Job Seekers Ask for Updates on their Job Applications from Employers, StartWire Delivers

June 14th, 2011 Comments off

New functionality makes that ‘thanks for applying’ email the key to closing the dreaded application black hole and getting hired

Lebanon, NH (PRWEB) June 13, 2011

StartWire™ (http://www.startwire.com), a start-up focused on radically improving job search, announces a major upgrade that addresses one of the big complaints of online job seekers: the dreaded ‘application black-hole.’  The newest release of StartWire allows job seekers to track and get automatic updates on their job applications from thousands of employers by simply forwarding their application confirmation email to apps@startwire.com.

Using this new feature, a job seeker simply shares basic information with StartWire about where they’ve applied and their application by emailing their ‘thanks for applying’ emails to apps@startwire.com or completing a brief web form.  StartWire’s application update engine then provides automatic alerts for all ‘tracked’ applications and instantly notifies the user with an email or text message alert if their job status changes.  Additionally, StartWire’s recommendation engine provides job seekers with job and job search recommendations based on their actual application history.

“Just like TripIt.com brought order to chaos in the travel industry by allowing frequent flyers to organize and socialize their trips by simply emailing their disparate itineraries to plans@tripit.com, I believe this new release shows StartWire is doing the same in job search,” says Description: https://mail.google.com/a/startdatelabs.com/images/cleardot.gifKim Mohiuddin of Movin’ On Up Resumes.

StartWire co-founder and EVP, Tim McKegney commented on the release: “Jobs seekers can now organize their job search, get automatic updates on their applications, find out who they know at a target company, and receive targeted job search recommendations…all by hitting the forward button in their inbox. And the best part is that StartWire™ is free and works across all industries and functions.”

Today’s release supports application alerts for more than 2,100 employers with that number set to grow to more than 5,000 in the coming weeks and months. 

About StartWire

StartWire launched in early 2011 to rave reviews and write-ups in US News & World Reports, About.com, AOL Jobs, CNN, ERE, and HR Executive Magazine. 


Job Seekers Ask for Updates on their Job Applications from Employers, StartWire Delivers

June 14th, 2011 Comments off

New functionality makes that ‘thanks for applying’ email the key to closing the dreaded application black hole and getting hired

Lebanon, NH (PRWEB) June 13, 2011

StartWire™ (http://www.startwire.com), a start-up focused on radically improving job search, announces a major upgrade that addresses one of the big complaints of online job seekers: the dreaded ‘application black-hole.’  The newest release of StartWire allows job seekers to track and get automatic updates on their job applications from thousands of employers by simply forwarding their application confirmation email to apps@startwire.com.

Using this new feature, a job seeker simply shares basic information with StartWire about where they’ve applied and their application by emailing their ‘thanks for applying’ emails to apps@startwire.com or completing a brief web form.  StartWire’s application update engine then provides automatic alerts for all ‘tracked’ applications and instantly notifies the user with an email or text message alert if their job status changes.  Additionally, StartWire’s recommendation engine provides job seekers with job and job search recommendations based on their actual application history.

“Just like TripIt.com brought order to chaos in the travel industry by allowing frequent flyers to organize and socialize their trips by simply emailing their disparate itineraries to plans@tripit.com, I believe this new release shows StartWire is doing the same in job search,” says Description: https://mail.google.com/a/startdatelabs.com/images/cleardot.gifKim Mohiuddin of Movin’ On Up Resumes.

StartWire co-founder and EVP, Tim McKegney commented on the release: “Jobs seekers can now organize their job search, get automatic updates on their applications, find out who they know at a target company, and receive targeted job search recommendations…all by hitting the forward button in their inbox. And the best part is that StartWire™ is free and works across all industries and functions.”

Today’s release supports application alerts for more than 2,100 employers with that number set to grow to more than 5,000 in the coming weeks and months. 

About StartWire

StartWire launched in early 2011 to rave reviews and write-ups in US News & World Reports, About.com, AOL Jobs, CNN, ERE, and HR Executive Magazine. 


Bay Area Hiring Round-Up: Apple Hiring Thousands, Getting Spacy

June 9th, 2011 Comments off

Steve Jobs has made his second big announcement of the week: Apple is building a spaceship like campus in Silicon Valley to house over 12,000 employees. A sketch of the new facility looks a bit like a flying saucer; you can see a picture here – and check out over 2,000 job postings at Apple in California here.

In other Silicon Valley news, we see signs of the tech hiring boom continuing — with trickle down growth in the financial services sector. Here’s a round-up:

  • Financial services advisory firm Robert W. Baird is expanding their team in San Francisco with two key hires, and gunning to grow more.Co
  • Data management firm Splunk has a new office in Cupertino, California to supplement staffing needs. They’re growing quickly, HQ is in San Francisco. Career info and big number of job listings here.
  • Mobile app company StackMob just received $7.5 million in funding; Xconomy reports that they will also be hiring. No listings on the site; but a contact list of staffers on the site.

Companies that grow fast often hire fast—very fast. For insider tips on how to get hired, check out our Insider interviews on the StartWire blog. Coming up: Tips from insiders at Google, McGraw Hill, and Eventbrite!

Got a company you’d like to work at, or want to see covered? Shoot us an e-mail: chandlee.bryan <at> startdatelabs.com

We’re invested in your success!

Announcing a Major Upgrade to StartWire

June 3rd, 2011 Comments off

Well, it’s been a long month but the DEV team @ StartWire is happy to announce a major upgrade to StartWire.

Here’s what you’ll notice:

  • You can now track where you’ve applied and get automatic application status updates just by emailing your application confirmation to apps@startwire.com.  That’s right, just take the ubiquitous ‘thank you for applying’ email, hit forward, and send it to apps@startwire.com.  If the email contains all the data we need to track your application, you’re done. If not, we’ll let you need to do next. Regardless, it makes keeping your job search organized and out of the black-hole a snap!
  • A super-cool, new user interface.  We opened up the application, added a home page that includes some great easy-to-follow instructions, and made some of our most popular and powerful features a lot easier to use.
  • Our jobs tab is now a recommendations tab.  We’ve talked to thousands of you about what you like and don’t like about your job search. Besides the black-hole, your #1 beef is that you’re flooded with jobs that don’t match your interests.  We’ve taken that to heart and have replaced our Jobs tab with our new Recommendations tab.  Now we SUGGEST jobs to you based on your profile, where you’ve applied, and who you know.  It’s version 1.0…so we’d love your input…but we think this is a critical 1st step to ending job spam. Check it out!

That’s it for now. If you haven’t checked out StartWire, we encourage you to stop by. If you like what we’re doing, share StartWire with everyone you know. If you don’t, write to us so we can fix it.

Happy Friday and Happy Job Searching,
The StartWire Team

The Early Bird Gets the Job

June 3rd, 2011 Comments off

StartWire research study finds that 50% of new hires applied within first week of job posting.

Lebanon, NH (PRWEB) June 2, 2011

StartWire™ (http://www.startwire.com), a start-up focused on closing the job application black hole today announced the results of a study examining the relationship between a job offer and the timing of a job seekers’ application.  

Data from over 6600 hires and across 10 industries show a consistent pattern: The early bird gets the job.

Of those hired 27% applied within the first two days after a job was posted. Nearly 50% of the hires were applicants who applied within the 1st week; approximately 75% of all hired candidates applied within three weeks. “Job seekers underestimate the importance of being at the front of the hiring line,” says Chris Forman, CEO & Co-Founder of StartWire™.

 “Once a hiring manager or recruiter does an initial pre-screen of candidates and makes an interview list, they rarely look back at applications that come in later. To optimize your chances, apply as soon as you see a job, and seek out an internal contact within the company who can put in a good word for you.”

“This research sheds light on a long known but little discussed reality in corporate recruiting,” says Mark Lotz, Principal at Camden Delta Consulting and former head of Talent Acquisition for Kimberly-Clark Corporation. “Given the upswing in hiring, corporate recruiters are often working on filling many positions. The reality is that if they find enough qualified applicants to satisfy the hiring manager, they rarely have time to go back to review the resumes of any new applicants.”

The data for this study was derived from a private, internal StartWire research project looking into online job search and hiring behavior. All participant information is being kept confidential. This study used blind application data from 15 leading employers gathered over the last 12 months. Application data was collected across all functions and levels. 

About StartWire™

StartWire™ closes the ‘application black hole’ by providing job seekers with free, automatic updates on their job applications from over 2,100 employers via e-mail and text. StartWire™ also provides a suite of tools that streamline the job search process from recommendations on where to apply and friends who can help, to status indicators of your chances of getting a call based on your application date, the age of the job, and industry benchmarks.

StartWire™ launched in early 2011 to rave reviews and write-ups in US News & World Report, About.com, AOL Jobs, CNN, ERE, HR Executive Magazine, & Career Xroads. StartWire™ is the 1st product commercialized by StartDate Labs™ – a recruiting and job search technology incubator. StartDate Labs is based in Lebanon, NH.

Want more information on the study? Contact us.

Insider Q & A: Jenny Blake says Career Path is an App – Not a Ladder

June 2nd, 2011 Comments off
Jenny Blake is an author, blogger, life coach and speaker for twenty-somethings. She is currently on a3-month sabbatical from her role as a career development sabattical from her role as a Career Development Program Manager at Google to promote her recently released book: Life after College: The Complete Guide to Getting What You Want. You can follow her on Twitter at @Jenny_Blake.
 
Tell me about working in Career Development at Google, who do you work with and what do you do?
 
Prior to taking my sabbatical, I was creating career development programs, doing internal coaching, and helping managers learn how to have career-related conversations with their employees. The Career Development team started as a way to keep employees engaged beyond their first few years at the company – particularly those just out of school.

I think in the future we’ll see more of this. Career development is not about promotions only; it is about skills and education, taking classes, mentoring, job shadowing, rotation programs. There are a lot of things companies can do beyond promoting people every time people want a new job. The opportunity to get new a title or a new set of responsibilities isn’t always there but the opportunity to grow is.

For individuals: the analogy I use is to treat your career like a smart phone, not a ladder. What new apps can you download to build out your own phone/career in a way that feels satisfying and engaging? It’s about thinking beyond the “I have to be continually moving up the ladder mentality. If you look at the app model, it’s more individual. Just like everyone’s phone is going to be different, your apps can be customized based on where you want your unique career to go. The happier you are in different aspects of your life, the less you are going to look towards your employer for complete fulfillment.

 

What prompted you to write Life After College?

I started my blog in 2005 after taking a leave of absence from UCLA to work on a start-up, and was feeling a little lost. I am a professional development junkie, and read a ton of books, but felt like there wasn’t one that combined everything I might need to think about to create the life I really wanted after graduation.

Then when I was 25 and at Google, I had a nagging feeling I wasn’t doing what I was supposed to and I felt burned out from trying to chase new achievements. I realized my own career model was basically broken. I wanted to find meaning in my career, do meaningful work, and give back. I wanted to take it up a level and help other people.
 

What’s the biggest mistake you see employees make inside a company?

One of the biggest mistakes an employee can make is to take a really reactive approach to their career, particuarly if they are unsatisfied. The mentality of, “I’m not happy, so you need to make it better.”

So what to do instead? Assess what’s working and what isn’t before you have a conversation with your manager about ways to improve the situation. It’s like looking at your wardrobe. What isn’t working that I need to get rid of? And what do I love that works especially well for me?

Another way to go about this: make three columns on a piece of paper: love, hate, and indifferent. Break down every aspect of your role and place your responsibilities in one of these three columns.

Remember that most managers want you to succeed, to be engaged, and to be happy. In most cases, your manager can’t help you overnight. As new projects come up, managers will have a better sense of projects to assign to you if you are clear up front about what you are looking for. For job seekers, it’s a question of priorities. For people for whom income is a first priority, you may need to take the first job that comes along. What is your “yes” threshold?  Be able to listen to your gut and don’t make a decision out of fear.

A friend once told me – what’s your oxygen and what’s your chocolate? You need to figure that out for your career. What works, and what doesn’t.

What are success strategies that work?

The people I’ve seen be most successful are people who get clear on the vision first so that in every networking conversation they have has a clear purpose. I know someone at Google who created his own job. He started a side project – a group volunteering initiative – that was his vision…He was clear about what he wanted to do. He built the bridge, and eventually he made it happen. If you are hazy, it is tough. Without a clear vision, it is hard to know where to go next.

This isn’t easy to do, but a good way to begin is to do a freewrite/brainstorm of everything you love to do – passions, interests, etc. From “I want to host the today show” to “I want to teach kindergarten.” Look for the common themes.

What’s the one piece of advice you wish you had known in college about managing your career?

Communicating what’s working and what isn’t is really important. I left my first job without ever telling my boss what wasn’t working. I wish I had given him the chance. I wish I had known that it was okay to have those conversations. The reverse is also true – learn to be open to feedback. Getting constructive feedback was game changing for me over time I learned how to listen and respond to feedback. Those became some of the biggest growth moments in my career.

Are there any questions that I haven’t asked that I should be asking? What’s the question and what’s your answer?

If you want to take action on any of the suggestions above, check out my Life After College Blog for free templates related to many of the topics we talked about.

Actionable advice to move forward (in 150 characters or less)

Treat your career like a smart phone not a ladder: What apps do you want and need to feel happy and successful?

 

Ohio Hiring Round-Up: 2,000 job openings at 4 companies, some pay big!!

June 1st, 2011 Comments off

Next week, StartWire EVP and co-founder Tim McKegney will be speaking to job seekers in Columbus and Cincinnati. (Events are free; contact us if you want more details.) Tim has spent thousands of hours over the course of his career listening to the hiring needs of recruiters at Fortune 500 companies; he’ll share secrets on how to get hired during his presentations.

At StartWire, we’re all about knowing where the jobs are, and getting better feedback from employers when you apply for jobs. (One of StartWire’s features is the available to get free updates on your job search status via e-mail or text. We provide this service for over 2,100 employers nationwide.)

And speaking of 2,100 employers, here are 2,100+ job postings we see currently in the Buckeye state:

Categories: Employment Buzz Tags: , , ,

7500 New Jobs in Massachusetts….

May 27th, 2011 Comments off

That’s how many professional, business, and tech jobs have been added over the past year. And more companies are hiring big.

Here are a few of them:

  • LogMeIn, a company that lets you login and access your data from anywhere, has 37 jobs posted and plans to add 100 jobs before the year is out.
  • Software company PegaSystems has 25 jobs listed with a salary of $70K and above.
  • SkyWorks Solutions, a semiconductor company that made over $1B last year, is hiring for over 40 jobs ranging from applications engineering to product marketing and cost analysts.

And, finally, we see evidence of additional hires at Power Home Remodeling Group which is expanding into Boston and Atlanta later this year. They project the expansion will add up to a combined 400 new jobs.

All of these leads have something in common: They are from companies that make something. If you’re applying to a company involved with product design; showing an interest in the industry – what they do, how they do it, can be as important as the skills and experience you bring.

Want evidence of this? Check out our insider interview with Maureen Crawford Hentz…

Categories: Employment Buzz Tags: , , ,

Bay Area Hiring Round-up: It Takes Hundreds to Make a Saleforce, Salesforce.com, That is

May 25th, 2011 Comments off

Salesforce.com has over 300 posted positions with an estimated salary of $90K and above. Looks like they are feeling optimistic, they estimate revenue for 2012 at over $2.15 billion.

Here’s an additional round-up of hiring in Silicon Valley:

Interested in applying for any of these gigs? Here’s a tip—take their products for a test drive. Aside from Net5, all of these companies have services and products you could test drive as a customer. When you apply, tell them you are an avid fan of the product. Be ready with an answer of what you might change if you worked with them – most companies appreciate honest, educated feedback. Done well, it could increase your hireability.

 


 

Mellon Bank of New York: Big in Brazil, Strong at Home (& Other Signs of Hiring in NYC)

May 23rd, 2011 Comments off

The Bank of New York Mellon Bank Corp plans to hire up to 100 new staff for Brazil/Latin American operations – a 20% increase there. But while they are hiring abroad they are also hiring close to home; we see 160+ posted jobs ranging from internships to the global relationship management.

Here are other signs of hiring life in New York:

  • Apparently, many readers are sleepless in Seattle. Amazon’s hired former Time Warner publishing chief Laurence Kirshbaum to lead their burgeoning New York publishing house. They’re staffing up big in Manhattan with over 45 posted jobs ranging from Acquistitions Editor to recruiting. Be careful how you source the listings, though – we found different jobs on their site for New York, NY and New York City, NY.
     
  • Chinese News Agency Xinhua’s opened a new office near Times Square. We’re betting a knowledge of Cantonese or Mandarin is helpful.
     
  • DC Business Advisory firm Collingwood Group has opened a Park Avenue office to better support i-banking and financial services colleagues. Anticipate that sharing the breadth and depth of your personal network will help with hiring there.
     

Finally, it’s always a good sign when the company who produces payroll data analyzed by hundreds and talked up everywhere is actively hiring inside. We see over 100 jobs posted at ADP in the NY metro area with an estimated salary of $80K and above.

That’s our weekly hiring round-up for the NYC Metro area, where do you see leads?

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