Wednesday, February 4, 2009

Job search website visitation -- fastest growing online activity

Wednesday, February 4, 2009


Job Search Online Fastest Growing Category

ComScore MediaMetrix, in a 2008 study of Americans' usage of online job searching, found that job search sites have seen the number of visitors grow 51% to 18.8 million visitors, as millions of Americans find themselves seeking new job opportunities. The final months of the year were some of the most heavily trafficked months of 2008.

CareerBuilder.com Job Search led the category with 9.1 million visitors, up 78 percent versus year ago, followed by Yahoo! HotJobsJob Search, up 146% and Indeed.comJob Search. SimplyHired, Inc. had the strongest growth rate of the top ten sites in the category, growing 161%.

Job Search Category Total U.S. (Home/Work/University Locations December 2008 vs. December 2007)

Total Unique Visitors (000)

Site

Dec-2007

Dec-2008

% Change

Total Internet: Total Audience

183,619

190,650

4

Job Search

12,445

18,826

51

CareerBuilder.com Job Search

5,132

9,121

78

Yahoo! HotJobs Job Search

2,282

5,605

146

Indeed.com Job Search

2,712

5,106

88

Monster.com Job Search

4,131

3,776

-9

Simply Hired, Inc.

1,188

3,104

161

JOB.COM Job Search

731

1,237

69

MSN Careers by CareerBuilder.com Job Search

593

1,004

69

AOL Find a Job by CareerBuilder.com Job Search

504

856

70

Jobs.net Job Search

350

368

5

Jobster.com Job Search

186

365

97

Source: comScore Media Metrix

Jack Flanagan, executive vice president of comScore, said "While much of the U.S. economy is suffering, job search has performed significantly better than average web site during these challenging times... Americans are turning online for this assistance now more than ever."

The consumer profile reveals that demographic segments in the job search category were disproportionately affected in 2008 by the current job market. Interestingly, the share of minutes spent by women in the category grew substantially, up 7.2 percentage points versus year ago.

Mr. Flanagan added "It's possible that women are being either disproportionately affected by job losses, or... playing a more active role in the job searches of their spouses... we could be seeing a phenomenon of more households needing to have dual wage earners... amidst a sharp reduction in the value of their assets and net worth."

Other demographic segments accounting for a substantially higher share of the time spent on job sites in December 2008 than in 2007 include people between the ages of 25-49, households making at least $75,000, households without children, and those in the South Atlantic and West South Central census regions.

Demographic Profile of Visitors to the Job Search Category (December 2008 vs. December 2007 Total U.S., Home/Work/University Locations)

Share of Minutes in Category

Demographic Segments

Dec-2007

Dec-2008

Point Change

Gender

Males

53.5%

46.3%

-7.2

Females

46.5%

53.7%

7.2

Age

Persons: Under 24

16.6%

15.3%

-1.4

Persons: 25-49

57.8%

62.7%

4.8

Persons: 50+

25.5%

22.0%

-3.5

Household Income

Under $75,000

56.2%

53.1%

-3.1

$75,000+

43.8%

46.9%

3.1

Presence of Children in Household

Children: No

42.0%

46.6%

4.7

Children: Yes

58.0%

53.3%

-4.7

Region (U.S.)

West North Central

6.5%

7.2%

0.7

Mountain

8.3%

6.5%

-1.8

Pacific

14.3%

10.9%

-3.3

New England

8.0%

3.9%

-4.1

Mid Atlantic

14.3%

10.7%

-3.6

South Atlantic

19.0%

27.5%

8.5

East South Central

5.7%

6.5%

0.9

West South Central

5.9%

9.8%

3.9

East North Central

18.0%

16.9%

-1.1

Source: comScore MediaMetrix

Monday, February 2, 2009

DC Job Hotspot During Recession

The money flows from here, Washington. After stimulus is passed, there will be more of an impact. In the meantime, here's what WJLA had to report.



Geico is also hiring.

The Bailout Rap

We had Matt come awhile back to explain what was happening with the economy. While this video is clearly coming from one perspective, I thought it was a great learning tool. It's about four months old, pre-election. Enjoy. And, as with rap, there are some explicit lyrics and a visual.

The rap was produced by Greg Somerville, a stock broker and radio host.