Hidden Job Market
Discussion
Good Morning folks
I hope you're all well. A lot of you may have heard that only 20% of jobs are advertised and the other 80% of the jobs remain unadvertised and are in the 'hidden job market'.
Can anyone suggest how to tap into this hidden job market?
Has anyone found a job this way?
Thanks
I hope you're all well. A lot of you may have heard that only 20% of jobs are advertised and the other 80% of the jobs remain unadvertised and are in the 'hidden job market'.
Can anyone suggest how to tap into this hidden job market?
Has anyone found a job this way?
Thanks
I've known people employed by direct letters to an establishment.
I'm talking schools here, probably as they have lots of temp work in terms of supply etc.
However any business with high absence or high staff turnover, might be worth a shot??
I was once employed via an agency, however it's a horrible brutal way to go.
Spam CV's seem pointless.
I would draft some nice letters and get posting!
Also networking with friends, linked in seems pointless to be honest, however what about facebook, get asking around??
I'm talking schools here, probably as they have lots of temp work in terms of supply etc.
However any business with high absence or high staff turnover, might be worth a shot??
I was once employed via an agency, however it's a horrible brutal way to go.
Spam CV's seem pointless.
I would draft some nice letters and get posting!
Also networking with friends, linked in seems pointless to be honest, however what about facebook, get asking around??
It's definitely all about networking. My last two positions came from someone who I knew coming direct to me with an offer. I've also had 3 or 4 approaches from other people for other roles over the past year or two. I followed one of those up and received an offer by the time I got home from the interview, but I was persuaded to stay where I was. I've recruited people myself the same way (and have another two on the go like that at present). No advertising or agencies at all.
It's all about making and maintaining contacts. "Hi, how's things, must be about time we caught up for a coffee?" is part of my regular schedule.
It's all about making and maintaining contacts. "Hi, how's things, must be about time we caught up for a coffee?" is part of my regular schedule.
If you are going to send a CV then follow up. But before that do your homework. Who are you going to send it to?
If the companies are local drop in if possible to hand it in. Ask for their business card and follow up by phone or email.
Don't just ask did you receive it? Engage in a proper dialogue, get some understanding of whether they have the sorts of roles you want in their organisation or team currently, ask to keep in touch, ask about their recruitment plans, ask how they like to recruit, etc.
Your CV is just like a flyer or piece of junkmail. It is only if any use if somebody relevant sees it.
If the companies are local drop in if possible to hand it in. Ask for their business card and follow up by phone or email.
Don't just ask did you receive it? Engage in a proper dialogue, get some understanding of whether they have the sorts of roles you want in their organisation or team currently, ask to keep in touch, ask about their recruitment plans, ask how they like to recruit, etc.
Your CV is just like a flyer or piece of junkmail. It is only if any use if somebody relevant sees it.
dundarach said:
I've known people employed by direct letters to an establishment.
I'm talking schools here, probably as they have lots of temp work in terms of supply etc.
However any business with high absence or high staff turnover, might be worth a shot??
I was once employed via an agency, however it's a horrible brutal way to go.
Spam CV's seem pointless.
I would draft some nice letters and get posting!
Also networking with friends, linked in seems pointless to be honest, however what about facebook, get asking around??
What was brutal about getting employment via an agency?I'm talking schools here, probably as they have lots of temp work in terms of supply etc.
However any business with high absence or high staff turnover, might be worth a shot??
I was once employed via an agency, however it's a horrible brutal way to go.
Spam CV's seem pointless.
I would draft some nice letters and get posting!
Also networking with friends, linked in seems pointless to be honest, however what about facebook, get asking around??
Why do you have LinkedIn as pointless? I was a recruiter and we often searched LinkedIn profiles for suitable candidates. These were for jobs which would probably not be advertised.
Op, it costs nothing to update your LinkedIn profile so do it.
bad company said:
dundarach said:
I've known people employed by direct letters to an establishment.
I'm talking schools here, probably as they have lots of temp work in terms of supply etc.
However any business with high absence or high staff turnover, might be worth a shot??
I was once employed via an agency, however it's a horrible brutal way to go.
Spam CV's seem pointless.
I would draft some nice letters and get posting!
Also networking with friends, linked in seems pointless to be honest, however what about facebook, get asking around??
What was brutal about getting employment via an agency?I'm talking schools here, probably as they have lots of temp work in terms of supply etc.
However any business with high absence or high staff turnover, might be worth a shot??
I was once employed via an agency, however it's a horrible brutal way to go.
Spam CV's seem pointless.
I would draft some nice letters and get posting!
Also networking with friends, linked in seems pointless to be honest, however what about facebook, get asking around??
Why do you have LinkedIn as pointless? I was a recruiter and we often searched LinkedIn profiles for suitable candidates. These were for jobs which would probably not be advertised.
Op, it costs nothing to update your LinkedIn profile so do it.
I've been on linked in for years with lots of high up (in my sector) contacts, never once had any contacts about jobs. Also when I recruited never ever thought of using linked in, ever.
I'#m public sector however, so perhaps not the target audience for either....?
geek84 said:
A lot of you may have heard that only 20% of jobs are advertised and the other 80% of the jobs remain unadvertised and are in the 'hidden job market'.
Incidentally, I have also heard this figure and it's b
ks. It may be that many people land a new job as a result of networking, but in many of those cases, there wasn't necessarily a vacancy beforehand. It's a figure that recruiters, LinkedIn and suchlike bandy about, but it's simply unsubstantiated because it's unprovable.Why would employers not bother advertising 80% of their vacancies in the hope that the right person just cold-called them at the right time?
I know the OP said 'jobs' and not 'vacancies', but that's semantics. I'm not denigrating the networking, speculative or direct approaches, but I do take issue with the oft-made suggestion that most job seekers are missing out on a 'secret club', because it doesn't exist.
I got my current job after emailing a company who my friend interviewed with, the role wasn't for him so he passed me their details.
I've also had sevral interviews over the years off the back of speculative email contact with companies.
It's a huge plus for them, as they don't have to fork out thousands in recruiter fees.
I've also had sevral interviews over the years off the back of speculative email contact with companies.
It's a huge plus for them, as they don't have to fork out thousands in recruiter fees.
dundarach said:
Agencies only interested when they smelt blood, no interest in me, only my skill set - which is fine I guess, just very cut throat.
I've been on linked in for years with lots of high up (in my sector) contacts, never once had any contacts about jobs. Also when I recruited never ever thought of using linked in, ever.
I'#m public sector however, so perhaps not the target audience for either....?
Public sector is a bit different. We recruited lawyers for several local authorities but usually the job had to be advertised. They were concerned about diversity and ‘word of mouth’ won’t help that.I've been on linked in for years with lots of high up (in my sector) contacts, never once had any contacts about jobs. Also when I recruited never ever thought of using linked in, ever.
I'#m public sector however, so perhaps not the target audience for either....?
dundarach said:
Agencies only interested when they smelt blood, no interest in me, only my skill set - which is fine I guess, just very cut throat.
I've been on linked in for years with lots of high up (in my sector) contacts, never once had any contacts about jobs. Also when I recruited never ever thought of using linked in, ever.
I'#m public sector however, so perhaps not the target audience for either....?
Might be your sector. I get a couple of contacts a week on linked in from recruiters. Seems like the main place they look for talent these days. I've been on linked in for years with lots of high up (in my sector) contacts, never once had any contacts about jobs. Also when I recruited never ever thought of using linked in, ever.
I'#m public sector however, so perhaps not the target audience for either....?
bad company said:
Public sector is a bit different. We recruited lawyers for several local authorities but usually the job had to be advertised. They were concerned about diversity and ‘word of mouth’ won’t help that.
"usually"?My wife and both daughters work in the public sector - seems as bad as the private sector companies I've worked at for dodgy recruiting practices, which, to be fair, have sometimes benefited my family members.
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