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Library 2.0, Library Services, Social Computing, Workforce Resources

Twitter—it’s the go-to place for job seekers

By blg3 | February 29th, 2012 | Comment?

the newspaper is 4% success rate to land a job, if that is all they want to use, they are killing themselves on more opportunity” —webinar chat comment

When Twitter first appeared on the virtual scene in 2006, I thought it was utterly frivolous and inanely obsessed with what someone ate for breakfast. It turned out that I was so wrong. Last week’s webinar on Twitter for Job Seekers further illuminated the substantial uses that have evolved wielding the power of the Twitter tool.

The webinar divided neatly into two segments:

  • In the first half, Andrea Snyder focused on how a library can use Twitter to amplify the job and career services they provide;
  • In the second half, Brooke Roegge focused on how users can find jobs through Twitter.

Tweet from Andrea's library

Andrea Snyder, manager of the Job & Career Information Center at the Enoch Pratt Free Library, has made active use of @JobCenter_Pratt Twitter stream to share job-seeker news, events and resources that the library has to offer. The tweets reach people on a different level, getting the word out to those who don’t often come in to the physical library. Andrea thinks the Twitter presence promotes her library as more of a person than an organization. She also makes the keen observation that the library’s use of Twitter is as much about listening as it is about broadcasting. She follows job-related hashtags (#jobs, #careers, #libs4jobs) to stay tuned in to the Twittersphere.

Tweet for job-seekersBrooke Roegge, digital information specialist at the Minnesota Department of Employment and Economic Development (@PositivelyMN), revealed that thousands of job opportunities are posted on Twitter every day. Third-party Twitter job search tools have contracts with big employers, like Kaiser-Permanente, Starbucks, Wendy’s, the list goes on. Brooke described a number of strategies and tools job seekers can use to search for jobs and target their searches to specific industries and geographic locations. There are even smartphone apps for on-the-go job seekers.

Listen to the archive to:

  • Hear more from Andrea about tools for tracking tweets, managing your tweeting time, and promoting your Twitter feed;
  • Get the details from Brooke about Twitter job search tools;
  • Read the chat log, in which the audience was actively engaged, sharing tools, insights, and answering each other’s questions.

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