The Google for Jobs Search Game

by | Jul 8, 2019

by Ben Hess, Managing Director, ThirdPool Recruiting

Two years ago (June 2017), Google launched Google for Jobs as a way of indexing job postings from around the internet.

Initially, Google partnered with some recognizable recruiting sites (ex. LinkedIn, CareerBuilder, ZipRecruiter) to get traffic flowing.

But over the last year, they’ve made a transition to delivering more organic traffic directly from employers in their search results.

According to industry experts, the increase in Google’s organically sourced job traffic was minimal in the first year (7% increase). However, organically sourced job traffic jumped 168% in year two.

As Google continues to incentivize more employers to feed their jobs directly into Google, there’s no doubt in my mind that it’ll become the dominant driver of traffic to an employer’s jobs and career sites.

What’s this change mean for you?

As an employer, you’ll either need to learn how to play the Google job search game on your own, or partner with someone who can play it for you.

None of this stuff changes overnight, but it does consistently evolve.

There is a broader lesson in play for our businesses in general:

When you notice the effectiveness of your favorite techniques starting to wane, it’s often a sign the underlying current has changed.

Effective leaders don’t fight it–they pivot and head in the new direction.

• • •

Search for other Recruiting Insight Postings


LIKE TO LEARN MORE?

The Simple Psychology of Real Estate Recruiting [2nd Edition]

Unlock the secrets of effective real estate recruiting. Revised to include actionable frameworks for sharper execution and to help you turn psychological theory into a repeatable recruiting system.

Creating Pacts to Avoid Distraction

Creating Pacts to Avoid Distraction

Notice the two parts to Nir’s formula: a pre-commitment and an external force to keep you accountable to that commitment. For recruiting setting goals and time-blocks in your schedule is not enough. Most people need some kind of external accountability, as well.

Look for Individuals Who Want to be Measured

Look for Individuals Who Want to be Measured

It’s not that people with a growth mindset don’t experience failure—they just see failure as an opportunity to learn new things, to be challenged, and to experience curiosity. This is an important topic to cover during interviews and follow-up conversations with your prospects. If you find someone who likes being measured, you’ve likely found someone who will push through the inherent failures of growing a real estate business and experience long-term success.