Chapter 2 — Part

The Internet job search explosion

 Great sites to launch your online job search  

When you take your job hunt online, you’ll quickly discover that you could easily spend forever in cyberspace discovering new job sites through the links that many job sites have to other sites. If you follow these links over a few weeks, you’ll also realize that the number of Internet job sites is growing quite rapidly and these sites frequently change their content and what they offer. There’s simply no way that any book could stay current with all the changes in Internet job resources.

We maintain a free Update Sheet for this edition of the Professional’s Job Finder to apprise you of changes we discover in the online and offline job sources described in this book. As explained in Chapter 1, you can always obtain this Update Sheet by sending a stamped, self–addressed envelope to Planning/Communications. We also have placed these updates sheets online on this Web site. They can be found by clicking here.

There are, however, a number of other resources you can use to keep abreast of the latest changes in online job resources. These resources can also be used to identify online job sites we could not fit into the Professional’s Job Finder and keep the book under five pounds. All but one of these resources is available free on the Internet. Some wordsmith coined the phrase “meta–list” to describe these extraordinary Web pages. They offer links to an incredible array of the same kinds of online job resources included in this book. We just couldn’t fit everything in here. So some favorite sites of experienced web surfers probably did not make it into this book. However, the meta–lists offered in this chapter will connect you to virtually every site we could not include here.

A good many of these sites also feature their own job or resume banks and/or directories of companies. Ordinarily I would have included them in Chapter 3 where the other broad–scope, general job sources are described. I’ve put them here instead because they include extensive links to other current job resources. Use them prudently. It is very easy to spend hours wandering through the links these sites offer.

There is no separate chapter of this book with all the online job resources. Instead they are mixed with the offline sources throughout this book. I did this to encourage you to consider all the possibilities so you will conduct a savvy, full–fledged job search that utilizes at least three or four of the different types of job sources and not rely solely on the Internet. However, to make it easier to spot online job sources, all URLs have been printed in boldface type.

JobHunt located at URL: http://www.job-hunt.org continues to blow me away with its extraordinarily comprehensive collection of links to hundreds upon hundreds of job sites of all types on the Internet. It would take several pages to really describe everything that is here. Visit this site today to get a good idea of all that the Internet offers job seekers.

The Riley Guide situated at URL: http://www.rileyguide.com offers an extensive set of links to other job sites on the Internet including perhaps the very best set of links to online job sites for individual states.

Job Source Network located at Internet URL: http://www.jobsourcenetwork.com offers a mind–boggling array of links to web sites you can use in your private sector job search: job databases, resume databases, and directories. You can search for jobs by job title and location. Check it out.

Internet Job Surfer located at URL: http://www.eng.rpi.edu/dept/cdc/jobsurfer/joba.html is a straightforward alphabetical listing of links to job databases, resume databases, and other services for human resources. It includes links to the home pages of hundreds of companies as well as a plethora of job services. It’s an excellent place to quickly find links to new and obscure job sources on the Internet.

Career Resource Center (CRC, Suite 147, 2508 Fifth Ave., Seattle, WA 98121; phone: 206/233–8672) free. Go to Internet URL: http://www.careers.org where you can choose between “Jobs Available,” “Employer Sites,” “Regional Pages,” “Career Reference,” and a few other categories. This may be the motherload of all Internet job search resources with over 10,000 links with Internet newsgroups, online job and resume databases, online job–matching services, employer job listing pages and home pages, state employment services, directories of companies, and much much more. Online sources of internships are also included. We would need several pages to list all the types of job search resources listed at this site, so just go here and use this site as a springboard for your Internet job search.

Elsewhere in this book we note that many colleges and universities offer very useful career services to their alumni. Use the Career Resource Center’s extensive links to college alumni associations to find your school’s alumni office and its services you can use.

America’s Employers (Career ReloCorp, 630 Third Ave., New York, NY 10017; phone: 212/681–6800) free. This Internet site offers extensive links to a plethora of job sites on the Internet. Go to URL: http://americasemployers.com and select from a list of “rooms” to access the type of job sources you want. “Advertised Positions” gets you to links to job and resume databases including ones posted by individual companies. There are also choices for “Medical and Legal Positions,” “Jobs for Engineers and Scientists,” “Job Postings by Government Agencies,” “Professional Academic Openings,” and “International Assignments.” You can also find links to newsgroups where many jobs are listed.

Back in the “rooms,” you can also find links to “Recruiters” to access employment agencies and executive recruiting firms; “Company Databases” you can search by industry, location, and name (updated weekly); “Entrepreneurial Options” where you’ll find links to business and franchise offerings; “Networking;” and “Resume Bank.” All in all, this is quite an extraordinary place with which to start or expand an electronic job search.

Career Mosaic (Bernard Hodes Advertising) is an incredibly extensive site at which to enrich your online job search. Go to Internet URL: http://www.careermosaic.com/cm/ and choose “J.O.B.S. Database” or “CareerMosaic J.O.B.S.” to search through thousands of job ads. You can search by job title, city, state, and/or zip code. To place your electronic resume online here for free, choose “Resume/CM.”

This ever–expanding site is a great place to find links to newsgroups where 57,000 jobs are claimed to be posted daily. CareerMosaic’s index of these newsgroups is updated daily. To get to the newsgroup index, select “USENET jobs.offered” or simply go directly to URL: http://www.careermosaic.com/cm/usenet.html. You can search by keyword and/or location. Follow the instructions presented at the site. These newsgroups are for specific metropolitan areas or for states, for specific occupations within a metropolitan area, for specific occupations throughout the U.S., and for foreign countries. They are a rich source of job postings, albeit little is known about how many people actually get jobs via these listings.

To find links to the home pages of hundreds of major employers where jobs may be advertised, select “Employer Profiles.” For jobs listings specifically in the health care industry, select “The Health Care Connection.”

CareerCity (Adams Media, 260 Center St., Holbrook, MA 02343) free. Go to Internet URL: http://www.careercity.com/ and select “Jobs” to access a job database and much more. You can search through the claimed 125,000 job listings by keyword, job category, job title, and/or state. Hint: This page is graphics intensive. The opening screen allows you to choose a text only version which will speed things up considerably.

After choosing “Jobs,” scroll down to the “CareerCity Corporate Recruiting Links” where you will find links to over 650 corporate Web sites for U.S. and foreign corporations that have job openings listed. You can select a single region, all regions, or international to conduct a search for keywords in the companies’ descriptions. This site offers a great way to quickly reach job ads for specific major companies.

This site offers another good place to reach user newsgroups. After selecting “Jobs,” scroll down the page to “CareerCity Newsgroup Job Listings” where you can see the entire list of over 100 newsgroups that have job postings. You can also select specific newsgroups (to choose more than one at time, simply hold the control key while you select each newsgroup from the list) and search them by keyword.

BOLDFACE JOBS offers a wide variety of job services at its Internet site. Go to URL: http://www.boldfacejobs.com and select “Find a Job” to access hundreds of job vacancies. You can search by keyword, occupation, and/or state. By clicking on “New Offerings” you can view job listings (and job candidate resumes) that have been posted for just seven, 15, 30, or 120 days. You can put your resume in the resume database for 30 days for free by picking “Place Information Online” and then “Add Your Resume.” You can keep your identity confidential. But there’s still more. Choosing “Recruiters & Agencies” allows you to search for employment agencies, executive recruiters, and temporary placement agencies by area code, state, agency name, and specialty. Selecting “Corporations” allows you to search a database of companies by area code, state, company  name, and specialty. “Links to Other Job Sites” offers ties to a dozen or so mostly well–known job sites on the Internet.

JobWeb and the Catapult on JobWeb (National Association of Colleges and Employers, 62 Highland Ave., Bethlehem, PA 18017; phones: 800/544–5272, 610/868–1421) free. Go to Internet URL: http://www.jobweb.org where you will find a rich variety of offerings. To access the job database, click on “Jobs.” Next choose “Job Postings.” You can limit your search to “internships or co–op opportunities.” You search by keyword and state, national, or international. You can alternatively select “Employer Directory” to search an extensive listing of employers by keyword, state(s), nationally, or internationally.

There’s much more here. Selecting “Job Search & Industry Information” connects you to the Catapult’s set of links to business sites on the Web including a number of very thorough directories of businesses. To access an abundance of links to job resources on the Internet, go to URL: http://www.jobweb.org/catapult/catapult.htm where you’ll find the “Table of Contents” which is filled with great links to Internet employment centers and a wealth of Internet job resources.

American Society for Agricultural Engineers Home Page offers links to over 175 job sites on the Internet including job and resume databases as well as specific companies with job sites. These linked sites are great resources for all job seekers, not just agricultural engineers. Go to URL: http://asae.org/ and select “Employment” and then browse through “Other Sources of Employment.”

Quintessential Career and Job–Hunting Resources Guide links you to a veritable ton of other Internet job sites. Go to URL: http://www.stetson.edu/~hansen/career.html and select “Lots of Career Links” which does just as its name says. You’ll find links to Web sites, each of which links to you other job sites.

Emory Colossal List of Career Links is an Internet site that offers a surfeit of links to Internet job sites. Go to Internet URL: http://www.emory.edu/CAREER/Links.html where you’ll find commentary on favorite sites and links to many more career sites. This is another great place to start an Internet job search and to keep your Internet job search sites current.

Job Listings by Nerd World Media™ offers a lengthy list of links to job databases, resume banks, and directories on the Internet. Go to URL: http://www.nerdworld.com/nw38.html where you can browse through this alphabetical listing of job sites or search by keyword.

infoseek offers connections to hundreds of job sites on the Internet. Go to URL: http://guide-p.infoseek.com/Facts?pg=maps.html and under the “Business” heading, select “Find a job” to see links to online job banks, resume databases, and company home pages.

Advancing Women located at URL: http://www.advancingwomen.com features a job database. Pick “Women and Workplace Strategies,” then choose “Career Resources and Job Search,” and then select “Employment, Jobs and Careers” to access the job database plus links to other job sites and networking contacts.

What Color is Your Parachute: Job Hunting Online is an Internet site offered by the Washington Post at URL: http://tenspeedpress.com/parachute where Parachute author Richard Bolles offers extensive lists of links to job search sites on the Internet. His listings include sites like those mentioned in this chapter that are gateway sites, sites that will refer you to lots of other job search Internet locations. He also includes a lengthy list of vacancy or job–listing sites. Also included is a list of links to resume banks and sites that help you write your electronic resume. He also includes sites for networking purposes and sites where you can obtain information about potential employers. Career counseling sites are also listed.

College Grad Job Hunter offers online job search advice geared toward college students and recent graduates. Located at URL: http://www.collegegrad.com. It includes a job database with over 100 positions that you can browse or search by keyword or job title. Select “Job Postings” and then enter your keyword to search or pick “View All Employment Ads.” Includes links to lots of job–related Internet sites. This site is closely related to Brian Krueger’s incredibly thorough guide to the job search, College Grad Job Hunter, ($14.95, 340 pages, 1997, available from Planning/Communications’ Job Quest Catalog on this web site).

Kaplan Career Center is a strong resource center for job seekers located at URL: http://www.kaplan.com/career. The resume database can be accessed by selecting “Resumes and Cover Letters” and then picking “Career/NET: Multimedia Resources.” Choosing “Classifieds” gets you to links to many sites of job databases as well as links to advice on interviewing, preparing resumes, and other job search sites.

Portland State University Career Center offers links to numerous sites where internships are posted. Go to Internet URL: http://www-adm.pdx.edu/user/carc/ and click on “Internship Information.” You’ll also find links to other sites where job vacancies are posted.

Where to find the different Internet job sources
in the Professional's Job Finder book

If an online site includes only a job database, it is listed under “Job ads.” If the site includes a job database plus a resume bank, directory, and/or salary survey, it is located under “Job services.” An Internet site with a resume bank plus any other services will be found under “Job services.” A site that includes only a directory, appears under “Directories.” A site with just a salary survey is found under “Salary surveys.”

What’s not included in the book. Online career sites that only offer advice on the job search or on choosing or advancing in your career are not included in the Professional’s Job Finder. To be included in this book, an online site must offer at least a job or resume database, a directory of companies, a salary survey, or links to other sites that offer these features.

This chapter of the Professional's Job Finder consists of five parts.
Simply pick the section of the chapter you wish to visit or revisit.

Introduction to the Chapter.

 

The Players in the Online Job Search: Learn all a job seeker actually needs to know to get her online job search started. Get the scoop on the World Wide Web, email, search engines, gopher servers, usenet newsgroups, mailing lists, ftp file transfers, and bulletin board services.

Growing Pains Online: Learn about all the weaknesses of the Internet job hunt that nobody wants to talk about! The Internet is a great place to find jobs for some professions, and pretty weak for others. Some job databases waste your time by listing jobs that have already been filled. Discover how to use resume databases safely so your current employer doesn’t find out you’re looking for a new job.

Offline Resources for the Online Job Search: Some great books offer fabulous, very detailed advice on using the Internet and bulletin board services in your job quest. They'll give you specific sites for individual companies. And two of them help you write an effective online resume you can submit directly to employers via the Web.

You are currently here in Part 5, the end of the chapter. Click on the number 5 at the left to go back to the top of this page.

 

Click here to buy this book from our secure
Job Quest Catalog Online

Click on the above icon to go to the first page of our secure
Job Quest Catalog Online

You can order toll–free weekdays between
9 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Central time at 888/366-5200.

For an order form you can print to fax or mail to us, click here.