What the Government Shutdown Taught Us About Job Posting Sites
During the first 16 days of October, the United States government was in shutdown mode and halted many routine operations after Congress failed to appropriate funds for the 2014 fiscal year and didn’t enact a continuing resolution to provide for funding in the meantime. An interim appropriations bill was signed into law October 17 putting people back to work, but during the shutdown, around 800,000 federal employees were furloughed, and 1.3 million were required to go to work without knowing when they would be paid.
Seeing opportunity in difficulty, however, a startup incubator called 1776 went live with a new website called Unfurlough.US that was designed to hook up furloughed federal employees with freelance or part-time work to help these workers replace lost income. The site went from being a public Google document to a job site in the space of only about five hours. While the site definitely gained attention due to the government shutdown and ensuing media coverage, it can teach digital publishers some important truths about job posting sites and how to use job board software to improve website monetization.
What Digital Publishers Can Learn from Unfurlough.US
One important lesson Unfurlough.US confirmed is that, while job posting sites need to be carefully thought out, they can be rolled out in a short amount of time. Customizable job board software is available that allows digital publishers and trade publication websites to create white label job boards targeted to their audiences without the need for extensive programming efforts. The site also drove home the point that online job search is the new normal. While people may occasionally still go at a page of printed classified job ads with a highlighter, searching for a job online is generally how it is done today.
Targeted Job Boards Are Successful
Another important lesson digital publishers can learn from Unfurlough.US is that targeted job boards get results. The fact is, furloughed federal workers often have very specific skill sets, and employers often need workers with very specific skill sets, so it was only natural that those workers and employers would coalesce around a site created for a very specific set of workers in a unique situation. If you were a furloughed NASA scientist in need of continued income, for example, you probably spent little to no time on huge job aggregators or answering vague Craigslist ads. But if you had the opportunity to put your skills to use on a relevant, weeklong freelance job, you could replace lost income while awaiting the call back to work.
Digital Publishers Must Stay Abreast of Trends to Keep Job Boards Relevant
Unfurlough.US took advantage of a very specific set of circumstances. Though they ended up receiving press attention from big sites like Mashable, TechCrunch, and CNET, Unfurlough.US started out with a simple and specific objective that was based on a current reality in the employment world. Depending on your digital publication, you can tailor your job board to current realities faced by your targeted audience. For example, if your local online newspaper reaches people affected by a major industry shutdown, you can look for employers targeting these workers who might be interested in listing on your site. If your site targets a particular trade, staying informed of industry trends can help you approach the right employers for your readership.
Turning Harsh Realities Into Opportunities
Unfurlough.US addressed an unusual mix of news cycle, economic need, and public sentiment, and gained a lot of positive attention even though it was new and very simply designed. Understanding economic trends in your specific region or in your trade can help you gain an advantage over job posting sites that are run on autopilot. When job posting sites recognize a trend or a need and make an effort to meet that need, they not only draw the interest of workers looking for jobs, but of specific employers who may be exactly right for those workers. When you’re able to do this, you not only indirectly address traffic development, you provide a needed service, and employers and job seekers will remember that next time they’re looking.
The government shutdown affected millions of regular working people and dominated news cycles for a couple of weeks. By recognizing an opportunity, 1776 and their site were able to quickly spring into action and try to address a pressing need in a unique way, and showed how job listing sites can succeed by doing so. With a carefully crafted job board on your news or trade publication website, you can assist revenue development, and position your publication to provide needed services and gain positive attention should a unique situation affects your readership.
Source: What the Government Shutdown Taught Us About Job Posting Sites by Mary Hiers
It’s not only a good: thing for NoVa and Va it’s obscene in the aounmt of money that individuals make working for the govt compared to the ordinaryschmucks and schmoes in RoVa and the rest of the country.I keep telling folks next time you take a trip allow extra time and get off the interstate and onto a parallel US signed road for a while and you’ll see for realjust how much of America lives and while there are some fancy houses there are far, far more really, really modest homes of many people who are LUCKY if they are making 30K a year.In the meantime, we have NoVa where 100K a year is routine so routine that at that salary you cannot find a single family home in NoVa and many choose to commute not 10 or 20 miles a day Nope 100 miles a day.the put 100K on their cars in as little as two years or less while much of the rest of America it takes 5-10 years to put 100K on a car.Now.. if NoVa was Seattle or Boise or Austin, Tx, etc, we could be PROUD of Va’s own private-sector powerhouse economic engine.not so much as Govt-worker Central at least for me given the tremendous 50 year onslaught of them headed south to Fredericksburg to find their dream home and in the process just ruin I-95 as a mainline interstate for East Coast travel , not to mention the mess on our own local roads as they queue up twice a day for their mega commute.and because Govt workers are so well paid they push the price of everything else up.teachers for example have to be paid cost-of-living supplements, reasonably priced affordable house for local workers who don’t commute is in very short supply, almost impossible to find even if a developer produced smaller scale homes for less.. they are snapped up.People move here they move out into the country (that’s what they call it) and once there they oppose vociferously any new subdivisions that will take away the cough cough.. rural character that their house had (apparently) no effect on then they want 24/7 fire and rescue coverage even though they moved out in the country to get that wonderful rural-character somehow it missed their focus that most rural has 24/7 only when local volunteers are around usually weekends so these folks march down to the local govt and demand 24/7 service for their taxes ( which are 1/3 or less what they used to pay in NoVa) . so of course the local BOS responds and taxes go up for everyone including the local workers who don’t commute and make no where near the 100K the complainers are making gee I go back and read this and it sounds TERRIBLE but PLEASE don’t mistake it for BITTER./I don’t blame these folks .. it is what it is but I’m also a pragmatic purpose who believes we have to face the truth of things and everything written here is true I-95 was built through Fredericksburg in 1963. From that time forward, our fate was connected to NoVa for better or worse.and .. to be balanced here.. there IS better we have better schools, libraries, fire/ems, shopping, restaurants..doctors.. hospitals, etc.but GOD we DO have traffic, higher taxes and SPRAWL out the wazoo!NoVa is not going anywhere as long as there is a Fed Govt.Hampton Roads/VB? I’m worried. we current spend about a trillion dollars all told for National Defense out of total tax revenues of 1.5T.we have an entitlement problem also that has to be fixed but we spend way, way too much more than we can AFFORD on National Defense so Hampton/VB and the State of Va better worry more about that area than NoVa and that area has tremendous opportunity and potential as any deep-water port would they need to get in that game more and more. I’m not convinced that it could not become a major technology region.