Job Dating, Not Marriage: The Changing Tenure of the Workforce, by Dan Finnigan

Careers today aren’t what they used to be. After serving in the Army and attending college, my father started his career in the early 1960s as a high school English teacher and head coach of the football team. After a few years he decided he needed to make more money, moving his young family to Florida to join Pan American Airlines as a college campus recruiter. His third — and last — job started two years later with a move to Xerox. After 34 years as an HR executive he retired from Xerox in 1999, concluding a four-job, 40-year career. And it’s a work history you likely won’t see ever again.

My father’s “Mad Men” generation did in fact average four jobs/employers in their career. But if you are in your twenties working today, you can expect to hold 10 jobs before you retire. If you also work in California in the tech sector, you can expect to hold 14. One reason is this: It used to be exceptionally rare for companies to lay people off. In fact, in the 1973-1974 recession, only 30 percent of the expenses companies cut came from layoffs. In every single U.S. recession since then, that percentage has grown significantly. During the last recession, 90 percent of the expenses cut were people –8.5 million of them.

It’s no surprise everyone working in America today feels they have to fend for themselves when building their career, that no company will keep them long enough to offer them career growth. So regardless of their industry, workers are always looking for another job. According to our annual Social Recruiting Survey, 61 percent of employees are open to or actively looking for a new job; and more than 30 percent of employers expect new hires to stay just two years or less.

Today, there are not enough qualified people to fill most of the recent and future jobs — because they require some form of college education. Technology, including the Internet and software, is transforming business and work. Economic growth is eliminating low-skilled labor, but creating an explosion of new jobs requiring specialized high-level skills. The automobile industry now says that jobs lost in our most recent recession were typically filled with high school graduates. Just years later, they are hiring workers who have had at least an associate college degree to run the increasingly sophisticated technology on the assembly line.

The problem is that today only 70 percent of our high school freshman will graduate, fewer will attend college, and our colleges are not generating enough science and technology graduates to meet demand. We simply are not allowing enough foreign skilled workers to make up the difference. As a result, only 20 percent of the working population will be qualified for 60 percent of the new jobs generated in the next 10 years. This means that the workers and employers who do have the education and skills to thrive in these new jobs will be in big demand — and they know it. Many have no desire to even work for big companies and instead are seeking self-employment, or entrepreneurism.

Employee loyalty has changed. A tumultuous economy sends many into unexpected layoffs, and employees watch this happen to themselves, their co-workers, or their connections at other companies. The life-time employer with the gold-watch job anniversary doesn’t exist anymore. A growing majority of the workforce embraces the new dynamic of regularly changing jobs.

Fast Company recently deemed these workers as “Generation Flux.” It’s a culture shift that can’t be ignored, under-appreciated, or avoided. As recruiters and HR professionals, it’s our job to embrace this change and figure out how to steer this trend to become a positive benefit vs. a negative hurdle. Employers want to entice an employee to stay, and do the best job while they are around. But regardless, they should be prepared for any employee to potentially leave in a few years. Today the thing employers should have a long-term, steady relationship with is recruiting.

Monster May Be For Sale

Monster May Be For Sale
byJohn Zappe

The long-rumored sale of employment publisher Monster could become a reality following news today the company is seeking “strategic alternatives” to improving its shareholder performance.

Speaking at a business conference in Boston today, Monster Chairman and CEO Sal Iannuzzi said the company is weighing “strategic alternatives to increasing shareholder value.” Although Iannuzzi did not specifically say a sale is being considered, he strongly hinted at it when he added that company leaders will “ensure that we extract the maximum amount of shareholder value in any way we can.”

Investors took the hint, bidding up the stock from this morning’s opening price of $6.89 a share to $8.01.

Reuters reported that a Monster spokeswoman declined to expand on Iannuzzi’s comments. Investors evidently anticipate that whatever alternative the board and management eventually come up with, it will be good for the stock price. Options volume on Monster’s stock increased 32 times over an average day.

However, no deal is imminent, analyst James Janesky of Avondale Partners said. “We know of no buyer poised to scoop up MWW.”

Monster’s stock, which sold as high as $18.47 in the last year, has been in decline since late last April. It fell sharply in August and has closed under $10 ever since. Even as Monster has struggled, its competitors in the job board market, while hardly soaring, have done better.

Dice is trading at just over half its late April peak close at $18.33, However, Dice is a much smaller company and specializes in niche employment sites, with the tech site, Dice.com, its largest revenue source.

LnkedIn, which went public in May, and hit a high of $122.70, closed today at $87. The company has been reporting strong financial growth and good profits.

CareerBuilder, the biggest job board operator, is privately held.

Iannuzzi, according to Reuters, noted the disparity between his company and its competitors. “The stock price is not where it should be,” he said at the conference. “If you compare us to our competition, any company in our space, our multiple is severely below them.”

That’s certainly true for LinkedIn, which trades at almost 800 times earnings. Dice was at nearly 19 times earnings. Monster closed today, after the run-up, at 18.6 times earnings.

If Monster decided to pursue a sale, the big question is who would buy? In years past, media companies were mentioned as likely buyers.Now though, with so many of them struggling just to remain profitable, that seems remote.

Another job board also seems unlikely. Dice isn’t large enough, and CareerBuilder, which has better numbers in several areas than Monster, may not want to buy. Even if it did want to remove its largest competitor, the company would have to convince its media owners — Gannett, Tribune, and McClatchy — to do the deal. Microsoft, which owns a small piece of CareerBuilder, has the financial resources, but may not see the traditional job board business as a growth market.

Still, Monster’s market cap, even with the price jump, is under a billion — less than the company’s 2011 revenue. Of course, the company wouldn’t sell for that; analyst Janesky speculated the price would be between $10 and $13 a share.

New Source of Hire Study Shows Job Boards Strong Performers

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New Source of Hire Study Shows Job Boards Strong Performers
by John Zappe Mar 15, 2012

HR technology provider SilkRoad says jobs search site Indeed.com is the leading source of external hires for its 700+ customers, providing 42 percent more new employees than CareerBuilder, the #2 source.

Overall, the SilkRoad results show job boards accounting for a high percentage of hires that aren’t either internal candidates, referred by employees, or come through the company career site.

SilkRoad pulled the source of hire data directly from its clients’ OpenHire systems. Doing it that way, says SilkRoad, yielded data from “200,000 job postings, 9.4 million applicants, and over 100,000 hires.”

In reporting the results on the company blog, SilkRoad said that because its OpenHire system automates candidate source tracking, “The metrics in this study offer a uniquely accurate measure of source effectiveness.”

What SilkRoad found is that 55 percent of the total hires came from three sources: internal employee candidates, employee referrals, and company career sites. The balance of the candidates primarily came from job boards, which, in addition to Indeed and CareerBuilder, included Monster, Craigslist, LinkedIn, and SimplyHired.

SilkRoad noted that its data is more reliable than that used in other studies. “Prior research has been less than adequate, based on survey data from relatively small sample sizes,” the company says on its blog.

Interestingly, the most recent source of hire study to be released — and the only one that has been publicly released for over a decade – tracks surprisingly well in some areas with what SilkRoad found. Released last month by the talent consultancy CareerXroads, the study found job boards provided a high percentage of all external hires.

CareerXroads principals and report authors Gerry Crispin and Mark Mehler compiled their results from 36 responses to their survey. Yet, they found that internal candidates, employee referrals, and corporate career sites combined accounted for about 63 percent of the hires.

They reported their results differently, for instance counting employee referrals and corporate sites as sources of external hires and reporting the results individually. Still, when it came to job boards, their results show Indeed accounts for slightly more hires than does CareerBuilder, while Monster, Craigslist, and SimplyHired provide fewer hired candidates.

The numbers certainly don’t line up anywhere nearly precisely, but having as much similarity as exists between the results offers recruiters and HR leaders firmer ground for their own comparisons. And more results can be expected. SilkRoad says, “Stay tuned as we continue to dig deeper into this data to share more findings on source effectiveness”

Google Plus

This is a great social media tool to source, especially if you are sourcing cutting edge professions such as software developers, online, media, etc. The early adopters already seem to be on board.

Search Options:
As always you can add a zip code, city or more specifics to tighten up your search
plus.google.com – company name
plus.google.com – job title
plus.google.com – company name title skills

Our Sample Search:
plus.google.com “account executive”
Results:

https://plus.google.com/113576228323655401420#113576228323655401420/posts

Click on About to learn more about this individual

Call the Google Headquarters and ask to speak to her if she is someone you need to hire! Just don’t tell her where you found her:)

Stop With the Recruiting Fashion Trends

I thought this to be a great article. I always think a mixture of active and passive candidates to be a good mixture of research. In the end, if they are active or passive doesn’t matter as much as finding the best fit for you hiring needs. Well, that is my opinion anyway. Read on and decide for yourself….

Stop With the Recruiting Fashion Trends

It’s a brand new year, great things are on the horizon … and for me, I have had it up to my eyeballs with a particular topic. I am so fed up with this topic that I want to climb to the highest peak and scream, bang my head against a wall, and even toss my desk around the room over and over. This topic that’s making me and others so irritated is Passive Candidates.

Yes, that’s right. The topic or even the mention of passive candidates now a day makes me want to throw up. In conducting my own personal year in review and through scouring HR topics, articles, blogs, etc., it seems as if 2011 was the year of the “Passive Candidate.” My response … so the heck what.

I guess I am at a loss as to why there is so much over-emphasis on “passive candidates.” Whatever happened to simply hiring the most-qualified, best-fit individual who can add their strengths in order to advance the organization? Now we have resorted to “Commandments of Recruiting Passive Candidates,” “Rules to Recruit Passive Candidates”, “Your Guide to Passive Candidates” — you get my point.

So here are some questions for you to ask yourself and answer:

  • What does passive mean?
  • Are “passive candidates” better qualified than active candidates?
  • Are “passive candidates” perfect?
  • Do “passive candidates” even know they are passive?
  • Are “passive candidates” just acting passive and playing the recruiting game?
  • Do hiring managers even know what passive means, or are they following another trend?
  • Has a “passive candidate” ever been hired and then performed poorly, or are they all major rock stars?
  • On a company employment application, where is the check box that asks whether one is passive or active?
  • Is there something wrong with being an active seeker?
  • What is most important to you in making your next hire?
  • Why does it seem that some of these “passive candidates” seem to change companies like it’s nobody’s business?
  • How come when I am speaking to a “passive candidate” and ask that individual what other opportunities they are currently looking at, the list is most of the time extensive?

Passive, active, semi-active, inactive, submissive, reactive, retired, separated, etc. — shouldn’t we want to hire the best and most qualified individuals for our positions? Don’t we want to seek out and hire those who possess the strengths to improve the organization?

Right now, there are individuals knocking at our doors, and while not all of them are qualified, a lot of them are very qualified. Yet, a lot of these individuals are facing discrimination by hiring managers and recruiters who want someone who is working or someone who is passive. I have yet to see any study or statistical data that proves passive candidates to be more qualified, make better employees, or add additional value than those employees in the “other” categories.

I am after the most qualified individuals for my positions. I hire for experience, qualifications/strengths, and fit. I have never asked whether an individual is passive or not because to me it doesn’t matter. If you have the skills, meet the criteria of the position, and are determined to be a fit, then there is a great possibility in making a match.

I recently completed an internal search for an executive-level position in one of our most prestigious business units. After taking the order and obtaining full details, I started my search process. Fast forwarding to the end, I presented five candidates in my final slate: two passive, two semi-active, and one active. The end result — the active candidate received the offer after a thorough and extensive interview process.

It turns out this active individual came from a competing company who had shut its local doors months prior. To no fault of her own, a little bad luck had her now in a position that she had never been in before — in active search mode. In my own evaluation, I found her to be no less qualified than other passive candidates I interviewed for this same role. In fact, she was the most qualified and turned out to be the best fit.

I call on my fellow HR and talent leaders to not follow trends or fashions. Rather, stick to and follow the fundamentals of recruiting and search, build relationships, treat others well, hire for skill set, fit, and strengths, interview like a pro, and lastly maintain an open mind.

Have a good article or Sourcing idea you would like to have Posted?

One of my readers suggested that he would like to add additional content to some of the articles I have posted, and he wanted to know if I would be open to him positing on this Blog? Absolutely!

In fact, that is a fantastic idea. If you have an article you have written or would like to be a featured writer on SourcingRecruiter.com, feel free to send me your information. I will take a look at it, and if looks get we will get it posted.

You can email your content directly to recruiting sourcer at yahoo dot com

Thanks!

10 Predictions for 2012: The Top Trends in Talent Management and Recruiting

This was written by
Dr. John Sullivan

It’s always better to be prepared than surprised.

By definition, being strategic requires that you look forward — identifying trends, opportunities, and threats. With the December lull looming, now is a great time to plan for the future. I’ve listed the “top 10 talent management trends” I foresee that require your attention.

But you should certainly do your own thinking. I recommend that you start by examining this past year…

2011 Was The Year of Social Media

2011 was a tough year for many in talent management, but despite compressed budgets, organizations continued to hire and develop talent. One factor that seemed to invade nearly every high-level functional discussion was social media. It’s clear that Facebook, LinkedIn, and Twitter will play a dominate role in recruiting and development best practices in years to come.

Not surprisingly, 2011 saw no fewer than 40 new vendors emerge to help organizations use social media to attract referrals. We also started to see early stage tools to use social media in talent assessment (pre/post hire) as well as applicant/candidate/employee experience management. New tools brought much enhanced visibility into talent issues, but most talent-management metrics continue not to resonate with key leaders outside of the HR function.

2012 Will Be “The Year of the Mobile Platform”

By the end of next year, even the skeptics will have to admit that the mobile platform will have become the dominant communications and interaction platform by early-adopting best-practice organizations. The capabilities afforded users of smartphones and tablet devices grows immensely day by day. Long before unified inboxes existed for the desktop, smart device users could see all incoming e-mail, social messaging, text messaging, and voice and video messaging in a single place.

Tablets will become the virtual classroom, and an emerging class of tools will let employees manage almost every aspect of their professional life digitally. During the next year, talent management leaders need to invest heavily supporting execution of talent management initiatives across mobile.

The Additional Top Nine!

Intense hiring competition will return in selected areas — global economic issues will persist for years to come, but the global war for talent will continue spiking in key regions an industries. While growth has slowed somewhat in China, Australia and Southeast Asia — including India — continue to see dramatic demand for skilled talent. In the U.S. and Europe, demand is still largely limited to certain industries where skills shortages have been an issue for years.

In high tech inclusive of medical technologies, 2012 will see a significant escalation in the war for top talent. As innovators and game changers step out of established tech firms like Facebook, Apple, Google, Twitter, and Zynga, a whole new breed to tech startups will be born each vying for the best of the best. While recruiting will move forward at a breathtaking pace, so too will “rapid” leadership development.

Retention issues will increase dramatically — almost every survey shows that despite high engagement scores, more than a majority of employees are willing to quit their current job as soon as a better opportunity comes along. I am predicting that turnover rates in high-demand occupations will increase by 25% during the next year and because most corporate retention programs have been so severely degraded, retention could turn out to be the highest-economic-impact area in all of talent management.

Rather than the traditional “one-size-fits-all” retention strategy, a targeted personalized approach will be required if you expect to have a reasonable chance to retain your top talent.

Social media increases its impact by becoming more data-driven — most firms jumped on the social media bandwagon, but unfortunately the trial-and-error approach used by most has produced only mediocre results. Adapting social media tools from the business coupled with strong analytics will allow a more focused approach that harnesses and directs the effort of all employees on social media. Talent leaders will increasingly see the value of a combination of internal and external social media approaches for managing and developing talent.

Remote work changes everything in talent management — the continued growth of technology, social media, and easy communications now makes it possible for most knowledge work and team activities to occur remotely. Allowing top talent to work “wherever they want to work” improves retention and makes recruiting dramatically easier.

Unfortunately, even though it is now possible for as much as 50% of a firm’s jobs to be done remotely, manager and HR resistance has limited the trend. Fortunately, managers and talent management leaders have begun to realize that teamwork, learning, development, recruiting, and best-practice sharing can now successfully be accomplished using remote methods. Firms like IBM and Cisco have led the way in reducing and eliminating barriers to remote work.

The need for speed shifts the balance between development and recruiting — historically, best practice within corporations has been to build and develop primarily from within. However, as the speed of change in business continues to increase and the number of firms that copy the “Apple model” (where firm is continually crossing industry boundaries) increases, talent managers will need to rethink the “develop internally first” approach.

In many cases, recruiting becomes a more viable option because there simply isn’t time for current employees to develop completely new skills. As a result, the trend will be to continually shift the balance toward recruiting for immediate needs and the use of contingent labor for short-duration opportunities and problems.

Employee referrals are coupled with social media — the employee referral program in many organizations is operated in isolation as are the organizations’ social media efforts, but talent managers are beginning to realize that the real strength of social media is relationship-building by your employees.

With proper coordination, employee relationships can easily be turned into employee referrals. This realization will lead to a shift away from recruiters and toward relying on employees to build social media contacts and relationships. The net result will be that as many as 60% of all hires will come from the combined efforts. The strength of these relationships will lead to better assessment and the highest-quality hires from employee referrals.

Employer branding returns — Employer branding and building talent communities are the only long-term strategies in recruiting. True branding is rarely practiced (hint: it’s not recruitment marketing) especially in the cash-strapped function of today, but years of layoffs, cuts in compensation, and generally bad press for business in general may force firms to invest in true branding. The increased use of social media and frequent visits to employee criticism sites (like Glassdoor.com), make not managing employer brand perception a risky proposition. While corporations will never control their employer brand, they can monitor and influence in a direction that isn’t catastrophic to recruiting and retention.

The candidate experience is finally getting the attention it deserves — Organizations have never treated candidates as well as they did their customers, but the high jobless rate has allowed corporations to essentially abuse some applicants. As competition for talent increases and as more applicants visit employer criticism sites like Glassdoor.com, talent leaders will be forced to modify their approach.

At the very least, firms will more closely monitor candidate experience metrics as they realize that treating applicants poorly can not only drive away other high-quality applicants but it can also lose them sales and customers.

Forward-looking metrics begin to dominate — Almost all current talent management and recruiting metrics are backward looking, in that they tell you what happened in the past. Other business functions like supply chain, production, and finance have long championed the use of “forward-looking” or predictive metrics and the time is finally coming when talent management leaders will shift their metrics emphasis. Forward-looking metrics can not only improve decision-making but they can also help to prevent or mitigate future talent problems.

Other Things to Keep Your Eye On…

In addition to the major trends highlighted above, there are 12 additional “hot” topics to keep your eye on:

  • Risk identification — almost every other business function has already adopted a risk management strategy. So the time is coming when talent management will be forced to adopt a similar strategy and set of metrics. This program will not only cover HR legal issues but also the economic “risk” associated with weak hiring, the absence of developed leaders, and the cost of turnover of key talent.
  • Prioritization — continued budget and resource pressure will force talent management leaders to prioritize their services, business units, key jobs, and high-value managers/employees.
  • Integration — there will be increasing pressure for talent management functions to more closely integrate and work seamlessly.
  • Expedited leadership development — as more baby-boom leaders and managers actually begin to retire, there will be increased pressure for expedited leadership development — specifically solutions that develop talent remotely using social media tools and within months rather than years.
  • Competitive analysis — the increasingly competitive business world has forced almost every function to be more externally focused. Although HR has a long history of being internally focused and not being “highly competitive,” there is increasing pressure to become more business-like and to adopt an “us-versus-them” perspective. That means conducting competitive analysis and making sure that every key talent management function produces superior results to those at competitors.
  • Contingent workers — as continuous business volatility becomes the “new normal,” the increased use and the improved management of contingent workers will become essential for agility and flexibility.
  • Unionization — there is a reasonable chance that actions by the NLRB will increase union power and make it easier for unions to gain acceptance at private employers.
  • Recruiting at industry events — as industry events return to popularity, recruiting at them will again become an effective tool for recruiting top and diverse talent.
  • Location software — talent managers will begin to realize that software that allows you to check-in and see who is within close geographic proximity has great value and many still unidentified uses.
  • Hire before they do — most firms will restrict their hiring until the turnaround actually begins. However, your firm must have a talent pool or pipeline developed, so that you can hire immediately and capture the top talent right before your competitors realize the downturn is over.
  • Assessment continues to improve — vendors, software, and tools continue to improve in this area that will become increasingly important.
  • Increase your revenue impact — increased economic pressures will continue the trend of forcing all functions (including talent management) to convert their functional results into business impacts in dollars. Talent management will face increasing pressure to directly demonstrate how their hiring, retention, development, etc. is focused, so that it directly increases and maximizes corporate revenues.

Final Thoughts

A recent survey of CEOs rates talent management as the No. 1 area where CEOs expect dramatic change during the next year. Given this increased attention, it’s even more critical that talent management and recruiting leaders set aside time to conduct a SWOT assessment (Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities, Threats) to identify where they are and where they need to be.

The “new” talent management leader must be more strategic, more proactive, and more business-like, and that means getting your entire staff to begin thinking about and planning for the game-changing events, trends, and opportunities that will occur during the next year. It’s time to realize the “but-we-are-overwhelmed-and-too-busy” excuse for not forecasting and planning is wearing thin.

Try My Reverse Search Tip Technique to Gather Crucial Competitive Intelligence

Please CLICK on Simply Hired to the RIGHT and try using job search engines in a different way after reading below.

Competitive Intelligence (CI)  Search Tip – A quick way to FIND companies in a particular industry and geography who are hiring similar people to your needs is to do a reverse search.

For example: Say you want to hire a software developer with C++ Skills in Nebraska or Ohio. You simply want to type in the city, state and job title/skills. Once you type this in, you will find a list of companies in that location who are also trying to hire people with the same skills.

From this data, you can build a solid list of target companies. You can then network with other individuals at each company who might be doing software development (or whatever position you are looking for). Since people of similar interest and backgrounds often know other people similar to themselves, this a great way to source and network! Good luck!

How to Find Your Next Job – Why using an Active and Passive Search Techniques works best when searching for a new Job!

Recently I had two people ask me for advice on what they should do in regards to searching for a new job. One person, a recent college graduate, and another, who has been with the same mortgage company for more than 10 years. The later was told she should start looking for a new job because her position would most likely becoming to an end soon – with the way the mortgage business is these days, this was no surprise.

Because I am a staffing professional, I wanted to offer some advice which should work for new graduates as well as experienced professionals who find themselves suddenly on the hunt.

The two job search strategies I would like to discuss are: Active Job Searching and Passive Job Searching. I think both are equally important and compliment each other.

Active Job Searching

This is the one most people are most familiar with. What I mean by active is that you actively search and send out your resume for positions you are interested in.

Without you putting in time to find a position nothing happens. The problem with this approach is that we are all busy and that most people don’t enjoy looking for a new job, so the activeness of the search takes the backburner many times.

Job Boards – Niche or General

There are many places you can search for positions across the Internet including: Monster, Career Builder, Hot Jobs, etc. There are also many more industry specific sites as well member organizations for your field of study that you can search on. For example, Dice is more focused on technology jobs where as Monster and Career Builder are more general in nature, not having any specific industry focus.

Make a List of Target Companies

Another way to actively search for a position is to make a list of the top ten companies you would like to work for and go directly to their website and search for positions. This technique is often overlooked but can allow you to find the job at the company you want to work for in your field.

Job Search Engines – examples include Indeed.com, juju.com, simplyhired.com

More recently on this list of places to actively search are Job Search Engines. Some companies post their jobs on Monster, some on Careerbuilder and elsewhere. Because these business charge companies to post for each position most companies don’t have an unlimited budget to post on a lot of sites, so they usually post on one site on the other.

Job Search Engines (in theory) pull data from multiple job boards, company websites and postings all over the Internet. By going here you might be able to pull up more jobs than you would, say if you just went to a Monster.com.

Social Networking Sites

Networking sites are all the rage these days. New ones seem to be popping up almost daily. Linkedin, Xing, and Twitter are just a few. If you aren’t a member of one, it is never too late to join. There are lots of networking sites, so pick the ones where you have a good network built up and create a very well crafted email, attach your resume, and send this out to your network.

This is a prime example of how networking sites work best and an often overlooked way to find a job. When my contract ended in my last job the idea to email my network occurred to me, and within a couple of weeks I was interviewing with three companies and selected the one offer that I felt would be the best long term fit for me.

So, in the end positing my resume wasn’t what landed me a job. It was emailing my network of contacts through Linkedin.

 Once you send out an email to your network it takes on a viral life of its own.

Passive Job Searching

This is a great way to search for a job when you don’t have time to sit down and actively search. What I mean by passive is that your resume is working for you while you are doing other activities – you could be having a cocktail, working out or anything and your resume is doing the work for you.

Post your resume on the Internet (if you have a personal website) and to any job board you find post worthy. The more focused the job site is to match your industry, the better off you will be.

I would not suggest doing just active searching or passive searching alone, but to try both at in conjunction with each other. If you do both of these techniques you are getting the greatest exposure and giving yourself the best possibility of finding the job you will be happiest with.

Good luck and happy hunting!

Scott Smith , www.sourcingrecruiter.com