Internet Speeds Up Recruiting and Staffing

Published: 13 April 2001 y., Friday
IDC found clients are demanding quicker turnaround and increased efficiencies, whether they are seeking senior executives or temporary employees. And to meet these heightened expectations, traditional recruiters are transitioning their brick-and-mortar practices to click-and-mortars. "Traditional recruiters can no longer ignore the impact of the Internet or online competition on their business," said Christopher Boone, lead analyst for IDC's eRecruiting research program. IDC believes executive search firms, which have been slow to move online for fear of losing their "personal touch," should emphasize their "high-touch" approach as a core strength as they move online. According to a survey of nearly 1,000 recruiters by AIRS, a provider of Internet recruitment training and information services, the vast majority (73 percent) of recruiters are on the Internet every day looking for candidates. Seventeen percent turn to the Net once a week, 7 percent use the Net once a month and only 3 percent do not source from the Internet. The AIRS survey also found that Internet sourcing is a relatively new concept for corporations and recruiters. Two-thirds of recruiters have less than two years of e-recruiting experience and only 34 percent of recruiters had between two and five years of Internet expertise.
Šaltinis: cyberatlas.internet.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

How Wall Street Stole E-Christmas

After weeks of preholiday exuberance, some online retailing stocks have taken a nosedive. more »

Portals and eCommerce Sites Winners of 1999

Internet retail sites experienced the highest growth in popularity of any category of Internet sites in the six months up to the end of November 1999. more »

Prestige 641 ADSL router interoperability

ZyXEL Communications Will Demonstrate ADSL Interoperability with Major DSLAM Partners at International 2000 Consumer Electronics Show more »

CNET: Net Phone Calls Increasingly Popular

Internet telephony soared in popularity during 1999, with more than 12 times the number of calls made over the Internet last year than in 1998. more »

Free Net Access Expected in 2000

Also, Microsoft breaks up, Web-only firms fail, and dot.coms make money in 2000, says IDC analyst. more »

Surprise bills

Local Kozmo.com customers got billed for items they never ordered. more »

"A" is for Amazon

A post-holiday online retailing survey by Ernst & Young found that 26 percent of those polled made an online purchase during the holidays. more »

"Private and secure" shopping experience

Wal-Mart opens doors to new online store. more »

search.lt news

search.lt presents newest links more »

Two glitches hit Microsoft Internet services

Microsoft experienced two glitches with its consumer Internet services, the Hotmail Internet e-mail service and the MoneyCentral.com financial services site. more »