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The small company I work at is no Google or FogCreek so it's been tough trying to get the attention of candidates in a sea of job postings.

I'm fairly sure the work we do is challenging and interesting enough for brilliant people. Conveying that succinctly in a job posting is hard, as is not getting overshadowed by the bigger and more famous companies.

I'm wondering what some of you are doing to make your job postings sticky?

Thanks.

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3 Answers

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A couple of other ideas:

  • Local universities and colleges may be worth investigating what it takes to try to get that stream of people to possibly apply for a position.

  • Are you big enough to try a recruiting firm? Granted this may be rather expensive but it is an idea to consider.

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Where have you been doing your job postings? On the big sites like Monsterboard? Because then it is probably easy for your listing to drown.

Have you tried posting it at more developer specific sites (if you're indeed looking for a developer) like for example job.stackoverflow.com?

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A few things to try:

  • Promote the company - so potential hires have already heard of you
  • Promote the work you have done / are already doing - so you don't have to do a hard sell on 'upcoming projects' being interesting.
  • Provide excellent training opportunities.
  • Engage with the local developer community. Sponsor events, user groups, etc. This will: promote your company; show you're a potentially good company to work for; show a commitment to staff learning and training; and may introduce you to some potential candidates.
  • Provide an excellent working environment - top candidates won't want to work in horrible conditions. (You do score high on the Joel Test? Don't you.)
  • Ensure that staff have the potential to learn and use new things/technologies.
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@Matt. We practice points 3, 5 & 6 but just stating that in the job ad isn't really convincing. Probably half the advertisers do that. So how do you actually get it to be believable? Point 4 is interesting and something we might try. – fung Sep 28 at 10:36
The way to make it believable is to talk about it elsewhere - provide supporting evidence. Include in the advert links to where we can see images of the working environment, company events, etc. Do you or your staff have blogs where they talk about their experiences of working for you or the training courses/opportunities they've been on/had? - Link them up. Obviously you can't do this on a lot of generic job sites or through most agencies. But then that's where you'll go to get generic candidates. If you want to stand out you need more than just an advert. – Matt Lacey Sep 29 at 9:33

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