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Job Site Traffic Synopsis: Super Bowl

During my time at Monster I was able to actually see the results of our Super Bowl ad traffic, whether it was good or not so good. But I’ve always wondered how much Super Bowl commercials really impacted other job board’s traffic. Moreover what other initiatives they utilize to maintain the growing need for more job seeker eyeballs after the commercial has come and gone.

So I took some time, did some research and wrote a synopsis of the following job sites complete with my humble twisted opinion.

Careerbuilder’s silly Monkey commercials, during and after, the Super Bowl propelled them into a new level of market awareness in 2006, although follow-up efforts in 2007 & 2008 could not replicate their initial traffic success. Careerbuilder’s consistent traffic has been solidified by their ability to turn into a finely search optimized machine coupled with job seekers returning through daily emailed job alerts.

HotJobs ran Super Bowl commercials in January of 1999 and found their site down for days due to pushing more traffic than they could handle, not a great first showing but this marketing method was an obvious success. Nowadays it seems their ability to gain ground on CB while passing Monster is mainly due to HotJobs ability to finally skew well in Yahoo’s organic search, which I’m sure has staffers saying “It’s about D@%# time!“.

Monster hit a homerun in 1999 with their “When I Grow Up” commercial; unfortunately they have not been able to replicate the success of ‘99, after several attempts, and over the past 3 years they’ve allowed their lead to dwindle being passed by Careerbuilder, HotJobs, and now Indeed. Monster’s highest single source of traffic originates, like CB, from their daily emailed driven job search agents which are sent to job seekers daily with a link back to their saved job searches. Most job sites have this email driven resource, although none has leveraged it to the extent of Monster over the past 8 years, unfortunately their advantage in SEO, which would complement their email traffic, has been spiraling downward for years.

Indeed is the black sheep of the bunch and hasn’t purchased a Super Bowl commercial. Paul runs a smart and tight ship, although continues to steadily climb into the group of traffic leaders. How? Well Indeed receives almost 25% of their traffic from Google through extreme amounts of SEO and targeted SEM. Indeed has a few high profile partnerships, although the bulk of their eyeballs come from search.

But aren’t Super Bowl ads providing brand awareness relative to search?

Of the TOP 10 keyword terms used on search engines in the Employment and Training segment (including job boards) 3 of these terms are a variant of Monster, 3 more are variants of CareerBuilder, 2 are Indeed variants and last but never least Yahoo’s HotJobs holds NONE of the top 10 terms for search… So thanks to the black sheep, Indeed, the “You need Super Bowl ads to brand yourself on a world stage properly” myth can be MYTH BUSTED.

My closing thoughts… If you have the cash on hand to spend on a Super Bowl commercial you’re richer than most. If you choose not to buy a SB commercial and spend it strategically using more of a consistent and diversified approach, you’re smarter than most. If you choose to take the SB commercial plunge you will also need the cash to support it with many long-term traffic initiatives, and if Monster and HotJobs couldn’t sustain long-term after their SB traffic tsunami, good luck. Also remember that back in ‘99 the internet was new and more of a novelty for most, meaning everyone flocked to these first dotcom companies utilizing the Super Bowl as a marketing vehicle.

Today’s viewers are just dotcomed to death!

Uncle Sam wants more Chad

Uncle Sam, once again, is not happy with our current one weekend a month (Army reserve status) arrangement so he’s called me back into the active Army for a period of 1 year… or whenever he feels like sending me home.

I started my Army career on active duty back in ‘89, went into the Army reserves in ‘93 and am now inching ever so slowly to my 20 year mark. I’ll be stateside (Fort Benning, Georgia) for the duration of my tour where again I’ll be serving as an Infantry Drill Sergeant training new soldiers.

Thanks you everyone who has already sent me supportive messages and most of all thanks to my boss, Bill Warren, who has committed to paying the gap in my salary while I’m away. This is neither the beginning, nor the end of Bill’s generosity to his crew, which is one of the biggest reasons I enjoy working at, and now getting back to, DirectEmployers and JobCentral.

Last but not least THANK YOU for reading, commenting and being a part of my blog. Yes, I’ll do my best to continue blogging about the industry, providing stats, doing the show and maybe even sharing some funny basic training stories once in awhile. So keep checking back or plug me into your RSS reader if you haven’t already.

- Chad briefing Segeant Major of the Army Preston in 2005 -SMA Preston, Drill Sergeant Sowash & 1SG Adams
- Check out more Army pictures from my last activation at Benning -

Indeed surpasses Monster

During the show last week I mentioned that Indeed supplies the big boards with enormous amounts of traffic. Using Hitwise I noticed Indeed is the #4 traffic provider for Careerbuilder and HotJobs, while this week moved from #9 to the #8 traffic provider for Monster.

Amazing yes.. but there’s more…

I have also noticed Indeed’s traffic numbers have surpassed Monster!?! It’s no surprise that Indeed is still on the rise, although it’s Monster’s plummet that has me scratching my head. Why would a company who has predicated their business model on job seeker traffic let it die on the vine? Also, since it is speculated that Monster is looking to be sold… How does this help their “perspective” auction block efforts?

The real question is…

Where is Indeed getting all of this traffic? According to Hitwise over 30% comes from search with the bulk (22%+) supplied by Google..

Smart SEO and I would venture to say even smarter SEM are the big factors, and whether you’re a fan of how Indeed is garnering traffic or not, it’s working.

Shannon asks about TMP Snake Oil

Shannon Seery Gude, blogger and 2.0 enthusiast, was kind enough to ask me a question regarding my recent TMP is selling Facebook snake oil post and since I felt there was more territory to cover on this topic I felt another post was appropriate.

Shannon asks…
…I am interested in why you think facebook applications are snake oil and wouldn’t be an effective channel through which to drive referrals?

First let me say that in general I don’t believe Facebook applications are snake oil, most of the time they are FREE, although I will say I obviously have problems with TMP’s $23,000US “Work With Me” gadget. First and foremost it is pretty standard for large employers to block Facebook, MySpace and other social networking platforms, which is just the tip of the $23k irony. I understand why employers block social networks, although if I’m paying $23k to boost my referrals through Facebook I’m pretty much blocking my very own success while sending a contradictory message to my staff.

Umm yea, hey guys after your 10 hour workday can you put this Initech gadget on your Facebook profile? From home of course since you’re blocked here at work… Oh and I need those TPS reports on my desk by tomorrow morning, mmmkay..

And don’t kid yourself by thinking that pulling the block off social networks at work will be an easy task, remember tech holds the keys to the blockade not staffing.

Secondly, it is meant to be passive, although it’s too passive. Seriously you’re hoping friends visit your profile and then focus on the Work With Me area long enough to click through and apply. I’m sure companies can devise more progressive outreach plans although for $23k TMP had better figure it out.

Last but not least, this program is built on the premise that 30+ million Facebook users will provide enough employee referral punch to be worthy, $23k worthy that is. I personally do not believe sheer numbers alone will win this particular gadget battle for survival and unfortunately, since TMP rushed to market, I also do not believe they have hiring statistics to provide a basis for purchase. Only WHIZ, isn’t that cool, BANG!

A closing word of advice for all vendors, even those masquerading as advertising agencies, build a solid case predicated on results not speculation. TMP should pull this gadget off the shelves and offer it FREE to a number of their big clients for 6+ months. What will this accomplish? Simple, you are rewarding your big accounts and you’re building a case for the entire market. Pretty simple I know, although when you’re rushing to be the first to market you sometimes forget it’s the client that counts, not your place on the INNOVATION pedestal.

I hope that answers you question Shannon.

JobCentral Jobs API is Official

After months of testing with numerous partner sites DirectEmployers Association makes their JobCentral jobs API available to the public.

The JobCentral XML API can provide FREE and EASY job content to websites without the need to bulk up on servers or develop search technology. JobCentral’s API will run in the background providing search and job content seamlessly through the partner’s domain. JobCentral’s feed contains original jobs, no spam, no duplicates, only current openings, and direct application connections for jobs seekers to the corporate Applicant Tracking Systems.

For more information contact api [at] jobcentral [dot] com

Joel aka ‘Cheez’ was the first to spring JobCentral’s new API on the world during our final testing back in November with the following interview. He asked all of the right questions so I thought, what the heck?

Cheez- Why open an API?
Chad- Hundreds of sites have been taking JobCentral’s XML downloads for years. Unfortunately most of the smaller sites could not handle the size of our files, so an open API was the next logical step in helping smaller companies/sites fully embrace JobCentral’s National Labor Exchange efforts.

Cheez- How do you choose who gets access and who doesn’t?
Chad- The API will be open to anyone. Interested parties will request an API key and JobCentral staff will review their site to ensure the JobCentral content is not used in a questionable manner.

Cheez- Do you plan on monetizing the API (if not already)?
Chad- No.

Cheez- For sites currently using your API, what has been the early feedback?
Chad- The feedback has been incredibly positive due to the ease of set-up, flexibility, and the cost (FREE) doesn’t hurt either. [Note: Partner site DisaboomJobs.com represents a live example of the JobCentral API.]

Cheez- How about customization? If an association in New York just wants NY content, for example, will you parse their database as such?
Chad- Yes, participating sites will have the flexibility to geo-target for local jobs, military crosswalk capabilities are available and much more.

For more information contact api [at] jobcentral [dot] com

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