8 out of 10 IT Jobseekers Fail to Find Work Through Professional Networking Sites
By The It Job Board, PRNEThursday, April 8, 2010
Job Boards and Recruitment Consultants are the 'go to' Channel for Active Jobseekers
LONDON, April 9, 2010 - In spite of their rising popularity, professional networking sites such
as LinkedIn are not replacing traditional job hunting and recruitment
methods, according to 540 job seeking IT professionals, surveyed by The IT
Job Board, www.theitjobboard.co.uk, in March.
Whilst IT professionals clearly use professional networking sites, their
primary usage is to build up a portfolio of business contacts (53%), and to
keep in touch with former colleagues and friends (33%), rather than to secure
new jobs.
Half of all respondents said they have used LinkedIn to search for jobs
and almost a third of IT professionals (32%) would like to be headhunted
through such sites. However, in spite of this, eight out of ten jobseekers
have failed to secure new roles via professional networking sites.
The favoured recruitment channels for IT professionals are job boards
(42%) and recruitment consultants (30%). Just 8.5% of IT professionals view
professional networking sites as the most valuable channel for job hunting,
indicating that traditional 'core' recruitment methods are still preferred.
According to the research, the main barriers to finding work through
professional networking sites are:
- Poor experience - 42% don't know how to find employers - Confusion - 20% don't know how to approach recruitment consultants - Privacy issues - 15% don't want their employers to know they are looking for a new job - The sites are untargeted - 11.5% claimed they are not specialist enough
Alex Farrell, managing director of The IT Job Board, said: "Whilst there
is a role for professional networking sites in the recruitment process, it is
still evolving. There is still confusion around how to use professional
networks effectively to find work. They are servicing the passive market,
whilst active jobseekers are utilising both job boards and recruitment
consultants.
"Making a success of professional networking is time intensive for both
candidates and recruiters alike. These channels don't - as yet - provide
targeted platforms. Today's recruiters would be better placed using
pin-pointed CV databases, which provide a more targeted, effective and
proactive way of finding candidates. I think it's a case of 'watch this
space'," she added.
Notes to editors
About The IT Job Board:
The IT Job Board group of companies was set up in April 2002
in recognition that recruitment in the IT sector was increasingly dominated
by the internet.
Today, The IT Job Board (www.theitjobboard.co.uk) is the UK's
biggest IT specialist recruitment website with over 23383 vacancies
advertised (as at April 2010).
Online technology enables sophisticated targeting - for example by skill,
region or experience - of The IT Job Board's database of 800,000 IT
professionals. The company always tries to get closer to candidates either
via planned content campaigns, or through the use of social networks.
The site also offers employers services such as branded job
postings, a featured employer zone, targeted email campaigns and guidance on
advertising copy. The managed campaign service filters responses to provide
companies with a shortlist of applicants most suitable for the advertised
position.
www.theitjobboard.co.uk's clients include Deloitte,
Accenture, BP, HM Treasury, Betfair, Amnesty International and MI5.
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For further information, interviews and photography please contact: Lisa Whiting/Kathryn Hughes, Publicite Ltd, T: +44(0)20-8543-6582, E: l.whiting at publicite.co.uk
Tags: April 9, London, The IT Job Board, United Kingdom