- Joined
- Nov 14, 2011
- Posts
- 443
- Reaction score
- 5
Hi,
I'm curious on people's views on job aggregators, whether they're good or bad. For arguments sake let's assume it has very good user experience/functionality like this: http://www.jobisjob.co.uk/
It seems the pros are you can find more jobs, which is good especially if you have stricter requirements. For example, it might save time searching on a job aggregator for a particular role/location/salary then manually searching on 3-4 different job sites.
However, the downside seems to be that aggregator is a bit impersonal and a stumbling block - you have to leave the site in order to apply for jobs, and saving jobs/email alerts or signing up seems irrelevant when it's not up to the aggregator when the actual job expires.
All these big job aggregators have "sign in and save" preferences, but I don't see the point of that featured on an aggregator. In order to view the full details on the job, you'd need go to the actual job site or application page, before saving. So you're basically "saving" a third-party click to another site before even viewing the full job description.
However, I see the advantage of uploading your CV to a job aggregator is that aggregators will work with recruitment agencies (just like a regular job board) to get your CV seen in front of potential employers, so obviously that's a clean feature.
What are other people's thoughts? Also, most job aggregators allow you to post jobs for free (since they make money from ads), which I personally think is where the job industry is going. I don't see why recruiters will be paying £200+/month to post jobs on well known boards such as Monster.co.uk when they can post for free on aggregators with bigger traffic and reach.
I'm curious on people's views on job aggregators, whether they're good or bad. For arguments sake let's assume it has very good user experience/functionality like this: http://www.jobisjob.co.uk/
It seems the pros are you can find more jobs, which is good especially if you have stricter requirements. For example, it might save time searching on a job aggregator for a particular role/location/salary then manually searching on 3-4 different job sites.
However, the downside seems to be that aggregator is a bit impersonal and a stumbling block - you have to leave the site in order to apply for jobs, and saving jobs/email alerts or signing up seems irrelevant when it's not up to the aggregator when the actual job expires.
All these big job aggregators have "sign in and save" preferences, but I don't see the point of that featured on an aggregator. In order to view the full details on the job, you'd need go to the actual job site or application page, before saving. So you're basically "saving" a third-party click to another site before even viewing the full job description.
However, I see the advantage of uploading your CV to a job aggregator is that aggregators will work with recruitment agencies (just like a regular job board) to get your CV seen in front of potential employers, so obviously that's a clean feature.
What are other people's thoughts? Also, most job aggregators allow you to post jobs for free (since they make money from ads), which I personally think is where the job industry is going. I don't see why recruiters will be paying £200+/month to post jobs on well known boards such as Monster.co.uk when they can post for free on aggregators with bigger traffic and reach.