August 28, 2009

HR Fact Friday: 45% of Employers Use Social Networking Sites to Research Job Candidates

Career Expert Provides DOs and DON’Ts for Job Seekers on Social Networking 

As social networking grows increasingly pervasive, more employers are utilizing these sites to screen potential employees. Forty-five percent of employers reported in a recent CareerBuilder survey that they use social networking sites to research job candidates, a big jump from 22 percent last year. Another 11 percent plan to start using social networking sites for screening. More than 2,600 hiring managers participated in the survey, which was completed in June 2009.

Of those who conduct online searches/background checks of job candidates, 29 percent use Facebook, 26 percent use LinkedIn and 21 percent use MySpace. One-in-ten (11 percent) search blogs while 7 percent follow candidates on Twitter.

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August 7, 2009

HR Fact Friday: Fewer Men Willing To Be Stay at Home Dad

Filed under: Work/Life Balance — Tags: , , , , , , — Paul @ 6:00 am

Working dads continue to explore different options to free up more time with their families, but fewer are willing to leave their jobs if their other half could comfortably carry the financial load for the entire family.

While nearly one-third (31 percent) of 797 U.S. men would give up the traditional role of breadwinner, that percentage has dropped from 37 percent in 2008 and 49 percent in 2005, according to CareerBuilder’s Working Dads 2009 survey.  The survey was conducted in February and March 2009 with men who were employed full time and have children age 18 or younger living at home.

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April 3, 2009

HR Fact Friday: 60% of Older Workers Delay Retirement

Filed under: Retirement — Tags: , , , , — Paul @ 10:35 am

While the economic crisis is being felt by nearly every segment of the working population, one group of workers is faced with particularly tough decisions regarding their futures. 60% of workers over the age of 60 say they are putting off their retirement because of the impact of the financial crisis on their long-term savings, according to a survey by recruitment firm CareerBuilder.  The survey was conducted among more than 8,000 full-time U.S. workers ages 18 and over between Nov. 12 and Dec. 1, 2008.

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