Will job boards be a thing of the past in years to come?

-

Social media, both internally and externally, is mixing with the “traditional” method of finding work online – and by extension then with traditional methods of advertising jobs online. New social media consultant firms are delivering programmes designed to expand a potential employer’s arsenal of recruiting tricks.
A social media marketing consultant used to be someone who sold your brand in the social media, normally by helping you infiltrate the right networks and chatter streams in the right way. Now the international social media consultant is also someone who helps you navigate the streams of job seekers and professional networks out there, all potentially fruitful ground for adding to the personnel of your company.
The international social media marketing consultant is able to use the same techniques as he or she applied to developing the reputation of your brand in the social media, to make your company a more attractive place for high quality candidates to come and work.
Specifically corporate social media sites like LinkedIn offer an excellent overview of the ways in which social media has added to the recruiting mix for successful companies. Looking at the recruiting habits of large organisations, you can see where the techniques advocated by the international social media consultant slip into the recipe.
Hewlett Packard, for example, does a major amount of recruitment either internally or through traditionally cultivated (i.e. not online) networks and recruitment associations. Where these methods fail though, HP is a long term user of LinkedIn – normally using the site to connect with known professionals it has been unable to find by other means.
The international social media marketing consultant can help an organisation to find highly qualified individuals by cultivating a specifically targeted list of contacts – industry experts whose own contact lists include many high calibre candidates whose CVs span a wide range of appropriate roles. Of course this is one of the major benefits of social media – once you’re in, you’re in and it only takes a request to your immediate network to spark a series of cascading referrals for people well suited to your requirements.
The international social media consultant can also utilise similar techniques to find people not immediately known to the organisation, but who may be a perfect fit for a particular role or need. By targeting your social media presence in the professional social media you can align yourself with potentially fruitful grounds for getting candidates come to you looking for work.
Social media for professionals encourages positioning by tags, in much the same way that search engine indexing is done by keywords. Your international social media marketing consultant can develop a presence for you in the right professional circles by targeting the tags, interests or even known employers whose business interests coincide with your own.

Latest news

Sidonie Viala: Pay transparency won’t close inequality if negotiation still drives pay

The EU's Pay Transparency Directive is on track to arrive with a simple promise: visibility will bring fairness. But transparency only exposes outcomes.

Calls grow for working from home as fuel shortages loom amid Iran conflict

Remote work is being urged as fuel shortages linked to Middle East conflict threaten commuting, business operations and workforce stability.

Worker denied leave for 25 years wins £400,000 in holiday pay case

A tribunal awards nearly £400,000 to a worker denied annual leave for decades, raising concerns about holiday policies and employer compliance.

Sustainable business starts with people, not HR policies

Why long-term success depends on supporting employees, not just meeting ESG targets, with practical steps for leaders to build healthier organisations.
- Advertisement -

Hiring steadies but Gulf crisis threatens recovery in UK jobs market

UK hiring shows signs of stabilising, but rising global uncertainty linked to the Gulf crisis is weighing on employer confidence and delaying recovery.

Women ‘face career setback’ risk with flexible working

Female staff using remote or reduced-hour arrangements more likely to move into lower-status roles, raising concerns about bias in career progression.

Must read

Andy West: Ease the pain of change management with a focus on people

A changing world puts pressure on organisations to change...

Paul Russell: So you want to be…emotionally intelligent?

Increasingly HR professionals are exploring the relationship between concepts such as well-being, personality and stress with workplace performance. And with emotional intelligence in particular being linked to not only better performance, but to job satisfaction, development of effective work relationships, greater workplace loyalty, enhanced firm revenues and overall job role advancement and success, it is not hard to see why.
- Advertisement -

You might also likeRELATED
Recommended to you