Maximizing Your Online Job Listings

Optimizing Your Online Job Listings

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Optimizing Your Online Job Listings

Scroll down to read more!
Maximizing Your Online Job Listings

Table of Contents

Online job listings whether on your company careers page or on an online job board are an effective way to reach active job seekers while also providing insights into job specifics as well as your company’s culture and employment brand. These job announcements can serve as third function as they build links and drive very targeted and qualified job seeker traffic to your job openings online.  Called SEO, or search engine optimization, recruiters can use what are considered online marketing tactics to extend the life of a traditional online job posting, help increase your company’s search engine page ranking, and reach a very specific audience of job seekers all online.

Before SEO, if a recruiter wanted to gain the attention of job seekers, he/she would post and re-post a job opening sometimes every single week to stay on the first page of the job board’s job listings.  SEO provides an alternative to this common practice as job seekers are taking their job search beyond the job board and using the power of search engines.

With an estimated 226,000,000 searches for the term ‘jobs,’ search engines like Yahoo, Bing, and Google are quickly becoming a job seeker’s job search tool of choice.  Knowing this when developing and implementing your recruitment strategy, especially when considering SEO, can put your company at a distinct advantage.

5 Tips to Optimizing Your Online Job Listings

  • Use Keywords. These are words commonly searched throughout your job opening description.  A standard job description will no longer do.  Include the city where your job opening in located, commonly searched for word combinations, and even city or certification abbreviations.  Check out Google AdWords Keyword Tool to get started.  It’s free.
  • Be Bold. After researching your keywords, choose 4-7 combinations you want to focus on.  Bold these keywords using larger text to call attention to these word combinations’ importance, as search engines score and evaluate a text’s importance contained with a web page by a number of facts including size, bold, and the number of times it’s used with a web page.  Web crawlers see H1 and H2 sized headings first as well as bold keywords, but it is important to not overdo it.
  • Custom url’s.  In addition to using keywords within your job announcement copy, I recommend customizing your web addresses to include the city and job title or common keyword.  This is just another way to emphasize the importance of the keyword and combinations, but remember to limit your url to just 3-5 additional words after your domain name.  Remove common words like ‘the,’ ‘and’, and ‘an’.  (Example: wwww.company.com/careers/java-developer-dallas-texas-dfw)
  • Use Video.  Search engines love video and web visitors do, too.  Videos keep job seekers on the page longer, learning more about your organization, and driving more qualified candidates.  Video is great for blogs, job openings on your career site and job board postings.  If possible, include a transcript of the video on your website or job posting making your page even more optimized for SEO.
  • Landing Pages.  Because job postings come and go, they are removed from the web making SEO a challenge.  By using landing pages to help drive candidates for specific positions like those that are hard to fill or are always open, you can drive job seekers to your career page even if you aren’t hiring right now.  These landing pages and web addresses are optimized and include keywords making them easily found by web crawlers and job seekers alike.

While SEO isn’t a new practice, it is new to the world of recruitment.  Just as the web constantly, changes so does search engine optimization.  It is a moving target that if used correctly can lower your cost per hire and help you reach job seekers where your competition is not.

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3 Comments

  1. Bravo on a very well written post! Before moving into the recruiting world, I worked at an SEO firm optimizing brand name retailer websites. Your advice is spot on!

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