Lean Executive” at Krispy Kreme, for instance, or the recent Monster headline, “Desperate Single Mom Willing To Do Anything”) or mention your work as a runway model or professional athlete, prepare to have your resume circulated to the entire staffing department.

Of course, what do I know? If I was such an expert, I’d have a job. Like being a professional resume writer.

 

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