Resume Spamming Redux 292
wiredog writes "Remember this story about the guy who spammed his resume? Well, now the Washington Post is reporting that resume spamming is a trend. Enough of a trend to have generated a backlash!"
Amusing fallout from an amusing story, and hopefully a lesson for
others too.
Programmer for hire (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Programmer for hire (Score:4, Funny)
Anyone want to hire me? IF you don't I'll sue you out of existence you motherfscker!
Ecxpect a call from my lawyers you sh1thead!!!
Hrm...lets load pine... (Score:5, Funny)
2. Hi, I took naked pics
3. Programmer For Hire
4. University Diplomas Cheap
5. MCSE seeking Job
I think I'll delete #5 first.
Spamming for jobs is not good (Score:4, Interesting)
I remember when I was in the process years back of trying to organise a startup. I would get spammed endlessly for jobs.
I don't mind people sending me an unsolicited résumé, but the key is to know the company. Form letters can work, but make sure that what's actually in the form letter pertains to what we do.
Currently I work for a company specialised in doing mobile entertainment using a Java platform. Don't tell me about your mad web skills with PHP and MySQL, because that's not what we do. Of course, if you hand-crafted a letter properly...
At any rate, I can't figure out why these people think they'll get jobs. I'll buy a ThinkGeek T-shirt for the first person who can prove that they really got a job from résumé spamming.
Re:Spamming for jobs is not good (Score:5, Interesting)
And an important difference is that typical generic spam is a no-risk proposition. If you send out a zillion spams and get one bite, you win. If you get zero bites, you don't lose anything, because these weren't your customers anyway.
But spamming for jobs is self destructive; you're actually closing off opportunities for yourself. Similarly, existing businesses who spam (though arrogance or more usually just stupidity) are cutting their own throats. You really have to wonder if it wouldn't be a better world if we took action to ensure that all spammers become, ahem, eligible for a Darwin Award.
Re:Spamming for jobs is not good (Score:3, Insightful)
True enough...
I think the only places that'll matter are those which have automated systems. Then they're looking for the right keywords.
Of course, if you have to spam, chances are, you don't have the right keywords.
Re:Spamming for jobs is not good (Score:2)
If you consider submitting resumes to a bunch of company's on monster.com until I got a job, then I win.
But, if you're only counting sending out bulk emails directly from me to a bunch of people, then I guess I don't.
Re:Spamming for jobs is not good (Score:2)
I don't think Monster.com submissions are spam. Spam is unsolicited. They advertised there.
So Monster submissions don't win.
Re:Spamming for jobs is not good (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Spamming for jobs is not good (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Spamming for jobs is not good (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Spamming for jobs is not good (Score:2)
But did you send 20,000 exactly alike? No. So you didn't SPAM.
I'll take the perl shirt. (Score:3, Interesting)
Why is Bernie Shifman any less guilty that AOL, Amazon, or MSN?? I have only been to MSN once, and then I changed the homepage preference, but I get e-mails from them daily. Why?? A hotmail user e-mailed me.
When I did consulting work, I used to harvest directories of local IT managers and send brochures and resumes for our companies services. While I was somewhat targeted in my spamming, I got alot of wrong e-mail addresses.
I am looking over old records, and I made over $27k from "cold calls(S)" (notation for people I spammed) in 1997. I admit it was spam, and I am proud of it.
Of course, realtors look through tax records and find people who bought their houses 5 years ago and contact all of them.
The real concept of Spam vs. Bulk mail seems to revolve around the idea that there is no penalty for the spammer. He doesn't pay for stamps, paper, etc. But to me there is far less of an environmental impact to sending an e-mail than a glossy brochure.
Just look at all of the junk mail you recieve and know that every person in america gets just as much. All of those glossy catalogs and 4.9% credit card offers consuming the landfills oif America.
The effectivness of an advertising message sent via e-mail is just as effective than that sent by snail mail. The real key is to have a good advertising message. If you send a subject "Resume Attached: " your response is not as good as say... "New streaming solutions for multimedia in the Mobile Paradigm" or even "Multimedia pioneer seeks new java-based challenges.". You might read that e-mail, the guy in accounting won't.
Yes, your subject should reflect the body of your message. If you are looking for a job as a Unix admin, put it in the subject! "Unix admin and scripter seeks employment." If they have a Unix job, they'll read it, otherwise, they won't.
I'll bet none of the resumes I sent in 1997 still exist today, but I'm sure that 99% of the paper resumes sent in that same year are still cluttering something up.
I'll spam you and let you know where to mail that shirt.
~Hammy
Re:Spamming for jobs is not good (Score:2)
then there is all the people who got jobs through those boilerromm headhunters, who pretty much spam your resume around. I paid for that one, sheesh.
Re:Resume? Resumé? Résume? Résumé? Résümé? (Score:2)
Re:Resume? Resumé? Résume? Résumé? Résümé? (Score:2)
The ñ in piñata is not an accented letter.. it's just plain old ñ, a distinct letter in the Spanish alphabet.
piñata.. there is no ñ in english. It's not a letter in English. English students do not know how to pronounce ñ.
Though it may be acceptable to use it in print, I doubt it's accurate.
Re:Resume? Resumé? Résume? Résumé? Résümé? (Score:2)
Well, the easiest way to go is to call it as most people do in Europe. Curriculum vitae.
Most people here ask for a CV, and the nice part is that no matter how you write it, not need for high-ASCII characters.
Re:Resume? Resumé? Résume? Résumé? Résümé? (Score:3, Funny)
no matter how you write it, not need for high-ASCII characters.
Are you sure it's not supposed to be curriculum vitæ?
Well at least.... (Score:5, Funny)
We get them at Sun..... (Score:2, Insightful)
Job sites (Score:5, Insightful)
You set up an online resume, and can 1-click send it to the employers of your choice. I was laid off in September, and I sent out 200 resumes in 1 day in this way.
How many callbacks from those, and from all the resumes I sent out over the next month? NOT ONE. And I am not surprised, I can only imagine the number of resumes they are recieving.
Although this isn't the same as all-out spamming, employer spam via job sites online is running rampant and is only going to get worse, which is bad for potentially good candidates as they are lost in the sea of Monster.com email notifications...
Mark
Re:Job sites (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Job sites (Score:4, Informative)
True resume spam goes to companies whether or not they're hiring and to people inside that may or may not have hire & fire capabilities.
That said, I wish Monster could find me a frigging job here...
GTRacer
- I can do lots of things on a computer
Re:Job sites (Score:3, Interesting)
The contacts broke down like this:
75% - Calls from recruiters with positions outside of my home state after I had specifically said I didn't want to move.
10% - Calls from recruiters with temporary positions they needed filled, after I had specifically said I was looking only for full-time employment
1 - Call from an out-of-state headhunter who had one local temporary position, but then told me he would probably never have another job for me.
The remainder - Calls from local headhunters who all said that I had the perfect skill set for multiples jobs they were recruiting for, who sent me out on over 40 interviews, from which I received two legitimate offers - one for a marketing company that specializes in developing spamming tools for mass-mailing campaigns and for facilitating tele-marketers calls (which I turned down) and a second for an insurance company on the fifth floor of a non-airconditioned building that required all their developers to wear suits (which I also turned down).
I spent many, many hours filling out applications and modifying my resume for each individiual job, and after more than a month of hassles, I decided that my current job wasn't so bad after all.
Re:Job sites (Score:3, Informative)
Depends on what he means by "modifying". It's common practice for job seekers to rearrange their resumes to better suit the position they're applying for. If, for instance, they're applying tor a sales job, but all their recent jobs have been non-sales, but they do have sales experience in the past, a resume organized along functional lines would be appropriate. If, however, they want to show length of employment in recent positions, and those positions fit what the recruiter is looking for, a chronologically-oriented resume would be best.
It sucks that this is necessary, but recruiters won't take the time to read an entire resume. I was told that if they don't see something that interests them in the first 15 seconds, they'll toss it and move on, so if what they're looking for isn't near the top, you can kiss that job goodbye.
Re:Job sites (Score:2)
Although it might encourage spamming, at least the companies you're sending resumes to did set themselves up for that exact purpose. Any corporation listing on monster.com, dice.com or others EXPECTS lots of resumes, and chances are good the resumes won't always match the job description. Probably the reason I never heard anything.
-Restil
Re:Job sites (Score:3, Interesting)
Never EVER give a headhunter references! (Score:2)
Monster. (Score:3, Interesting)
I don't know if it still works, but if you haven't already, add "Linux" somewhere on your resume. When I changed "BSD" to "Linux" on mine last year, the offers at least tripled in volume.
I wonder if BSD is dying...
--saint
Doesn't seem wise... (Score:4, Insightful)
Identity theft, anyone ? Not to mention that you set yourself up for reverse spam...
Re:Doesn't seem wise... (Score:4, Funny)
C//
Ulterior Motives (Score:2)
Hmmm...this resume dumping looks like a great way to...ah...unload some of those prickly co-workers or PHBs in my workplace!
I can think of several people right now that I'd rather not have here. I could polish up a resume for them and post it to every Usenet group I could find. Mebbe even a few of the alt.sex sites just for the entertainment value!
My Monster.com Resume put me on every spam list. (Score:4, Informative)
My publicly viewable resume.
I was job hunting and put my resume - full name,address, phone removed - up on Monster.com, hotjobs, dice, ect. I created a new email account, just for recieving responses. Well, the online resume only got me calls from head hunters, but withing a couple months that address was recieving spam like crazy, while my other more guarded address, even the ones I use for online registration and other "unsafe" purposes were still relativly spam free.
This leads me to believe that places like HotJobs and Monster are harvested by bots/spiders for email addresses on a regular basis... If the sites themselves aren't selling them.
Moral of this story is if you post a public resume, keep a seperate mail account for it.
Re:My Monster.com Resume put me on every spam list (Score:2)
Re:Doesn't seem wise... (Score:4, Informative)
The humorus side to this is watching the evolution of those who were spamming me. First it was the headhunters and other job-search web sites (blocked some of them), then it sorta moved to "special offers" (ironic they buy their list from those who spam the unemployed); the "make money at home" came soon after that, followed by all the rest of the herbal viagra and diet pill "we spam anyone" stuff. Only now am I getting the good stuff, here's to hot young teen lesbian whores!
Resume Posting Services (Score:4, Interesting)
It Works! (Score:3, Interesting)
I asked him about the job listing that he was hired for, but he doesn't even remember which website had the listing. People are just trying to find honest work when they send their resumes out. There isn't really a reason to take someone to court just because they sent you an unsolicited resume.
Re:It Works! (Score:2, Informative)
It's when you just stripmine websites for addresses and then create a script to send out thousands of unsolicited emails. It is even worse when you are asked to stop and you continue to do it.
Re: Headhunters (Score:2)
Also, in my past experiences, most headhunters are out for themselves, and care very little about your long-term success in a new position. Sure, they'll call all the time and try to prep you for a new job - but if they know the place has high turnover or generates a lot of complaints, they'll hide that from you.
Agreed, actually... (Score:2)
Don't like it? Don't hire them.
Re:Agreed, actually... (Score:2)
1. Ignore it.
2. Ask the offender politely to stop
3. Sue.
(Violence, of course, is illegal)
#1 is guaranteed to produce no change in behavior.
#3 is guaranteed to produce a change in behavior (possibly not the change you want)
#2 will often work wonders if you are dealing with an individual who cares what you think.
#2 is guaranteed to produce no change in behavior when dealing with strangers who consciously choose to engage in behavior they know is offensive to you (spamming, for example).
So, when dealing with faceless entities, you have two effective choices:
1. Ignore
2. Sue
#1 is really best for your own mental health.
#2 is the only option that can possibly produce a change in behavior and is the only correct choice if you wish to better society by doing your part to eliminate anti-social behavior.
Don't like it? Don't hire them.
This is equivalent to ignoring them. If they get hired by ANYONE, their behavior has been encouraged. They will do it again. They will tell their friends to do it. Eventually someone will write a book telling everyone how great it is to do this.
Or you can say "I will spend 30 minutes of every day ignoring stupid people. There is no point in growing an ulcer over it."
Re:Agreed, actually... (Score:2)
You're forgetting #4 - petty revenge. Ask them to stop on a newsgroup. Be sure to add their home phone number so they know you're referring to them specifically.
Re:It Works! (Score:2)
What Bernie did WAS spam. He sent his resume (through e-mail, not a job site) to thousands of e-mail addresses, including non-HR addresses. Many of the addresses never asked for resume submissions. When people complained, he went berzerk and started threatening them with lawsuits. Then he spammed AGAIN, after he was asked not to.
What your friend did was fine - what Bernie did was not OK.
Re:It Works! (Score:2)
I'm in complete agreement with you -- presuming that you work in a company's HR department. These folks get paid to sift through crap like that. Bulk-mailing stuff to people who have no reason to look at it [petemoss.com] should be punishable by death.
Reverse Spam (Score:2, Interesting)
I don't think this is isolated, but if I (and the few other people I know) am in a unique situation, please let me know
Resume spamming works (Score:3, Interesting)
IMO it's not as illegitimate as the previous stories seemed to imply, provided you use a sensible list of address (jobs@company.com for example), and not a grep of Usenet addresses.
There's really no comparison between batching a few dozen resumes to somewhat relevants, and sending hundreds of thousands of porno mail ("Do not open this mail if you've below 18!" -- still laughin about this one) to completely random addresses.
The problem with the poor dude that was derided here was that he was a fucking moron; he would not have had any problem had he apologized or just even shut up after being told not to send more mail.
Re:Resume spamming works (Score:2, Funny)
What about jobs@apple.com?
Does that go to Steve or HR? :o
Why hire lazy people? (Score:5, Insightful)
Any sensible employer should refuse to hire a person who chain-guns his résumé to a hundred different people precisely because doing it that way is the easy way out! If you want to be employed, demonstrate that you are willing to go to all the trouble of actually doing it right. Otherwise you're simply telling people, "I'm too lazy to get off my butt and put a little effort into being hired."
Good Point (Score:2)
In our digital world, there is still that simplistic charm of a nicely formed resume on high quality paper, packaged in a nice envelope. If you want to attach a digital copy, a nice, pure black floppy with a printer printed label make a great touch. (in otherwords, no funky neon 13 year old floppies)
This approach not only shows that you are willing to put in the extra mile, but that you're one step ahead by including both forms of media.
Re:Why hire lazy people? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Why hire lazy people? (Score:2, Insightful)
Do you realize how pompous your post sounded? While a nicely done paper résumé is impressive, there are so many variations on how they are supposed to be done, that it's ridiculous. Am I supposed to be terse, with bulleted one-liners, or am I supposed to state job functions and explain my duties, responsibilities, and achievements? What about the cover letter? How can I possibly say something unique that pertains to this exchange, when everyone and their cousin is also sending the exact same thing? And again, is it supposed to be short and to the point, or more verbose and explanatory?
Take a look at the job-search sites, or books. They all say to tailor résumés and cover letters to the company, but how are we supposed to know the company wants it to be done? That is why I say your post is pompous, when you say people have to be "willing to go to all the trouble of actually doing it right." Define 'right', and I will waste another $50 on the 'right' paper, 'right' cover letter wording, 'right' résumé, 'right' everything else that goes along with it. Next time. Thankfully I do have a job now.
If someone sends a resume in email to a company, especially a company that produces or services computer products, it should carry as much weight as any paper resume. Imagine if a computer software company decided it wouldn't hire anyone who was too uneducated to send a proper email resume. After all if they are too stupid to know how to use a computer and the Internet, then that company surely doesn't want them as employees.
Personally, I think the whole process is a bunch of crap. Someone applying for a job, at anything smaller than a worldwide company with a million employees, should contact someone at a company any way possible. And that someone shouldn't be the HR manager, unless the person is looking for work in the HR department. A computer tech should contact a manager in the IT department. Then if there is a job opening that matches the person's skills and preferences, there can be further dialog. If not, the person can be told so directly. No more of this canned response, "We have received your application, and will file it...."
There are only two arguments against this. One is that it's not appropriate. See my first paragraph on what some people see as appropriate. The second argument is that it would waste so much of someone's time, answering 100 job requests each day. But those job requests are coming to someone at those companies right now anyway. There is just a department dedicated to fielding them. Imagine if you could cut your HR department out entirely, and just add a few more personnel to the other sections to handle the increase in correspondense they would get. These few more personnel would of course be working in those sections when they weren't answering job requests, so they would be more productive than the HR department staff would be when they aren't answering job requests. I know this will never be implemented, and it's only half thought out, but it sounds better than the crap people have to go through nowadays, just to find work to put food on their table and pay rent.
Bet the new guy read slashdot (Score:3, Funny)
Now.. I see three possibilities here:
(I'm using "he" as the subject here. Women, typically, are not this dumb.)
1: He formed the idea himself, out of extreme desperation for a job (Been there, done that.. just didnt spam)
2: He got the idea from the original guy.
3: He got the idea from slashdot. THANKS SLASHDOT.
:)
Re:Bet the new guy read slashdot (Score:3, Funny)
Wrong. Women are not smarter than men, nor are men smarter than women. People in general are not very smart and rarely take the time to think through their actions. The "it seemed like a good idea at the time" mentality is played out over and over throughout the world.
So, reading your post, I will guess that you are more intelligent than the individual that spammed you. However, by your logic:
If the spammer is a man, you are a woman (contradictory because your username is AnalogBoy)
If the spammer is a woman, you are smarter than her, thus you must be Wonder Woman (which would also explain the AnalogBoy handle as that is your "super-hero cover" designed to confuse the bad guys (who, again by your logic, would be unable to see past such an obvious ruse))
It is possible that you are a man, and therefore the spammer must have been a lower form of life.
;)
Definition of Spam (Score:3, Interesting)
I don't think (at least according to the above definition of spam) that emailing your resume to a couple dozen people constitutes as spam. (It's a really stupid idea, though.) If you send your resume to a company through snail mail, they wouldn't consider it junk mail. If you send it through email (and you're sending it to just them, not to the whole world) they probably won't sue you for sending them junk mail. Just the same, it's probably better to send a real paper resume--it shows you put some effort into it other than point-and-click.
I got Shifman's resume (Score:5, Interesting)
Shifman got no more than he deserved.
Re:I got Shifman's resume (Score:2)
Re:I got Shifman's resume (Score:5, Insightful)
Shifman got no more than he deserved.
Did he?
it's obvious that Bernie Shifman is a moron asshole spammer, and on that basis I have no sympathy for him. But what Neil Schwartzman has done goes a little too far IMHO. He's posted Bernie's home address, phone number, aerial pictures of his apartment on his Web site. The popularity of that site has now given Bernie the dubious honor of "The Most Hated Man on the Internet" (Bill Gates notwithstanding). Shifman is no doubt the recepient of thousands of harassing phone calls, e-mails, people outside his apartment, etc. He will never be able to get a decent job again, and his life is all but ruined.
And yet he has been proved guilty of no crime.
Is this the best that the so-called egalitarian culture of the Internet has to offer? I don't see any Jonathan Katz articles standing up for the rights of this guy, who's currently getting the electronic equivalent of a lynching.
Yes, Bernie's moronic threats and accusations are highly amusing, but it's important to remember that there's a real person behind them. A person of obviously diminished capacity, who honestly thought he was doing the right thing. If Bernie Shifman were to commit suicide tomorrow, how would Neil Schwartzman and everyone else who took part in making this guy's life hell feel?
(And yes, the case can be made that Bernie did include his personal information in his spam, but does that mean he gave up his right to privacy? How many strangers do I have to send my resume to before I can make the assumption it'll be spread all over the Web? 5? 50? 500? 5000? Where's the line?)
In the end, I think this is really a matter between Bernie and Neil, and those are the two that need to settle it. I hate spam just as much as the next guy, but I think people need to be proven guilty (in a court of law) before being condemmed. Let's not all let ourselves be guided by mob rule. The Internet was built for better things than this.
Re:I got Shifman's resume (Score:3, Insightful)
And this is a problem how? His actions, and his actions alone have made him "The Most Hated Man On the Internet" If he'd apologized to Neil, promised to never do it again and behaved like a decent human being, instead of threatening lawsuits with every other sentence do you think that he would nearly as hated? Even if Neil had posted the exchange under those circumstances would it have made Slashdot headlines? ("Moron spammer issues apology and stops spamming")
Yes, Bernie's moronic threats and accusations are highly amusing, but it's important to remember that there's a real person behind them. A person of obviously diminished capacity, who honestly thought he was doing the right thing. If Bernie Shifman were to commit suicide tomorrow, how would Neil Schwartzman and everyone else who took part in making this guy's life hell feel?
Though I took no active role in harrassing Bernie I certianlly wouldn't mourn his passing. Yes that's a cold hearted, vile thing to say but it's true. Likewise I wouldn't be upset if every person who ever sent me spam took their own lives, same goes for Hillary Rosen and "Smiling" Jack Valentii - all people who have in some way made my life (and many others) just a little bit more miserable their sudden absence would be like a ray of sunshine.
(And yes, the case can be made that Bernie did include his personal information in his spam, but does that mean he gave up his right to privacy? How many strangers do I have to send my resume to before I can make the assumption it'll be spread all over the Web? 5? 50? 500? 5000? Where's the line?)
One.
If your sending personal info to random strangers you've already given up your right to privacy. Maybe Bernie should've researched Neils privacy policy before sending him personal info?
In the end, I think this is really a matter between Bernie and Neil, and those are the two that need to settle it. I hate spam just as much as the next guy, but I think people need to be proven guilty (in a court of law) before being condemmed. Let's not all let ourselves be guided by mob rule. The Internet was built for better things than this
Bernies not being punished for a crime, he's being smacked by his peers for an amazing, and continued, breach of etiquitte(sp?) Anyway all Neil did was post the facts (+ some personal opinion) of his communications with Bernie and other some other publically available information. Final judgement was left to the reader, as was what (if any) action to take against him.
Re:"Moron spammer issues apology and stops spammin (Score:2)
I still stand by my original point that Bernie wouldn't have become "The Most Hated Man on the Internet" had that been the headline though.
Word attachments (Score:2)
I'm surprised no spammer has included a Word virus that mails the resume to everybody in the recipient's address book. It could optionally email all their names, addresses, and phone numbers to the spammer's "legal team" so they can be included as defendants if the spammer sues for "slander".
Instead of opening these attachments, I suggest every recipient should just send this canned response:
You'd think out-of-work techies... (Score:3, Interesting)
I don't understand how tech industry people could have thought this would be any different. Perhaps they are fooling themselves about how this relates to physical paper resumes, since some employers will simply take mailed-in resumes and place them "on file" for future reference. As it is, unsolicited emails do nothing more than make the spammer look like a jackass.
Oh, a note to the poster who said they more or less spammed employers through Monster.com. Employers in that system explicitly signed up to receive such emails, thus it can not be spamming.
So did he use Chinese mail servers? (Score:2)
Funny, but let's try to fix this (Score:5, Insightful)
The same applies to this Slashdot discussion. The people who have the technology openings people want are probably Slashdot readers (<SARCASM>who would want to work for someone who wasn't Slashdot-aware?</SARCASM>). Or perhaps you've already hired some outstanding candidate who found a way to get your attention without resorting to spam.
So let's put the question to you:
Duh. (Score:2)
A genuine, qualified, informed candidate will send a resume that matches the job description to the appropriate HR or Hiring Manager address, with a brief cover letter that accurately outlines why the candidate is both qualified for the job and genuinely wants the job.
HTH.
Re:Funny, but let's try to fix this (Score:2)
I'm sure there are other ways, but this is a start (and what I'm currently doing).
Re:Funny, but let's try to fix this (Score:2)
The genuine, qualified, informed candidates will not need slashdot's help to distinguish themselves. If you do, you aren't. See you at McDonald's.
Know your industry (Score:2)
Believe me, if you were a key person at Boofarg Enterprises, which has Garfal Industries as a customer, and Boofarg goes titsup.com, Garfal will be overjoyed to have somebody on staff who understands Boofarg's (former) technology as well as that overall industry so that migration to somebody elses' technology can begin.
Of course, if you worked for a dot.com with no business plan, no customers, no suppliers, no competitors (how can anybody compete against nothing? :-), then you're SOL.
It also helps to have some Open Source credentials nowdays. I got hired on my current job because of my work on an Open Source program in a related area.
-E
Re:Funny, but let's try to fix this (Score:2)
Hack Slashdot, then brag about it. [securityfocus.com]
We call it "networking" (Score:2)
Well, you see most folks have a "social circle." It's that set of people they're on good terms with, keep in touch with, do favors for, spend time with. When one hears of one of these folks in need of assistance one pauses for a moment and thinks if there's anything they can do; in this case if they know of a position or a connection for this person. In return these folks do the same.
Another popular strategy is "work buddies." These are the folks who you shared jokes with while waiting for photocopies, sat in small windowless rooms fighting the good fight, who respected or appreciated you at a former job. If you haven't completely alienated everyone you've ever worked with you'll likely have a few names in the address book you can drop a line to, see if they have any leads. Of course they'll expect the same in return; today or someday.
Finally there's the traditionial technique of "working the room." There are any number of events in most places for folks who are looking for positions to get together and share information. There are also places where the fishing is good: Try finding a users group meeting for products and tools you're familiar with. make a favorable impression and see if there's anyone in need of your skills. Go to trade shows in areas relevant to your field, chat up others and hand out resumes. Get involved in online discussions and projects you can contribute value to, perhaps impress a potential employer or someone who can recommend you to a potential employer.
Sure none of these are alien concepts?
Well. (Score:2)
If someone thinks they will get work via resume spamming.. I guess that's their problem. I guess Spamford Wallace might hire them.
I just follow my policy as with all spam: Do nothing. Delete it. Don't click on links, don't ask to be removed, and don't waste time complaining to someone. I just delete it.
Re:Well. (Score:2)
That's what I do too, but the one thing I do above and beyond this is to set up a filter to automatically delete mail from the sender's domain or address if I receive more than one piece of spam from the same sender. If everybody started doing this, then spammers would have a huge disincentive to send spam because they would no longer be able to send the recipient any mail at all (which they may eventually have a legitimate need to do). Yes, they could change their "From" address, but if they are attempting to masquerade as a legitimate business (you know, the types that preface their messages with "This is not spam" and have a presumably stable web presence), they will have a much harder time defending themselves in court if there is a record of their addresses jumping around. This obviously doesn't apply to all spammers, but it applies to enough for my "Trash" folder to have been automatically filled by 830 pieces of unread mail over the last three months or so.
The exponent factor (Score:3, Insightful)
That's why it was especially disconcerting to read one girl's comment in the article to the effect that if she got even one good offer, she was unconcerned about pissing off everyone else. If the first maxim is true, that one bad experience offsets a hundred or more good one's then how much exponentially worse must it be to create a hundred bad impressions on the low yield opprotunity of creating a good one. I suspect it might be alright to send someone a resume that is not necessarily solicited. After all, you never know until you try. But this means addressing a personal correspondence to a specific relevant person at your targeted company. I hope nobody gets any ideas from this.
No penalty? (Score:3, Informative)
When you're looking for a job, you don't think potentially getting yourself blacklisted, doesn't count as a penalty?! Even if you don't get blacklisted, you still make a bad first impression. Maybe you could have gotten a job there, but not anymore.
When it comes to resumes, I don't think spam is a problem, precisely because it does penalize whoever does it. When someone's selling a make-money-fast scam, they've got no reputation to lose. If you're looking for a job and your resume has your real name on it, you do.
so what are the criteria? (Score:2, Interesting)
I recently sent email resumes to the HR email addresses of about 40 companies. I found the addresses by searching miscellaneous job sites for work in a particular, highly specialized field. I didn't apply for any of those specific jobs, though, for a simple reason: I'm looking for telecommuting and/or freelancing work in this field, and no major corporation that I've seen advertises telecommuting or freelance opportunities on a regular basis.
I didn't send to any of the addresses without first going to the company's website to check out their business and their careers page, but I didn't do an exhaustive investigation of their business either.
So, was it spam? Will they think it was spam? There's no way for them to know what my approach was
Incidentally, each email included a link to a detailed online resume, and the first several of them did not include a resume-in-brief within the email itself. Site logs indicate that nobody has visited the resume links.
Another Bernie? (Score:2, Insightful)
From the Post article:
Still, she's not bothered by critics of spamming or those who find the tactic bothersome.
"I really wouldn't care, if I could get somebody to see it," she said. "Maybe somebody'll see it and have a job opening."
Do we have another Bernie on our hands?
Man, people just don't care who they piss off anymore, as long as there's a chance that they get their way
1470 spam a year- that's not much at all. (Score:2)
That's only 4 spam a day. I get at least that much that slip through procmail filters on an address that's relatively unpublished. My public yahoo account gets about 20 a day. Really, where did they get 1470 on average? I have friends, who aren't so 'net saavy and post their address everywhere that get much more.
I'm kinda curious now to see how much I'm getting. Probably less than 20 a day since it's unpublished, but I wouldn't be surprised to see at least 10 a day.
Resume spamming (Score:2, Flamebait)
Spammers should be deported to Afghanistan, where they can share the nation's one surviving 300 baud modem, in their efforts to tell the world how to get rich quick.
If an alledged techie spams, I'd automatically assume that they were incompetent techs, simply because:
So people think jobs are hard to get, these days. I can remember, in England, when unemployment in some parts of the country was as high as 20%. It was about this time that Norman Tebbit (Crud Puppy's evil twin) made his infamous "get on yer bike" remarks.
So? So, why whinge at a pathetic 5.5%? It's barely noticable! Be grateful it's not four times as severe.
One thing I will say with techs - we CAN work our trade, without the benefit of a large-scale industry to support us. You can write perfectly good code, or design the ultimate in microprocessors with nothing more than a pencil and some paper.
The code, if it really is any good, can become a marketable product with nothing more than a 386SX and a CD burner. It might take a while, but it can be done.
The chip design can be loaded into any FPGA device, tested and sold to any company that produces chips on a commercial scale, or any University with the tools to press chips for their own use.
Steelworkers need some hefty equiptment to be able to do anything. Programmers need a brain and an idea.
Personally, I think it would be great if companies refused to hire technical workers who could not show their competency at core skills (design, implementation, testing and caving in to PHB's). A resume, really, is nothing more than bragging rights for something that everyone else has already forgotten. It would be better if such things were allowed to die.
Computing is both an art and a science. It is not a work of fiction.
Re:Resume spamming (Score:2)
I thought Junis had upgraded to 1200 baud?
Has JonKatz flown over and interviewed him in person yet?
This is ODD I get 1-2 calls a week ?????? (Score:3, Informative)
That said I get 1-2 calls a week, half of those from the principals, IBM has called directly, So has MS, they didnt READ the resume apparently, IBM became a nuiscance at one point, I asked where the hell they got my resume, they told me and I tried to track it down but to no avail.
Why are these people who spam resumes getting no response ? Is it lack of their skill sets ? I am a competent programmer on many plattforms and a competent sysadmin when I have to (I hate that part).
I worked at a "Dot-Com" from before they decided the Dot-Com route was the one they would take, when I started there were 10 developers, competent and a total of 17 people, some sales, some clerical. I bolted about 4 months before their crash and burn, it wasnt hard to see the writing on the wall with a burn rate like ours, we were over 100 people in a years time and STILL only had 10 ACTUAL PROGRAMMER, the rest were QA, PROJECT MANAGMENT, All kinds of other made up shit that had no room in an IT company of any worth. We never missed a deadline or dropped the ball UNTIL they started with the project managment crap.
MY point is, All of those 80 people we hired were wholly unsuited for the IT market, those who werent have jobs and had no problems finding jobs, I left for a Higher MUCH salary amongst other reasons.
Did any of these people think theyre not getting hired because theyre better suited to diggin ditches than IT work ????
What they had a taste of the IT glory days and think theyre qualified and dont realize they were just warm bodies ?
Re:This is ODD I get 1-2 calls a week ?????? (Score:2)
Where did you post your resume? I've been trying to get a job for months with no luck (and I have 10 years of experience in unix/NT/network admin, technical training, telecom, harware support, etc.). Maybe area plays a heavy factor in this, too.
-Legion
Re:This is ODD I get 1-2 calls a week ?????? (Score:2)
In my area there are no beginning jobs in IT. They all require 3 years of experience in at least 4 different disciplines.
Some of them seem to read, "We fired our IT department, and we need a guy who can do it all."
One self declared "Entry Level" job wanted 4 years of experience!
The reason I can't find an IT job is that I don't have years of experience. I graduated last year and have been scrounging up temp jobs to get by.
The market is getting better, but I don't know when/if the entry-level jobs are coming back.
I used to get 1-2 calls a week... not any longer. (Score:2)
Over the last six weeks or so I've gotten a total of two calls.
It works... (Score:3, Troll)
Recruiters spam potential employees too... (Score:3, Informative)
Bottom line - spamming sucks, no matter who is doing it.
spamming != mass sending of resumes (Score:3, Interesting)
I think the article was referring to people who send their resume out to non-job-related mailing lists, random people they see online, or picking a bunch of inappropriate names from a corporate website. Some people seem to be confusing this with sending resumes out to all the job search engines and sending messages to all the jobs/hr@prospective.companies-type addresses. Remember that these lists and addresses are created specifically for this purpose... so it's not abusive to take advantage of them.
(Which reminds me... I may be losing my job in a week or so... wish I could figure out why all the "internet" jobs on the search engines are for the point-and-click-FP-of-website-designer, and none for router jockeys/infrastructure engineers)
Online resume services seem un-useful (Score:2, Interesting)
IMHO, the best way to distribute a resume is directly to whom you're interested in working for. Can't find anyone of interest to work for? I suggest talking to as many people as possible. Since these resume services cater to headhunters, you'll never get personal interaction. Through talking to people, you can get a good idea of what is available for you.
Presently, I still get an occasional email from my original resume posting 2 years or so back. I find it amazing that although I've taken my name off of the resume sites, I still get offers.
Shouldn't there be some sort of premium service, or at least an option on an automated site to filter out would be head hunters? Just my 2 cents.
The sniper approach (screw spam) (Score:2, Informative)
Anyone use headhunters? I'm skeptical that they aren't as selective as they need to be.
I just love lazy asses (Score:3, Funny)
OK, so go online and submit your resume via the many various accepted methods. Just about every corporation has an ability to accept resumes, there's Monster.com, thingamajob.com, all sorts of others. There are job recruitment agencies all over the place that take online resume submissions... basically, get off your ass and work for it, don't just send your resume out to everyone and their brother and expect a kind response!
PS - most resumes have confidential information in them, it would be great irony if these resume spammers suddenly suffered from "stolen identity."
Heh, I just thought of something... (Score:3, Informative)
Actually, I'm going to try that when I get laid off.
Bimbo spams, wonders why nobody hires her? (Score:2)
And here's the whole problem (Score:2, Insightful)
I really don't care about offending others... as long as I get the job
I really don't care about causing traffic delays by cutting people off... as long as I can get there faster
I really don't care about causing pollution... as long as I can make more money
I really don't care about trampling the rights of the innocent... as long as we can punish the guilty
The funniest thing is how loud people complain about others being selfish...
OBFun: Go to local grocery store. Cut in front of line. When someone complains say "Why can we do it on the freeway but not here?" Watch them fizzle.
The Zen of Job Discovery (Score:2, Informative)
My best success has been from just informing them I'm available, either by website or by listing on job sites. Apparently there's something to be said for the confidence of passivity and not seeming to want it too much.
I'm sure there was a time long ago when aggressive tactics like resume spamming and showing up at offices was appealing (especially in the glad-handling sales world), but now it just seems creepy. It is no longer a benefit to seem desperate.
Another failed buisness model. (Score:3, Funny)
1. Spam resume
2.
3. Profit!
Maybe he'll figure out 2 someday.
What to do (Score:2)
The REAL problem is the current way jobs are .... (Score:4, Informative)
The REAL problem is the current way jobs are found, or rather, NOT found. And this existed during the peak of the bubble, making it hard for employers to find good people even though many good people existed looking for work even at that time. That problem is that connecting between employer and employee candidates is so ineffective.
Job boards are the rage. But they have only a small percentage of the jobs. Most of the jobs on the boards are posted by professional recruiters and their firms. But the majority of job openings are not listed there because they are not sent to recruiters. These are "less crucial" openings that don't justify the cost of a headhunter, which can be as much as the employee's full first year salary. And most businesses simply don't want to deal with the hassle and cost of posting all their own job openings on all the job boards. It costs a few thousand to post a single job opening to all the major job boards (there are too many of them).
A better designed job board would help. Doing searches on skills, job functions, and other criteria is in many just a cheap string search. And in those few that do more than a string search, they are often limited to listing just skills alone, instead of also other things like what job function roles one is looking for, or needs. I remember getting calls many times for someone to do a programming job in C++ even though I was only open to network management work. The reason was that I have nearly 20 years experience programming in C (not C++), and some board lumped C and C++ together, and never took into account that this was merely a skill and not what I was actually looking to do. I wonder how many potential employers skipped over my online profile just because I looked like a programmer to them (when searching candidates on these boards, employers see profiles first, and have to take extra steps to see the actual resume).
Then there is the fee to post a job. And the fee to view resumes. While the job boards do need to make money these days (especially considering their investors want to see a return on investment), this still remains a big obstacle to getting jobs listed. Some industry analysts say there are nearly a million job openings in high tech even now; a figure I have some doubts about, but I can't totally discard the possibility because I know the vast majority of them won't be posted on the big boards, even if the market was booming (and certainly not during a recession).
It sure would be a big plus to people looking for work if there was a totally free board (free to post a job, free to post a resume, free to search jobs, and free to search resumes). I've even suggested that employers wanting to hire people on H-1B visas should be required to post on the major boards for 3 months before applying to grant the visa, and a free super job board might even make that viable (and get more Americans back to work at American companies ... and maybe similar in other countries, as I hear Germany has a problem similar to H-1B). The problem will be paying for such a board (bandwidth isn't free, now), and advertising probably doesn't cut it anymore.
Low-Tech Resume Spamming (Score:2, Interesting)
How Headhunters work. (Score:2, Informative)
1) MOST recruiters usually do not care about anything other than adding your resume to their database. This is why the 'Laundry List' job add exists in today's newspapers.
2) Any job that is vague about the position is usually bogus. Look for postings that contain detailed job/project information.
3) If you meet a scummy recruiter (think slimy used car salesman), or someone who does not appear to be on the up and up about the position with you, go somewhere else.
I used a recruiter to find my current job, but I only contacted those that I rememberd being rather reliable people from my contacts in working for the company.
There are a lot of short-term or fly-by-night recruiting agencies created by MCSE's, or programmers who couldn't hack it.
Re:Goes down on Your Permanent Record (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Goes down on Your Permanent Record (Score:3, Insightful)
Ummm, back when I used to drink, I actually did just that. Sort of a drunken pickup spam. Mostly I got smacked, but believe it or not, it actually worked!
Re:Headhunters: what do you look for? (Score:2, Insightful)
Someone with a clue and who respects me.
Seriously.
I've had headhunters call me when they obviously didn't read my resume, just saw a warm body they could hammer into whatever position they had, irregardless of what skills I had, where I was located, or even whether I wanted contract or full-time. I won't hesitate to tell these to go away, and don't bother me.
I've had other headhunters call me, but don't really understand the industry they're hiring for. I once had a headhunter tell me that he had a hot job for me fixing ATM machines because I told him I knew something about ATM networking. *sigh* Another didn't know what the salary scale for my profession was. Turns out he was trying to find folks with more 5+ years of experience to take jobs at less than half than what I was making in the same geographical area.
I've had others who have social-engineered my phone number from somewhere and call me at work - something I had said was a definite NO-NO.
A good headhunter doesn't forget that he's dealing with people on both sides. Stuffing me into a job I hate might get him his finders fee, but isn't going to make me happy, and I certainly wouldn't use him again, nor reccomend him to my friends.