Morning Sun

Here are tech tools that can help you land a new job

- The Washington Post

For Patrick Moran, who put in his two weeks’ notice at the end of October, job hunting has become a web of confusion given his unfamiliar­ity with profession­al networking online.

Moran, who is a production manager of a doughnut bakery in Rhode Island, said he has been struggling with constant turnover in staffing, long hours that start at 2 a.m., no benefits and stress that got worse during the pandemic. Now he’s hoping to land a job that will meet a few basic requests: allow him to sit down in an office, work normal hours and have some benefits. But the job search has been tough, and cold applying to jobs on company websites and online profession­al networking site Linkedin has been relatively fruitless for him.

“I have no interest (in the food service industry) anymore because of everything that has happened. My mental health has already suffered enough,” said Moran, who received a four-year degree in baking and pastry and has spent his entire career in the same industry. “I feel like your grandma on Facebook,” he said about using digital tools to job hunt.

Moran is not alone; millions of job seekers are switching industries, embarking on a new path but many of them are left to their own devices to navigate the journey. A record 4.3 million Americans quit their jobs in August, according to recent data released by the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Workers across industries — including restaurant­s, manufactur­ers, retailers, health care and profession­al business services — have left their positions in search of better opportunit­ies. Although online job-searching tools have existed for years, workers’ reliance on them accelerate­d during the pandemic as networking opportunit­ies and in-person job fairs have been limited. Online services, apps and websites can help people make their next career move, and many are increasing­ly turning to them as the shift in the U.S. workforce continues.

The latest data show that workers are taking advantage of the benefits these tools can provide. The 20 most-downloaded job search and career developmen­t apps collective­ly saw a rise in installati­ons within the first nine months of the year, according to data from the mobile analytics company Sensor Tower.

Experts say job seekers across industries would be wise to use at least some tech tools as they consider their next steps. The apps and services often provide free access to valuable networks of contacts, advice and guidance, as well as direct access to employers and jobs.

“Online communitie­s are a huge tool to connect with other people, and their importance escalated even more so during the pan

demic,” said Wendy Saccuzzo, a career coach and the head of hiring services for the online community Tech Ladies. “Getting informatio­n, understand­ing the trends in job searching, and supporting each other is really everything.”

Profession­al networking and job search services like Linkedin, Indeed and Ziprecruit­er can help workers find job openings as well as connect with hiring companies and decision-makers. Meanwhile, communicat­ion tools and review services like Slack, Glassdoor and Blind can help potential applicants communicat­e with industry or company workers to get the scoop from the inside. And more tailored apps — like Seasoned for restaurant workers and Snagajob or Instawork for hourly workers — can aid with finding jobs in specific industries. For workers who may want to develop a personal brand, website-building tools like Wix and Weebly, résumé builders and social media networks can help them gain some credibilit­y.

Linkedin and Indeed have seen major increases in activity. Linkedin reports it is hosting a record number of job openings, although it would not provide specific numbers, with the rate of people transition­ing jobs between June and August up more than 50% year over year. Indeed said as of Oct. 22, job postings were up 48% compared to February 2020 levels before the pandemic-related shutdowns in the United States.

“We are calling it the Great Reshuffle,” said Rohan Rajiv, group product manager at Linkedin. “People are rethinking their careers, taking the time to pause and think about how they work.”

To aid the shuffling workforce, Linkedin recently added filters that allow job seekers to target remote, hybrid or on-site roles. Indeed has added tools to help employers conduct video interviews and hosted a monthlong hiring initiative for the restaurant industry last month with the online restaurant reservatio­n service Opentable.

But the large job sites aren’t the only services seeing a massive rise in demand. Apps and services catering to specific industries like Seasoned — an app that connects workers and restaurant­s — and apps that are helping people learn about company culture — like Blind, a workplace chat app, and Glassdoor’s Fishbowl — are also experienci­ng a bump in activity.

Ware Sykes, CEO of San Francisco-based Seasoned, says the app has garnered more than 300 restaurant brands that represent 100,000 locations across the United States since it debuted, in its current form, in July 2020. The app, which is free for workers, also has more than a quarter million workers in the cities it serves, which include Dallas, Austin, Orlando and soon, Miami. It also helps workers connect to each other to share industry knowledge.

“The white-collar tools don’t take into considerat­ion what’s needed for an hourly worker,” Sykes said. “There’s been no place for restaurant workers to go to get advice on what they need to do to build their skills.”

Sarah Johnston, founder of executive career-branding business Briefcase Coach, said that a couple of months ago, she had about double the interest in her services as during pre-pandemic times.

Johnston said aside from Linkedin, she finds Slack communitie­s to be helpful with networking. Some communitie­s are dedicated to specific industries and post jobs, offer advice as well as networking opportunit­ies. She also said email search tool Hunter.io, which offers users 25 free email address searches a month, can be helpful for people trying to connect to a specific person — perhaps a potential boss.

To help job candidates get past those pesky automated applicant-tracking software systems, which often eliminate applicants before a human even gets to consider them, Johnston suggested tools like Jobscan and Skillsynce­r. They offer a free sample scan but cost money thereafter and give job seekers a score based on how closely their résumé matches up with the keywords on the job descriptio­n.

“I’m seeing a rise in people who want to test the waters,” she said. “People have been inside their houses for the last two years, and they want a new challenge.”

For workers looking for insights that they won’t get from the job descriptio­n, recruiters or hiring managers, a few tools might come in handy. Saccuzzo, the career coach, said Twitter can be helpful in tracking chatter about the company, its values and culture, as well as possible job openings.

Meanwhile, apps like Fishbowl and Blind, which help people connect with others in their industry, give job seekers the ability to stay anonymous so they can candidly converse about culture, the downsides of a job or a company’s leadership.

Fishbowl, which has more than 1 million users, said the number of profession­als who created an account on its service has increased threefold since the outbreak of the pandemic.

“The immense growth we’ve seen across Fishbowl’s digital communitie­s — or bowls — over the past 18 months highlights the critical need for jobseekers and employees to gain informatio­n from people beyond their immediate circle,” Matt Sunbulli, Fishbowl CEO and co-founder and Glassdoor vice president of product management, said in a statement.

Ziprecruit­er, meanwhile, is trying to make the online job search feel more human, ironically by using artificial intelligen­ce. It charges companies but not jobseekers and said its A.I. persona named Phil will soon be able to converse with candidates to better get to know what they want, what their experience is and what might be their best job match. Then, Phil can help connect candidates to the right recruiters and job opportunit­ies. But Phil will likely be tracking and storing users’ job preference­s to improve the service.

“What if we were able to assign every job seeker with a recruiter to find out everything that’s special about them and use that to pitch to the best employers?” said Ryan Eberhard, Ziprecruit­er’s chief product officer. “That’s the essence of this product.”

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