Archive for the ‘Irish Jobs’ Category

500 Jobs Recruitment Drive by the Dublin Airport

Wednesday, July 7th, 2010


Not that many companies make the announcements of hiring 500 staff, and really doing it in the short space of time. Usually the recruitment PR lately sounds like XWZ Company is announcing the plan to hire 200 new staff, and then in the small print it also says it is a plan for the next 5 years, while in the first year it will hire 12 staff, and first one and a half positions will be announced immediately!

Well not the Dublin Airport! They really do need to fill the new Terminal 2 with staff shortly, and they need hundreds of people to run that think 24/7.

Irish Jobs Market site has hosted a recruitment site for Dublin Airport Jobs. An announcement on TV covered by all the media brought 10.000 people and more each day after the announcement. Within a week the jobs had to be taken down – such was the amount of applications.

Premier Group Irish Employment Monitor: Irish professional jobs market sees an improvement in September 09

Thursday, October 22nd, 2009


Irish professional jobs market sees an improvement in September 09

 

  • During September 09, the volume of new professional job opportunities within Ireland increased 31% compared with August 09 to 4,764. This was the highest number recorded in any one month so far this year.
  • However, this was still 58% fewer new roles than a year ago (September 08)
  • The number of professionals who began their search for a new role during September 09 rose 55% versus the previous month (August 09).
  • This was a drop of 28% compared to the same month the previous year (September 08).

 

September 09 records highest number of new professional job vacancies in Ireland this year

 

The Premier Group Irish Employment Monitor, which measures the pulse of the Irish professional jobs market, registered a 31% increase in the number of new professional roles coming onto the market during September 09 versus the previous month (August 09). This was the highest number of new professional job vacancies recorded in any one month so far this year. Anecdotal evidence suggests employer confidence grew over the period, albeit at low levels. However, the year-on-year comparison highlighted just how contracted the jobs market has become over the past 12 months as the number of new roles in September 09 recorded a drop of 58% versus September 08.

 

During September 09, candidate flow showed a typical pattern for this time of the year, with the number of new professionals entering the jobs market increasing from the previous month. There were 11,105 professionals who began their search for a new role in September 09; 55% more than in August 09. While seasonal factors and a slight improvement in market confidence contributed to the month-on-month rise, the extent of the increase is a reflection of the particularly suppressed volume of candidates that came onto the market in August 09 – the lowest recorded in any one month so far this year. The annual comparison still registered 28% fewer new jobseekers than in September 08.

 

Brian Murphy, Managing Director of Premier Group in Ireland comments: “The Premier Group Irish Employment Monitor registered a welcome uplift in new job volumes within Ireland’s professional jobs market during September 09; the highest volume of new jobs recorded in any one month this year. This rise is predominantly down to an improvement in employer sentiment, although confidence levels remain weak. The increase in demand for professionals in September arose particularly in the pharmaceutical, medical device, and ICT sectors. Within financial services, the general insurance and pensions sectors were also busier.

 

“With the peak summer holiday season ending at the beginning of September, a seasonal rise in the number of professionals who started looking for a new role was anticipated. However, the actual increase was exaggerated by the previous month (August 09) which recorded the lowest number of new professional jobseekers in any one month this year. The number of candidates still far outweighs the number of roles coming onto the market each month and so competition between professionals for available jobs remains high. While there are early signs that confidence is returning to the hiring market, it is still too early to tell whether this improvement will be sustained over the coming months, particularly with the Christmas holiday season on the horizon.”

 

Chart: New jobs v. new candidates

PREMIER GROUP IRISH EMPLOYMENT MONITOR – SEPTEMBER 09

About the Premier Group Irish Employment Monitor

 

The Premier Group Irish Employment Monitor measures the pulse of the Irish professional jobs market by tracking the number of new job vacancies and new candidates within the Republic of Ireland each month. The first Premier Group Irish Employment Monitor was launched in May 2009 with data from April 2008 onwards.

 

Statistical methodology

Monthly new jobs and new candidates

Monthly new jobs and new candidate figures are based on Premier Group’s own monthly records of new permanent job vacancies and new candidates registering with the firm for permanent employment. Statistics for the full market are derived using Premier Group’s own market share.

 

Job classification

Job vacancies are professional level roles within the following sectors and functions; Banking & Financial Services, Commerce & Industry finance, Insurance, Public Practice & Tax, Legal, HR, IT, Life Sciences, Engineering, Process & Manufacturing, Professional Services, Sales & Marketing, Customer Service, Secretarial & Office Support.

 

Geography

The data is based on new job vacancies and new candidates registered with Premier Group’s network of Irish offices in Cork, Dublin, Kilkenny, Limerick and Waterford.

Irish Jobs: Dublin sees biggest increase in new jobs in September

Wednesday, October 14th, 2009

  • ◦September records a 7% month on month decrease but a 3% increase overall since the Index began in April
  • ◦Dublin sees the biggest increase in new jobs
  • ◦While Longford, Laois and Kilkenny were the poorest performers during the month of September
  • October 7th 2009 The IrishJobs.ie index, for jobs advertised online, for September reveals a 7% decrease on the previous month.

    However September figures are positive overall and are 3% up on the Index which was benchmarked in April.

    Seasonal factors explain the monthly drop experienced in September; two of the top 3 sectors which experienced the biggest decreases were Tourism, Travel and Hotel & Catering and this attributed to the overall monthly drop on August.

    Since IrishJobs.ie began the monthly Jobs Index in April there has been a 3% increase in jobs advertised online overall. While this growth is modest, it remains positive, indicating a more stable market than that experienced this time last year.

    The counties which experienced the largest job increases since April 09 are Dublin, Cork and Galway. However, at the other end of the scale Longford remains bottom of the list, followed by Laois and Kilkenny.

    Overall the sectors with the most number of jobs advertised online are Sales, IT, Hotel & Catering, and Retailing, Wholesaling & Purchasing. While the top counties for jobs are Dublin, Cork, Limerick and Galway.

    Regarding month on month comparisons the top 3 sectors that flourished are Education, Childcare & Training 24%, Sales 16% and Retailing, Wholesaling & Purchasing 14%.

    While the sectors that saw the biggest month on month decreases were Tourism, Travel & Airlines (-11%), Banking, Financial Services & Insurance (-10%) and Hotel and Catering (-4%).

    The IrishJobs.ie index measures jobs advertised by companies across the main recruitment sites in Ireland. It provides a month by month analysis of the Irish Job market broken down by sector and county for both employers and job seekers.

    Jane Lorigan, Managing Director of saongroup.com Ireland, which owns IrishJobs.ie comments “It is disappointing to see monthly figures down by 7% when compared to August. However looking at the bigger picture the September jobs index is up 3% against April?s benchmark. This indicates modest growth over a 6 month period but significant growth when compared to the same period last year when jobs online continued to drop sharply on a monthly basis.”

    -ends-

    About IrishJobs.ie

    IrishJobs.ie is an award winning website with ISO and W-Mark web certification. IrishJobs.ie currently advertises over 20,000 job vacancies sourced from nearly 1,000 active clients. According to the latest ABCe audit figures (January 2008), IrishJobs.ie has 10,753,187 page impressions, from 963,397 visits to the site by over 526,000 different jobseekers per month.

    About the IrishJobs.ie Online Jobs Index

    The jobs index monitors live and current jobs advertised by companies across the five leading recruitments websites in Ireland on a weekly basis, thereby providing a broad and comprehensive overview of the Irish market. Data is gathered from IrishJobs.ie, Jobs.ie, Monster.ie, RecruitIreland.com and Loadzajobs.ie. Data from April 2009 provides the benchmark for the Index. Data for August is compared both to the Index and also to the previous month The Irishjobs.ie Jobs Index measures not only the number of jobs available but also how individual sectors and counties are performing. In effect, it can give a monthly snapshot of the economy.

    About saongroup.com

    saongroup.com is one of the fastest growing online recruitment companies in the world with operations in Ireland, the UK, Europe, the USA, China, India, Dubai, South Africa, Central America and the Caribbean. The group also includes Candidate Manager, a leading global provider of recruitment management software and Maybefriends.com a leading online dating website

    What is the future for job boards?

    Saturday, August 15th, 2009
    

    Job boards, by tradition, provide a platform on which recruiters pay to advertise their vacancies then wait in anticipation for applications to flood through to designated in-boxes. There is nothing particularly deliberate about the service and the reactivity is both its strength and its weakness.

    But in the current climate there is little room for limitations, so whilst reduced-cost recruitment solutions will continue to feature in most recruiter’s budgets, technological development dictates that unless job boards embrace more innovative strategies, they could see their status stifled by the sophistication of integrated products such as applicant tracking systems (ATS), CV parsing and the prospects of disintermediation.

    Reactivity is history. Witness the rise of integrated proactive engagement.

    In good times desirable candidates are comfortable, entrenched in their positions and paid well. They are confident. They don’t reach out and share because they see no purpose in it. Conversely, in bad times, everyone feels the need to share, so recruiters are inundated by CVs, most of which are either irrelevant or wholly generic; the latter being as bad as the former during a time when standing out from the crowd is so important.

    So what should job boards be doing to ensure their users receive a service that will make them return? What is the future for job boards and how will they tackle the undoubted challenges that lie ahead?

    The recruitment landscape now is about conversations. Web-savvy jobseekers are communicating in language that is natural, open and honest, sometimes even direct; more direct than recruiters might wish them to be. Everything is changing. People are connecting and working together. The Internet is enabling these conversations and there is nothing corporations or recruiters can do to stop it. What they can do though, is embrace it: for joining them and showing innovation is surely the only way to preserve.

    For some job boards social media has come at just the right time. It provides them with the means of providing information (e.g. advertising jobs), building relationships (with clients and candidates) and conducting forums for discussion on how they can improve as an industry. Most importantly of all, however, social media allows job boards to get messages out from their clients to a far wider audience than many other recruitment channels. And these messages are delivered real-time, with accuracy.

    If a job board operates in a niche sector the dissemination of this information is even more specific, so even more relevant. A jobseeker looking for marketing jobs in the UK, for example, should be better served by a job board specialising in the marketing field. They return to job boards where the content (and the current age is all about content) is targeted at them. People see tangible value in subscribing to newsletters and feeds, contributing to forums and joining groups if it directly benefits them. Generalist sites, whilst clearly valuable, cannot offer this exclusivity. Their unique visitor stats may be high but they are unable to harvest customer loyalty. Return rates are relatively low.

    Sector-specific job boards are also far more likely to be empathetic to their clients. They hear where they are coming from, understanding their frustrations and working to their needs. For niche job board owners it is essential they engrain themselves under the skin of their market. Generalist sites have multiple variables and bigger margins for error. If a niche board fails to engage with its audience it will soon lose its unique identifier and will be dropped in favour of a more meaningful competitor. This is the same for traditional recruitment generalists.

    The word ‘traditional’ is an interesting one. When does something stop being contemporary? Job boards have been around for ages but are still commonly classed as modern-day recruitment mediums. With the advent and development of social media, however, do job boards now fill a void between traditional recruitment companies and en vogue employment media? Irrespective of the answer it indicates challenging times ahead.

    Job boards offer a low-cost but highly speculative place for employers to advertise their vacancies. Job boards offer recruitment agencies a platform from which to attract talent and develop brand identity. Two separate entities, two different purposes. But whilst the impression is one of mutual exclusivity there should be no reason why the pair cannot develop symbiosis via a job board. By the same token why should recruitment agencies view their competitors as foe? In an age where sharing information and being transparent are the currencies of social engagement, perhaps a job board provides the perfect place to perpetrate a fee-sharing mechanism.

    Referral-based recruitment will dominate the employment landscape within two years. In the same period social media will evolve and, with it, opportunities to network will be met by a larger number of experienced social-engagers. These people will be accustomed not only to integrating with social space but using it to find a job and developing their careers. They will also be used to earning fees from recommendations.

    Job boards can be a vehicle for recruiters to attract a better quality of candidate to their vacancy by advertising the role with a cash incentive for recommending someone to it. This serves two purposes: firstly, few recommendations are offered lightly so the recruiter will receive endorsed applications – always a winner. Secondly, recruitment consultants can become referrers, working on vacancies with cash incentives, collecting fees they would not otherwise have been able. There are multiple benefits: recruiters always have new briefs to work on; a recruiter-registered jobseeker has more job options; it reduces the number of speculative calls/applications to the employer/recruiter.

    Any niche job board embracing the referral model will add stickiness to its site and through an undoubtedly vast people network can ensure it is the oiled handle of this multi-cogged mechanism. Referral-based recruitment links all the staffing components together and manages to cohesively combine social media, social networking and innovation into one malleable solution.

    As employers seek the feasibility of disintermediation, job boards and recruitment consultancies continue to prove their worth. But isn’t the true middleman the traditional recruiter? And if so, where would that leave job boards? Because if the figures are correct more than 50% of job board advertising revenue comes from recruitment agencies. Removing them would mean a huge reliance on direct employer spend, something they are trying to reduce. It is a merry-go-round of conjecture and hypothesis but one thing is for certain, as and when the economy flourishes again it will be the job boards with value-added customer retention schemes that will benefit and profit most.

    Around 75% of job boards are owned by the major publishing groups in the UK. Clearly these companies are suffering in the current recession. Classified advertising revenues have dropped by over 17% in the last 12 months; some individual results are much more serious than this. The downturn is hitting advertisers and recruiters hard, attacking job boards from both angles. The short-term cites continued embattlement against cautious employers and cash-strapped recruitment consultancies. So, now more than ever, digital recruitment solution providers should be putting a reciprocal arm around the metaphorical shoulder of their clients, urging them to embrace their new solutions.

    When the economy recovers it will be the innovators who thrive. Statics will die. There are too many potential landmines out there for a ‘traditional’ job board to remain reactive. Get with social engagement or get ready to fail.

    Read more about the outlook for the recruitment landscape in 2011.

    Simon Lewis | Only Marketing Jobs (via Onrec)

    Irish Recruitment Survey

    Tuesday, June 16th, 2009
    

    A recent survey carried out by RecruitIreland.com shows that despite the prevailing doom and gloom, Irish jobseekers can see some positive outcomes from the recession.
    Dublin, June 16, 2009 – A recent survey carried out by RecruitIreland.com into how the recession is impacting jobseekers shows that despite the prevailing doom and gloom, jobseekers can see some positive outcomes from the recession.

    . 70% of survey respondents agreed that bargaining for services is now easier
    . Over half said there is less pressure to “Keep up with the Joneses”
    . Half of those surveyed are optimistic about the future and the majority of respondents feel that recovery will take place in early 2011

    Commenting on the results Emma Henry, Marketing Manager RecruitIreland.com said;

    “This survey shows how resilient we are as a nation. It is refreshing to see that people can see some positives”

    However, it seems that very few can escape the impact of the recession, 81% of the jobseekers surveyed have seen their jobs impacted in some way and 33% of those surveyed have actually been made redundant.

    Other key findings are as follows;

    . 35% have had a reduction in salary and over half of those have also seen reduced working hours
    . 31% feel that their careers are on hold for the moment, some even feel that their careers have taken a step back. According to one respondent;

    “Yes, I was made redundant in my career. I had worked hard to get to where I was and now I have to take a step back about 5 years just so I can get a job!”

    . 16% are taking the opportunity to invest in further training
    . 14% have actually benefited from the recession through promotion as the result of a job freeze or are benefiting from increased experience through job sharing
    . 8% are taking the opportunity to start their own business

    “It is particularly heartening to see that our entrepreneurial spirit is still flourishing with over 8% of respondents setting up their own businesses” Commented Emma Henry

    “Pressure to keep up with the Joneses, however, has been replaced with the pressure to get or keep a job and there is no downplaying the stress this can cause.

    In an effort to help ease this stress a little RecruitIreland.com has been running a campaign offering free jobs advertising to all Irish employers until September. The objective is to provide a one stop shop online for jobseekers.

    To date the campaign has been a great success and we now have over 450 employers supporting the campaign and advertising their job vacancies on the site.”

    Irish Jobs meets LinkedIN

    Friday, June 5th, 2009
    

    The Irish Recruitment Conference was a place where you could see Irish Jobs and LinkedIN together.


    irish-jobs-and-linkedin

    Jane and Patrick having a chat during a break of a Irish Recruiters Conference: “The Future of Recruitment – Part 1: The Road Ahead”

    Jane Lorigan, CEO of IrishJobs.ie
    Jane has been CEO of IrishJobs.ie for over 4 years and is also a board director of Saongroup which is an Irish company that is one of the fastest growing online recruitment companies in the world. The group has expanded quickly in the last 2 years and now has operations in the UK, USA, Canada, China, India, The Gulf, Caribbean, Central America and South Africa.

    Patrick Traynor of LinkedIn
    Patrick is sales manager for corporate solutions for LinkedIn. He has 15+ years experience in sales positions in a variety of online industries and is currently helping LinkedIn expanded its market share into Europe.

    Worky.com

    Thursday, April 30th, 2009
    

    worky-profile Worky.com is a new Irish Recruitment Social Networking site.

    Ireland is a nest for the recruitment sites. Obviously a very small number of the sites work well for the employers in Ireland since the market can only support a certain number. Worky is different, since it is built to be a global recruitment social networking market. Worky is in essence a LikedIN with no registered users. Or Monster with no jobs. Or both in the same time actually.

    Where is the full Worky recruitment site article.

    Interview

    Tuesday, November 18th, 2008
    

    If you prepared your CV properly, and applied to the relevant job you like, there are only three possible outcomes. You will get a mail saying you are not suitable or something similar, you will not hear from the recruiter at all, or,…. Your mobile will ring! Everyone loves to get that call: “This is John. I’m calling to see if you’d like to come in for a job interview.” Your pulse races, then your stomach drops: “What am I gonna wear? What am I gonna say?”

    The time has finally come! You’ve been called for an interview. Now what? Don’t sweat it! Prepare yourself to win. You know you’re ready for the job…now you have to convince the employer as well!
    Getting ready is a probably the most important part of your interview. You will likely (and you should!), spend more time preparing yourself than you will in the interview. Preparing includes getting to know more about the company and the job, and being able to explain how and why you’re the best person to hire. To help you study, be sure you have a full job description. If you do not have one from when you first applied for the job, be sure to ask the person who is arranging your interview for a copy. Even if you do have it, make sure it is the most recent and the most complete job description.

    What then? Try to find the examples in your past or work experience where you have made achievements that are relevant for the job. Simply list all the requirements from the job description, and prepare a short answer that showcases what have you done in the past that shows you will do it good in the future job as well.

    He honest in the interview. And even more important: Be yourself!

    Irish Jobs Site Platform?

    Wednesday, September 17th, 2008
    

    What software platform are the Irish Jobs Boards running on today:

    Jobs.ie – Windows Server 2003
    IrishJobs.ie – Windows Server 2003
    LoazaJobs.ie – Windows Server 2003
    EmployIreland.ie – Windows Server 2003
    RecruitIreland.ie – Windows Server 2003
    Monster.ie – Windows Server 2003
    You-name-it.ie – Windows Server 2003 (most likely as well!)

    And then you get us at www.Jobs-Ireland.ie:

    Jobs-Ireland.ie Apache/1.3.37 (Unix) mod_python/2.7.11 Python/2.3.4 PHP/5.2.3 mod_throttle/3.1.2 FrontPage/5.0.2.2635 mod_psoft_traffic/0.2 mod_ssl/2.8.28 OpenSSL/0.9.7a

    Markes you wonder, doesn’t it? Why are we the only one??? :)

    Jobs Ireland – First Blog Post!

    Monday, September 15th, 2008
    

    Jobs Ireland is a blog about the recruitment industry in Ireland and jobs advertised online on the Irish Jobs sites.