Tech Job Postings Are Down 40% On Popular Job Boards (medium.com) 142
Tech job postings are down 40% year-on-year, says Cameron Moll, founder of job board Authentic Jobs. He says that job volume for April 2016 was nearly half the volume of April 2015, and currently, annual job posting volume is 63% on the platform compared to 2015, and 59% compared to 2014. But wait, there is always a chance that it is only his website that is getting less popular, right? Mr. Moll adds that it's not just his job board, but several of the competitors' as well. From a blog post: On one hand, we're cautious to assume that fewer jobs posted = fewer jobs available. We recognize companies have many avenues for advertising available jobs -- social media, recruiters, employee word-of-mouth, company websites, etc. Companies may choose at any time to broadcast jobs through these channels instead of a job board. So, for all intents and purposes, it's feasible the same number of jobs are available this year compared to previous years, just not on job boards. On the other hand, our volume trends have been very consistent the past four years. However, these trends are suddenly meaningless in 2016. It's anyone's guess what our volume will be each month regardless of what the historical data says.
Dammit Trump! (Score:4, Funny)
None of this bad stuff would have happened if that Donald Trump hadn't fooled those idiot 'Muricans into voting to leave the EU!
If there's one thing that's a confirmed fact from reading Slashdot's editorial spin: If you aren't in the EU you might as well kill yourself now because you either live in the utopian paradise of the EU or you live in Somalia and there's literally no shades of gray.
Just look at the third world hellhole that is Switzerland compared to the economic powerhouse of Greece if you don't believe me!
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When the U.S. was run under the Articles of Confederation, the Continental Congress printed currency but it depreciated so fast that individual states started just printing their own money. There was no such thing as a federal tax system; Congress
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The EU was destined from the start to become a dystopia- it's basically a confederacy that self-sabotaged itself by adopting a common currency, so the economies of individual countries lost the stability that was formerly provided by currency exchange fluctuations.
That stability came at the cost of a lack of stability for others. It was destined from the start to fail because the UK didn't adopt the Euro. If Germany had refused the same crap would be happening, but it was the UK.
Haha overrated (Score:2)
Overrated is a mod that exists strictly to tell you that you are correct, and made someone butt-hurt.
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This.
Geographically unspecific (Score:2)
I assume this is focused stateside? The articles doesn't provide much in the way of clues.
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Don't forget the jobs posted by HR that reads like your dating profile.
Posting jobs is so 2000 (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm a senior level developers and it seems to me that recruiters are going straight to the source instead of posting.
I get at least 5 to 10 emails or linked in posts per week pumping my ego and trying to get me to join the latest hot startup!!! Bean bag chairs!!! On site dry cleaning!!! Ping pong!!! Stock options that may actually be worth something.... Or not!!!!
Re: Posting jobs is so 2000 (Score:1)
I will second that. Much of our recruiting has been through networks. Job boards have just been shitty and costly.
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As a recruiter, I'd say that the problem with job boards is that 95+% of applicants apply for jobs they've never done before, and would not be considered for by the hiring manager. Searching for and contacting people who are qualified, and hoping that they'd be interested in the job on offer, is more likely to result in a hiring
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I got one today and it literally said "free beer and more minge than you could shake a stick at".
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That was a typo. It was supposed to read, "mange".
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That was a typo. It was supposed to read, "mange".
Are you ready to make the jump to Mangement?
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"Free beer and more manga than you could shake a stick at".
Where do I sign up?
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What?
Link?
I'm EU work eligible. Dual citizen...what kind of beer?
I'll find my own minge. 'Target rich' environments are good. Do they get free beer as well?
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Just found out it's been filled :-(
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Haha yeah, I get 3-5 recruiters contacting me every day.
Sometimes its a big company (Facebook, Google, Netflix, Microsoft, etc.) but more often than not it's endless small shitty startups.
I always respond with the same answer: No thanks.
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What self-respecting tech worker wears anything that would need dry cleaning? What is this, 1971?
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That means their office is located in one of those shopping center strips, between the dry cleaner and the payday loan place.
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What self-respecting tech worker wears anything that would need dry cleaning? What is this, 1971?
My current employer offers on-site pickup and delivery for dry cleaning to this day. It really does look like they think it's 1971. It's not free, either. Not even cheap. Just local. I've never once seen something on the rack in my building. In the building full of sales droids and business types, the service gets used. Go figure. And that would be why the company continues to spend money on it. Some middle manager is using the service regularly, and has the clout to keep it, even if 1000 other peo
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Get out while you're young.
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Yeah,
I'm getting at least half a dozen emails a day about yet another hot startup. Most of what they tell me sounds like bullshit. They really hate it when I remind them that I can't pay a mortgage with options. Show me the color of your money, sucker.
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I have known that for years, even pass it on to anyone looking.
Also, put a skills summary at the top of the resume. It's an easy way to pack in key words.
Make sure you list 4 to 5 accomplishments per position. That's another way to pack key words.
Stuff like
2010-2015 Acme Corp
Sr Unix Engineer
* Deployed multiple OEL (Oracle Enterprise Linux) servers to use as Oracle DB Rack.
* Maintained AIX, HP-UX, Solaris, and Linux servers.
* Managed CentOS (RHEL) 5, 6, and 7 servers using puppet and Spacewalk (Satellite ser
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Looking for a job? (Score:5, Informative)
Qualified individuals are hard to come by. It's not the fact that there aren't jobs. We just don't have time to interview 20k practically worthless applicants to find that one hotshot that knows his stuff. There are alternatives. I research github accounts.
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Suppose I don't want my work in a public Github area?
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Looks to me like there isn't an alternative. This is what is expected. You must do what is expected. I'd like to hear from others.
In some fields, free software is uncommon (Score:2)
So what is expected of a developer in a field where free software is by far the exception [pineight.com]? Commercial video games are non-free far more often than not, as are player software for rented movies and (U.S.) income tax return preparation software.
Re: Looking for a job? (Score:2)
Talented engineers don't use svn/perforce. I've used them all(including cvs) in production environments and I've found serious short comings in workflow with all of them when compared to git. Also tool integration is almost always better with git. Perforce usually requires reinventing the wheel. In game development that might not as big of a deal, but if your products span multiple domains it's really important. I work with Linux guys, Windows guys, AWS guys and Ruby guys just to name a few.
I would take an
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Re: Looking for a job? (Score:1)
Heh and this is why not only not having good people you also will never have friends. You insult a large segment of talented people who have to use tools such as perforce (Google), star team (telecoms), Svn/cvs and even rcs which was still used in parts of Apple during the iCloud buildout. You say all of those people lack talent?
You are so full of yourself you will never know real talent or friendship, you are the pinnacle of arrogant elitism. We're it not for the fact that people like you must be publicly
Re: Looking for a job? (Score:1)
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What do you mean by that? Old people pushing commits or projects getting old?
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That would be "geriatrification." "Gentrification" would be a complaint about projects becoming more high-class (or conversely, less accessible to the lower class). In the context of computer programming, I have no idea WTF the GP was on about either.
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What part of the country are you talking about? I can easily get $100+ an hour from multiple clients in my area.
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If you can't afford health care on a programmer's salary, you're doing something seriously wrong.
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Obamacare changed that. Prior conditions can no longer be used to deny you or even effect your rate.
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There are lifetime caps. Your policy will determine what doctors you can see. With mine, I can see pretty much anybody I want.
As for prior conditions in another country, I don't see how it matters. They're not allowed to ask you about them in the first place. Keep in mind that this all assumes you sign up during open enrollment. After that, the rules change a bit.
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You miss out on me because I'm not permitted by my current contract to post anything on github.
No, you miss out on a job because you could not negotiate the "we own what you make in your free time" clause out of your contract.
The article, and the headline, are bullshit. (Score:5, Informative)
- The 40% figure is based solely on the author's job board (which this article was meant to promote).
- He makes some vague claims that he's "been tracking a few of our closest competitors for a couple years," and that data "trends along" with theirs, but he offers no concrete numbers, and the the plot he provides actually shows no such thing.
- The author provides no real, provable explanation as to why this is (supposedly) happening.
He may still be accidentally right about the jobs market, but this article really says only one thing: that 40% fewer people are using Authentic Jobs. And I'm more willing to conclude from that that they're getting their asses kicked by Indeed and LinkedIn.
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I haven't noticed that at all. I could quit where I'm at and have another gig in 24 hours.
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So why don't you move?
It's the perfect opportunity to get out of the hellhole that is Miami and Florida in general.
Re:The article, and the headline, are bullshit. (Score:4, Insightful)
So why don't you move?
Because people who have other priorities in life such as proximity to family shouldn't automatically be excluded from having a career. Sadly, the US seems to be reminiscent of the old days where pa would leave his family to go work in a mine to put food on the table. This, in days where telecommuting is easier then it ever has been.
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*shrugs*.
I moved from Australia to New Zealand for 5 years and now to San Francisco in the US. I love travel and working different places in the world and see no reason to need to live within close proximity of my family.
Seeing them once every year or two is plenty enough. Skype and Facebook exists for a reason. :)
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I agree that it's strange that hi-tech jobs can't be done remotely in this day and age because management wants warm butts in seats
Some high-tech engineering jobs require specialized equipment, such as the developer board for an FPGA or a game console, that must be stored in a location more secure than someone's apartment.
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Try finding an embedded systems job in the Miami area (without the knee-jerk reaction of: MOVE!)
If you reject the obvious solution as "knee-jerk", then I think the problem is you, not the job market.
Re:The article, and the headline, are bullshit. (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:The article, and the headline, are bullshit. (Score:5, Informative)
Having been looking (and not finding) a new tech job in my area (within 100 miles of my home) for over a year... He's probably not wrong. I just don't see the jobs on 'job sites' anymore.
And everyone says it's all moving to social media, but even there I just don't get much interest. I get hits on things like linked in, but since I'm now 37 I regularly get asked why I'm still in IT. When I say I still want to work in it because I like it and I'm good at it I never hear back.
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I work on the network / support side of things. I live in Vermont. I rarely if ever see temporary IT positions posted. Dice.com is nearly dead, - the same jobs are still posted months later, the same is true of a few local IT recruiter pages. The interviews I've attended are still hiring 6 months later, for the many positions I've interviewed for. A good friend of mine had to move to Arizona to get into the programming side of things, as everyone here apparently wants him to have 2+ years of programming ex
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"Dice.com is nearly dead"
That and Glassdoor and Monster and CareerBuilder and many of these other job/professional sites are just bullshit. Half of the jobs posted are really just a means of information-gathering for survey companies or resume stealing fucks, there was never a job available in the first place, but spending the meager one-time listing fee to get all that information under the guise of a job offer makes financial sense.
You have better chances of finding actual work on Craigslist, and even the
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Don't you know that software development is for kids? Christ, even my 10 year old nephew can do it! If you're a real adult you show that you can boss people around.
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Hey, get enough of those "boss-people-around" folks in a meeting room, and you can extend a 3 week project into 3 months easy.
Re:The article, and the headline, are bullshit. (Score:5, Insightful)
What happened to this profession. (Score:2, Insightful)
Wait until you hit 60. Or even 50. Too old for tech, too inexperienced at anything else.
Ain't that the truth!
And folks who aren't in the business still think things are like they were in 1999 and wonder why you can't get work. And folks who are but either still in their 20s just brush you off because "if you were any good and have the skills, you'd have a job."
My brother just hit 50 and he's afraid of losing his job - he's training H1-b replacements with a promise of an eventual promotion. He sees the writing on the wall since his last promotion was canceled due to a reorg and is looking fo
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If you're a sysadmin/IT and you keep the same job, I know people who have been able to stay on for a while, but many get replaced by "the cloud". Larger companies with fancy DMZ's and stuff like that still need sysadmins.
When I want to see what the unsupplied demand is, I look at dice and see what has the most hits.
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Sentence 1: agree.
Sentence 2: agree.
Sentence 3: agree.
Sentence 4: hard right turn into a Godwin.
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I already get comments that I'm to inexperienced for anything else. Just to tide me over from the draught I applied to places like the local pizza shop... Who turned me down for 'lack of restaurant experience'. The same sort of thing happened all around when I tried to find 'regular' work. Heck factories told me that my history in IT made me a high risk of leaving when something better came up and somehow factory employers want people to commit long term.
In the end I did get a part time job... With the US P
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Welcome to the future. When I was between programming jobs I worked as a receptionist/office manager job. Not exactly programming, but as you said, paid the bills.
Even that wouldn't have been an option prior to transition. For some reason, employers aren't so critical when it's a woman applying for a "normal" job. Work history doesn't matter as much, I guess because it's "expected" that you're not going to work uninterrupted from the day you enter the work force to the day they kick your carcass out the d
Re:The article, and the headline, are bullshit. (Score:4, Interesting)
Really??? Maybe it's where you live that's the problem. I live in Houston (not exactly a tech Mecca), and have found NO shortage of tech jobs, even though I'm 50.
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I live in Northwest PA, which is not exactly a tech mecha... But in the past their has always been a good number of jobs as their are any number of companies around which, of course, run all sorts of computer systems. Now the market just seems dead. A few postings exist, but most are ones I've interviewed for and who knows exactly what they want because they are still there (and are from names you'd recognize).
The interest I do get always seems to be 'why haven't you gone into management if your any good?',
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That works up until someone actually goes and contacts a former employer. I also never wielded the power of a 'CIO' as everything I did as the defacto head of the department was filtered through others... I'd create a budget or proposal for something we'd need and my on paper 'manager' who was the head of the business unit would look it over and forward it on under her name. Though I also directly reported to the CEO, especially if 'something went wrong'. It was in lots of ways a very horrible job with all
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Yeah, I've been stuck and am slowly extricating myself from a position that eventually stripped my authority but left the responsibility. It happened slowly, as the CIO started hiring directors, instead of promoting from within (Sr. Mgr was the highest slot up to then).
Re: The article, and the headline, are bullshit. (Score:1)
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We only post jobs on our site just in case somebody wants to apply, but normally we contact candidates directly.
If you want to find a job, you should advertise yourself (github, linked in).
It is hard to hire in tech.
We reject most candidates either on technical basis (typically lack of potential, but also mismatched perceived skill vs actual) or cultural basis (won't be a good team fit).
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the balance are networking (45-pct) and old fashioned poaching (45-pct)
Would getting a CCNA help with the "networking" part?
a rotten steak is not indicative of the herd. (Score:2)
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First comment in his blog explains it (Score:2)
There have been a ton of niche job boards crop up over the past few years, which are targeted to precise audiences and that are creating more competition.
In other words, he's getting his butt kicked by the competition. But he's in denial, so he blames the job market.
Sadly... (Score:2)
My first thought is that perhaps employers are figuring out that with many job boards largely full of scammy recruiters (No, I didn't check the board that's the subject of the article), and don't want to play in that kind of sandbox anymore.
Linkedin is far more effective (Score:1)
or there are simply twice as many job boards? (Score:2)
Maybe That's Because (Score:2)
Yeehaw, (Score:2)
the crash is on!