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Articles tagged 'Facebook'

Industry News, Social Media, Technology & Resources

Finally, We Have Identified a Relevant Professional Search Engine


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The competition for professional networking sites just took an attention-grabbing twist, as Identified launched in public beta Monday. This new site is actually aimed at aiding recruiters in producing better search results for candidates and predicting which candidates companies would be must interested in. Dubbed as a professional job search engine, Identified ranks people on a scale of 0-100 from three key areas: professional career, education background, and social network.

Built on a combination of your Facebook data and entered information, Identified takes the approach of ranking the top candidates in various skill sets. For example, if you are looking for a Software Engineer, Identified will accumulate a list of the top software engineers on the site.

By using a complex algorithm, Identified provides users on what companies are ideally looking for. In fact, it was that concept that intrigued the minds of Identified’s co-founders Brendan Wallace and Adeyemi Ajao. The two were students at Stanford University when they pondered the question, “What will make us more desirable to employers?”

The two built the site and when it was launched on campus, they had more users in eleven days than Stanford’s career center had resumes. After expanding to nine other colleges (Harvard, Brown, UVA, Georgetown, etc.), Identified raised $5.5M from Google CEO Eric Schmidt, Draper Fisher Jurvetson’s Tim Draper, Bill Draper and others.

“When I first saw Identified exploding on Stanford’s campus, it reminded me of the early stories of Facebook’s growth at Harvard back in 2004,” Bill Draper said. “Like Facebook did for social networking, I think Identified will become the standard of professional networking for the Facebook generation and beyond.”

Identified works closely with Facebook’s API to pull data that helps accumulate your ranking. Historically Facebook has been a college phenomenon. In fact, it was only open to university scholars until 2006. This being the case, there is far more accurate data on Facebook than other professional networking sites such as LinkedIn. According to Identified, 47% of Facebook users enter their professional information in their Facebook profiles.

Currently there are near 80 million Facebook users in the United States between the ages of 18-34, as opposed to slightly over three million users on LinkedIn. If 47% of those Facebook users have entered their professional information, Facebook is a much larger resume database than we realized.

According to Wallace, “the problem with LinkedIn is that it outputs a lot of data. Identified is a professional search engine that delivers professional information in a professional way. You get the best results at the top.”

Rankings

The biggest debate with Identified has been over its rankings, but let’s takes a closer look. Looking back at the photo of the query I ran earlier, Garrett Marcotte is the top ranked Software Engineer, yet does not have the highest score. In theory, Identified is telling us that Marcotte is the most desirable Software Engineer to companies in their database. After a closer look into his professional and collegiate history, you can see why:

What you can’t see is who Marcotte is connected too. Remember, Identified also ranks your relevancy on your social network. Since I ran a query for Software Engineers and Marcotte is the most relevant candidate, his social network probably contains a vast array of other Software Engineers.

It’s the same theory that you’re only as good as the people you surround yourself with. If you are a good recruiter, your network probably contains a lot of high level recruiting connections. Likewise, if you are a junior recruiter or not the best sourcer, you probably don’t have the largest recruiting network, and you probably are not reading this article.

In a similar search for “Robotics,” Marcotte’s relevancy is ranked lower. This is most likely because he is currently not performing that role and his social network probably contains less “Robotics” professionals.

To date, Identified has scored and indexed over 40 million professionals, 60,000 companies and over 8,000 universities. 40 million profiles is a lot, and Wallace adds that they are growing at a rate of 2 million profiles a day. However, not everyone has signed up just yet. Identified pulls in its users’ connections’ information straight from Facebook and creates scores even for people not registered. This is public information that Identified is providing recruiters without a direct connection on Facebook to these candidates. Currently, users are not able to search on score, but a paid feature will soon be in place for recruiters to utilize.

It is important to note that your score is not an indicator of success or status as a better candidate. Your score should be viewed as an indicator as to how companies may potentially view you. Likewise, your rank does not necessarily make you the best candidate for the job, but the higher your rank, the more desirable you will potentially look to companies. Identified has features, and is working on more, that will help you increase your score. By adding your grade point average, SAT scores, job title, and description of past work done, your score can increase. In theory, if you rocked a 4.0 at the University of Wisconsin, you can have a similar score to a user that attended a more prestigious university.

Analytics

 

 

One cool feature of this site is the analytics it provides for each search. Check out my search for a Software Engineer. Identified lists the most common schools and majors for each Software Engineer on the site. This is a great analytics feature that can be for pipelining and sourcing future candidates.

On your personal page, the analytics go even further. Identified lists the most common job titles, most common companies, most common universities and even most common majors in your own network. Great information to know.

According to Wallace, “Identified is trying to give transparency to users when companies are searching for you in Facebook and how that information is in a score.” He adds, “LinkedIn is a database, and Identified is a search engine that gives relevance to who is going to be on top of the list.”

This might just be the most relevant professional search engine that we have seen yet. The only candidates that we will not be able to see are the ones not on Facebook. But with near 800 million Facebook users, I think we have found our next recruiting playground.

So how relevant are you?

Social Media, Technology & Resources

Getting to know Knod.es: A Quick Way to Search Your Networks


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knodes logo

It’s eminent that recruiters make the best networkers. Being the face of a company and telling its story to potential prospects is part of our vocation. Attending job fairs, networking events, and mixers allow us to mingle with passive candidates and offers exposure to the community.

With Recruitment 3.0, social networking allows us to have access to millions of people and lets us easily grow our talent pipeline. Today, we spend the majority of our day searching for candidates on the most popular social media sites. LinkedIn has become our playground and building our network is an absolute necessity.

Without a doubt, recruiters should be the most connected users on LinkedIn or any other social media site. I actually feel bad for my non-recruiting friends as their LinkedIn, Facebook, and Twitter feeds have become over-saturated with my latest connections, job announcements, and recruiting news articles.

The words “sourcing” and “hiring” have become part of my friend’s vocabulary. I love reading their responses to my social media updates:

Obviously, my status updates and constant jabber about sourcing has become a little obnoxious to others. As a result, I stumbled upon a new site that makes it easy to reach out to your entire social network without status updates or blasting a tweet.

Knod.es, product of SnapGoods, is a new site that searches your LinkedIn, Twitter, and Facebook connections that are most likely to have an answer to your question or topic.

Social Media

Searching Social Media Requires Outside-of-the-Box Thinking


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Non-Standard Descriptors and the Role They Play in Social Media

Sourcing has always been a significant component in the recruiting lifecycle. However, in recent years, sourcing has taken a giant step into the forefront and has become recognized as the solid foundation upon which successful recruiting rests in order to identify and secure top-level talent, no matter what industry you may be supporting.

These days, it seems as if nearly everyone from CEOs of Fortune 500 companies, to inventors in various fields, to the grandmother of your best friend has a Facebook page, a LinkedIn profile, or a Twitter account.

Although some people are still discovering and testing the waters of the Twitterverse, a diverse and large population spanning nearly all industry segments has already fully jumped on to the real-time messaging bandwagon in order to share information or blurt out a piece of nonsense rolling around in their head.

Social Media, Technology & Resources

Analysis of Technology Applications and Platforms for Recruiting and Sourcing: BranchOut


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BranchOut tree

Facebook has been a forerunner in personal networking. As more companies have joined Facebook, the applications utilizing personal and professional information are also on the rise. Two years ago we saw this same process within Twitter as more and more developers saw a way to profit and join the network. However, an important question is being asked: Is Facebook trying to be too much to too many people?

I’ve seen the fads come and go (Farmville, Mafia Wars, Questions). The latest additions to Facebook are professional networking platforms. BranchOut and BeKnown are the first two I’ve tried. I’ve noticed it’s a battle to leave my Facebook Wall uncluttered. Head to head, which professional application on Facebook is truly the best? This week, I’m looking into BranchOut.

Industry News, Social Media

Monster Launches a New Facebook App: BeKnown


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Monster launched a Facebook app over the weekend that will let the 700 million users of the popular social community build a professional network separate and apart from the one their friends get to see.

BeKnown, as it is called, borrows much from LinkedIn and BranchOut, but goes further than the latter and offers more versatility and flair than the former. It’s not a frontal attack on LinkedIn’s growing recruitment business, but a flanking maneuver, focusing on younger workers just beginning to build their business contacts.

While Monster is aiming at the 600 million-plus users worldwide who aren’t LinkedIn members, those who are can import their contacts from there as they build an independent network on BeKnown. The app also makes it possible to invite contacts from other sources, including Gmail, Yahoo, Twitter and, of course, Facebook.

Installing the app gives users a second Facebook profile that can be imported from LinkedIn or Monster if they are registered there. Pictures and other existing Facebook content can be managed to create a distinctly differently persona from the one social friends get to see. Otherwise, the visual appearance mimics the typical Facebook presence.

Industry News, Social Media

Facebook’s Tag Suggestions Raise Recruiting Issues


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Ever since Facebook started rolling out its facial recognition service — officially “Tag Suggestions” — a few months ago, pictures have been getting tagged with the names of the people who are in them, without their permission and even without their knowledge.

As you might imagine, this is causing an outcry about the privacy implications. Last week, just days after Facebook extended its facial recognition to Europe and other countries, a group of privacy organizations filed a complaint with the Federal Trade Commission. One of the issues is that Facebook requires users to opt-out rather than opt-in to the service. The bigger part, however, is over what data Facebook is collecting and how it will be used.

European Union regulators raised the alarm last week, and now some in Congress are complaining about Facebook’s implementation.

Facebook’s response? “We should have been more clear with people during the roll-out process when this became available to them.” To be fair to Facebook, the service has been around for months in the U.S. without much complaint. But a Sophos blog post complained that it was turned on for users elsewhere without any notification, and that the default is on.

Social Media

Job Boards vs. Social Networking Sites


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boxing gloves

I follow a number of recruiting blogs as well as many sourcers and recruiters on Twitter and I see a growing trend of job board bashing – typically comparing them (very) unfavorably to social networking sites and applications.

I love and leverage social networking as much as the next recruiting professional, but I refuse to just blindly follow the crowd or jump on the bandwagon when it comes to anything. With all of the buzz about social media and so many people running away from and disparaging the job boards, I am going to step out of the crowd and try to figure out where this perspective that job boards = old/bad, social networking = new/good comes from, because to me, some of the reasoning doesn’t add up.

Social Media

Facebook Fan Pages for Sourcing and Recruiting


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facebook-fan-page

I recently shifted from a 90,000-employee organization to a 1,500-employee organization. In doing so, I have been wondering if my new organization needs a Facebook Fan Page. Hence, I am on a journey to find an answer…

So — what are some of the things you need to consider before you decide to create a Facebook Fan Page? I came up with a few below, and I hope to add more to the list very soon. (Based on your views and comments)

Industry News, Social Media, Technology & Resources

FellowUp With Your Social Network Connections


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How many times do you make a professional connection on LinkedIn or Facebook, only to forget about following up or staying in touch? Granted, if we are making quality connections, this should not be the case, but we do not live in a utopian world and things frequently slip our minds. Wouldn’t it be nice if there were a collective way for our social network to remind us to follow up without having to revisit each site one at a time?

FellowUp will help to solve this problem.

Leadership, The Sourcing Function

Don’t Be a Sourcing Snob


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Are You a Sourcing Snob?

Ask yourself these questions:

  • Is a candidate identified on LinkedIn intrinsically “better” than a candidate sourced from Monster?
  • Is candidate sourced by cold calling inherently “better” than a candidate sourced from a job posting on Careerbuilder?
  • Does it really matter where a great candidate comes from?

I continue to see well-respected thought leaders in the staffing industry make claims that the quality of candidates on the job boards is low, and there seems to be no shortage of those in the recruiting and staffing industry who are happy to jump on that bandwagon. However, whenever I read or hear broad, sweeping statements claiming that an entire population of 50,000,000+ candidates is low quality just because they happen to be in an online resume database of a major job board – my response is a mix of shock and disappointment.