Blog

How your social network can make you money and help your friends at the same time.

July 27th, 2009

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Our idea is simple: MyJobReferrals.com is an online employee referral system that removes the limitation on what company you can refer people you know (and in many cases, our awards are a lot higher that those internal programs too). Refer a qualified friend for a position and get a referral award if they are hired. It’s a straightforward concept and the site is designed to reflect that.

Awards for full-time placements range from $1,000 to $7,000 for each referral that is hired. Contract awards go from $400 to $600 per hired referral. Check the listings, we’re talking serious money.

We believe the knowledge of when your friends are looking to change jobs has value (and is more accurate than any social networking site could identify via automated search). That belief is the genesis of MyJobReferrals.com, we think you can identify this relevant info more efficiently than some automated cloud system.

With that in mind, this site was setup to put people in a position to help friends find a new job and get an award if they’re hired. We don’t want to know all things about everyone, our goal is to help your friends find new jobs and for you to get into the market of hiring for hard-to-fill positions.

Get Paid For Who You Know!

Click here to be notified about new positions to start making referrals and collecting placement awards.

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MyJobReferrals.com is an online job referral system enabling individuals to refer qualified candidates for open positions and receive a finder fee if their candidate is hired.© 2009 My Job Referrals, LLC

Making Referrals

An easy way to make money referring people for jobs.

July 15th, 2009

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The job market is undergoing a revolutionary change in the way it works. MyJobReferrals.com is a centralized, online web application that rewards you for linking qualified candidates to open positions. At MyJobReferrals.com, it’s easy for individuals to browse through open job opportunities and identify positions that a friend or colleague might be interested in hearing about.

How does it work? It’s very simple:

Browse – Visit MyJobReferrals.com and review the available job opportunities.

Refer – Think of friends and associates that are looking to change jobs and would be good candidates for the posted opportunities. Submit a referral via the site to make them aware of the opening.

Track – Log back in to MyJobReferrals.com and check your dashboard to view the status of your referrals as they go through the hiring process.

Collect – If your referral candidate is hired, a placement award is paid out to you for making the hire possible. Get paid for who you know. IT’S THAT EASY!

GET STARTED

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MyJobReferrals.com is an online job referral system enabling individuals to refer qualified candidates for open positions and receive a finder fee if their candidate is hired. © 2009 My Job Referrals, LLC

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Making Referrals

Refer friends and colleagues for jobs – Get paid for who you know!

July 13th, 2009

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Get paid for who you know!

The job market is undergoing a revolutionary change in the way it works. MyJobReferrals.com is a centralized, online web application that rewards you for linking qualified candidates to open positions.

No recruiting experience required

You don’t have to be a recruiter or have any recruiting experience to utilize or benefit from this service. By simply notifying a good candidate about the job opening, you receive a placement reward if they are hired. It’s that easy!

Refer people you know

Friends, family members, business associates, and colleagues are all possible referral candidates. We only ask that the person knows who you are and that you feel they are a good fit for the posted job opportunity.

Keep your day job, make more money

You probably won’t be able to sit back and quit your day job, but if you visit the site and do a quick search when you hear that your friends and contacts are interested in looking for a new job, My Job Referrals can increase your income through successful referrals.

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MyJobReferrals.com is an online job referral system enabling individuals to refer qualified candidates for open positions and receive a finder fee if their candidate is hired. © 2009 My Job Referrals, LLC

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Making Referrals

Improved Referral Site Layout Is Live

July 4th, 2009

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The new site layout for MyJobReferrals.com is live! The new design streamlines the job posting review and referral process as well as improving the overall functionality to the site.

Improvements on the referral source side include clear indicators of how to refer candidates for jobs as well as highlighting the referral award paid out for successful placements. On the recruiter side of the application we’ve made it easier to drill down into each posting & include relevant data about each candidate for the job.

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MyJobReferrals.com is an online job referral system enabling individuals to refer qualified candidates for open positions and receive a finder fee if their candidate is hired. © 2009 My Job Referrals, LLC

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System Status

Social Media Recruiting – Only good if you find what you’re looking for…

June 12th, 2009

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No one denies the fact that social media is being used to find jobs, but it’s worth noting that a number of those placements come about when the friends of the job seeker learn (via the social media network) that the individual is looking for a job and help them out. That method of using social media to find a job is quite different from being a recruiter or hiring manager and trying to locate a viable and interested candidate out in the social media stratosphere.

The most recent example of the gap between what social media can provide and obtaining  placements is highlighted by the following report from the SF Business Journal.

“Growth for Twitter, the superhot San Francisco microblogging startup, slowed significantly in May, according to the digital traffic measurement firm Compete.

Monthly unique visitors to Twitter rose a mere 1.47 percent, or 285,333, to 19.7 million between April and May, according to Compete. The number of visits increased just shy of 7 percent.

That compares with an increase of monthly visitors of 5.4 million during March and 6.1 million in February.

Compete’s figures follow closely on the heels of a controversial Harvard Business Review study that looked at 300,000 Twitter accounts and found the top 10 percent of Twitter users accounted for over 90 percent of tweets, as postings on the service are called, while over half of the account holders tweeted less than once every 74 days…”

<Full Article Here>

Despite the avalanche of media coverage over Twitter in the past few months it’s noteworthy that once the dust clears the fact remains: At it’s base form, social media is just another way for groups of people to communicate. The questions to ask are: Do your customers use the service you’re trying to reach them with? Are enough of them using the service to make it worth your time?

As a business, the key is to identify and harness relevant information in a way that enables value to be created and generate increased revenues. Currently, Twitter, MySpace, LinkedIn, and Facebook cover many topics of information and interests other than searching for or finding a job. However, this accumulation of a large amounts of data does not make it easier to identify meaningful information that is of value to recruiters & hiring managers.

Developing an effective way to identify and connect qualified candidates with open positions is the hurdle that needs to be overcome before social media becomes a reliable tool for recruiters.

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MyJobReferrals.com is an online job referral system enabling individuals to refer qualified candidates for open positions and receive a finder fee if their candidate is hired. © My Job Referrals, LLC

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Insight About Social Media, Referral Recruiting

The Candidate Bill of Rights

June 10th, 2009

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Developing trust between parties involved in any kind of significant interaction is critical. In order for a relationship to exist both sides must have an understanding of what is expected of them and uphold their ends of the agreement.

As part of the groundwork for establishing a level of trust at MyJobReferrals.com the operational staff and recruiters who use the service decided to come up with a list of rights referral sources and candidates who use the site should expect to receive when they use the service.

Several recruiters mentioned that Accolo had developed something similar to what was being discussed. As it turns out they had a fairly comprehensive list of items and rather than re-creating the wheel we’re giving them the credit for establishing this list.

Recruiters using the MJR service are expected to adhere to the items in the following ‘Candidate Bill of Rights’. They aren’t hard to do and good recruiters do these tasks as a part of their job. Several of these rights such as ensuring follow up notifications on applications are enforced via the My Job Referrals service. Any remaining items are the responsibility of the individual recruiter posting the position. If a candidate feels they have been sold short on these items they should let us know so we can follow up with the other party and address the issue as needed. With thanks to Accolo for putting this together and without further ado:

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The Candidate Bill of Rights

Confidentiality: Individuals are entitled to the security and confidentiality of their personal and professional background and data. Any decision to make that data available to others must be at the specific request of the individual.

Credibility: All advertised positions must be verifiably open and available to job-seekers, with the intent of the hiring organization to make any and all efforts to fill the open position.

Accuracy: The description of an open position should accurately and specifically identify the unique attributes of that position as they relate to the Hiring Manager, organization, geography, work group, work to be completed, and performance measurement criteria.

Consideration: All interested candidates, from all available sources, should be considered for an open position based upon their ability and aptitude, and that consideration should be free from racism, sexism, and other forms of prejudice and intolerance.

Consistency: Hiring decisions will be made based upon on a set of specific and defined criteria that is relevant to the position, consistent across all candidates and applied objectively.

Follow Up: All applicants are entitled to consistent communications regarding the status of their candidacy, regardless of the outcome of their application.

Preparation: Each individual should expect that they will be provided with all relevant information about the organization and Hiring Manager in order to best prepare them for success during the interview process.

Respect: Scheduling of interviews will occur in a manner that demonstrates respect for the candidate, their time and their efforts.

Communication: Every inquiry regarding the status of candidacy or application is worthy of a response.

Information: All applicants will be provided with the necessary information about the company, hiring manager, compensation, performance expectations, and other criteria in order to make an informed career decision.

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MyJobReferrals.com is an online job referral system enabling individuals to refer qualified candidates for open positions and receive a finder fee if their candidate is hired. © My Job Referrals, LLC

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Referral Recruiting, Referral Recruiting Tips

Twitter’s major limitation in advertising & sourcing.

June 1st, 2009

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It’s no secret, the amount of information on the Internet is its greatest strength and weakness. It’s wonderful to have such resources at your disposal, but it can be difficult to provide or locate key information when it’s needed at a particular time.

With its short message and limited ability to hold one’s attention span Twitter has difficulty providing a effective level of persistence. There is no doubt it will play a role in the world of social networking and hiring, but a major shortcoming is the lack of information being conveyed and staying presence.

In order for job postings and advertisements to be effective via this medium they need to be repeated multiple times in order to ensure coverage. However constant repetition can OVERWHELM the target audience with information. Human nature adapts to routine which includes developing an immunity to repetitious events the mind deems to be irrelevant. Simply mass marketing job posts via a Twitter service will be little different from spam mail or mass mailings.

Additionally, no job description can be adequately outlined in 140 characters or less. Twitter’s ultimate business fit will be as a notification service linking to more substantial information but only for target audiences that frequent and use the service. (For example: Promoting concert tickets in the LA area would be a good fit. Whereas advertising motorized wheelchairs in Florida would have limited results)

So before investing time and resources into Twitter, first ask yourself what your business model is trying to accomplish then match it up against the strengths and limitations of Twitter. If it fits into the role you wish to use it for, then proceed. If you’re trying to do something ill suited to what Twitter can provide, you may want to reconsider the business strategy or use another communication mechanism better fitted to your needs.

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MyJobReferrals.com is an online job referral system enabling individuals to refer qualified candidates for open positions and receive a finder fee if their candidate is hired. © My Job Referrals, LLC

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Insight About Social Media

Referrals are the #1 Source of External Hires

May 15th, 2009

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The 8th Annual 2009 Source of Hire Study from CareerXRoads confirms that for those hires originating from external sources; referrals from current or previous employees, customers, and vendors are the number one external source accounting for 27.3% of successful placements.

Nearly 40% of all positions filled within companies result from internal transfers or promotions. Interestingly, job boards (excluding company sites) produce only 12.3% of external hires and seem to have reached their peak.

The report is a concise analysis of the current status of the industry and has insightful observations about the future of sourcing, recruiting, and hiring. A recommended read for anyone involved in the sourcing and candidate placement fields.

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Referral Recruiting

How to write job postings and get referral candidates to apply.

May 11th, 2009

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Attracting quality talent is a constant challenge. Referral recruiting offers recruiters the ability to efficiently reach their target candidates via referral sources but also requires a different approach to writing the job post.  For starters, to effectively utilize referral recruiting a recruiter must put themselves in the shoes of the two target audiences; the referral source and the candidate.

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First, focus the opening lines of the job post at the referral sources locating talent on your behalf.  To enable referral sources to refer quality applicants, one must effectively communicate the requirements in a way that friends and colleagues of the potential applicant can understand and associate to the individual.

The best way is to keep it short and to the point. Include simple details that a friend or acquaintance will know about a person; the job title, the primary task for the position summed up in one or two sentences, and the length of required experience.

Other details may be added here but each additional requirement actually decreases the chance of getting an initial referral. Good referral sources will not submit a candidate that they do not KNOW to possess a requirement listed in the job posting even if the potential candidate has the desired skill unbeknownst to the referral source.

Remember: At this point the objective in referral recruiting is to maximize the number of referral candidates for the position.  Every referral may not be completely qualified for a position, but a qualified candidate who is unaware of the position cannot apply.

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The second target reader of the posting is the actual candidate for the position, but be careful to avoid dissuading qualified individuals. Write a concise but informative job description to encourage the candidate to apply. Avoid writing a lengthy list of bullet-point requirements and attaching a generic list of soft-skill requirements at the end of the posting.  Clearly define the tasks for the position and make sure the goals are as tangible and objective as possible. Less is more. Here are some general guidelines:

  1. Use simple words. A term used for a task or responsibility within an organization may interpreted differently by an external candidate. A good job description outlines the tasks to be performed using simple words. Deciphering acronyms, buzzwords, or industry slang just to understand the job responsibilities is an indication that the position might not be at a great company to work for in the first place. The good candidates know this, so make the requirements understandable so all candidates clearly know what is expected of them.
  2. Make requirements clear. Don’t put generic requirements like “strong communication skills” or similar catchphrases into the job descriptions. Communication is overly broad in that there are many forms of it and ways in which it can be applied. Clarify the required skills by giving some context in which it will be used, such as: “Present technical wireless concepts to those not familiar with the cellular phone industry”. Make sure each task item illustrates and pertains to a key job function.
  3. Don’t go overboard. The job description should outline the requirements but it should not list every single responsibility and task the job will perform. Postings with lines and lines of requirements read as ‘avoid me at all cost’ jobs.  Also validate that it’s realistic, don’t require 5-7 years of experience for a platform or field that has only been existence for 3.
  4. Write it in a positive sense. A candidate should be able to clearly tell whether they have experience or know-how that meets the requirements and subsequently want to apply. A job posting that includes tangible or quantifiable objectives receives more applicants than one containing a bullet-point list of vague requirements. To get the better quality candidates, one must write better quality job descriptions.
  5. Don’t go overboard. It’s important enough to be repeated. Keep it short, positive, and as objective as possible.

Remember: An advantage of referral recruiting is the ability to make passive candidates aware of open positions they would not normally be aware of. The job post must communicate the high-level requirements of the job to the candidate AND to be written convincingly to encourage them to apply.

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Additional Posting Tips:

  • Title – Include a job title comparable with others in the industry.
  • Major Duties – Starting with an action verb in each clause, list the tasks that are to be completed while holding the position. List these tasks in order of importance. Be clear and specific. Mind rules 3 & 5.
  • Education/Experience – Include the desired degrees and required experience. If possible, try to avoid making “X number of years” one of the requirements for a position as is it not a reliable indicator of how much an individual learned or can accomplish. People learn and utilize their experience at different rates in different organizations. Make skills the primary driver, let the level of education & experience be validated during the interview process.
  • Supervision – Include to what degree the position is supervised, and by whom it is supervised. Candidates want to know how the position fits into the organization structure.
  • Working Conditions – Be clear as to when and where the candidate is expected to work. Hours, months, locations, travel requirements are all essential components of this section. Mind rules 3 & 5.
  • Benefits – Include things that will attract candidates, such as challenging assignments, insurance policies, etc. Make sure to sell the position well here, and explain exactly what the candidate will be getting in return for his or her services.

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Other Resources & Thought Provoking Reading:

Why you must eliminate  job descriptions!

Additional tips on writing more traditional job descriptions.

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MyJobReferrals.com is an online job referral system enabling individuals to refer qualified candidates for open positions and receive a finder fee if their candidate is hired. © 2009 My Job Referrals, LLC

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Referral Recruiting Tips

Why Recruiting Will Become More Important As Online Social Media Evolves, Not Less.

April 20th, 2009

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It’s funny to hear talk about recruiters being replaced by online social networking systems in the next few years. It reminds me of the late-1990’s when people thought that accountants would become replaceable with the advent of TurboTax & other tax software packages. Now we know; as long as tax law continues to be complex, there will be a need for good accountants to interpret and apply that information on our tax returns.

But let’s back up to the reason recruiters are brought on board in the first place. In many cases, they are more effective at locating qualified candidates than the company can do on its own. With the advent of new online tools, it’s possible for recruiters to become even more effective if they develop and learn new methods to stay ahead of the curve. There’s no reason  to minimize the situation; A Darwinian process is in effect as we speak, recruiters that adapt and develop ways to be effective within this new environment will be better at locating candidates going forward and therefore have a better chance of succeeding/surviving.

Recruiting online is the first step towards becoming more effective in locating candidates. But the challenge facing recruiters (and the internet as a whole) is the fact that there is TOO MUCH information available, which makes it difficult to locate the right kind of information when it is needed.

Social networking and online media is a treasure trove of many things that can be used by marketers and advertising individuals, but everyone is looking for different things related to their industry/product. The challenge recruiters face going forward is locating the right candidate information at the right time from all the terabytes of data available to them online. [More on that in an upcoming post which will be linked to here once posted.]

As long as there is a need to locate good, qualified candidates from the masses, there will be a need for recruiters to locate them, guide them through the hiring process, and place them.

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MyJobReferrals.com is an online job referral portal enabling people to refer qualified candidates for open positions and receive a placement award if their candidate is hired. © 2009 My Job Referrals, LLC

Observations