TMP Worldwide Advertising & Communications, LLC

From the Desktop of Karin Lash, Regional Director, Interactive Strategy

Karin Lash

Once upon a time I was a Recruiter contemplating for the first time my advertising agency's recommendation that I add an online job posting to my print buy. Fast forward eight years, and I now work for that very same agency and job postings & resume mining are old news when it comes to recruiting and sourcing candidates.

We all know technology has changed the way we live our lives - and how we seek out new employment is no exception. The reality is that job postings and resume searches are simply no longer enough to be called a "strategy" - they are merely two of many tools in a wide arsenal we must engage for our employment message to have any hope of being seen or heard in the sea of advertising clutter that permeates all forms of media, not just online.

A successful interactive media strategy accomplishes several things. First, it leverages the full value of what traditional job boards have to offer. This means looking beyond job postings and resume searching to sponsorships and targeted marketing opportunities such as banners, emails and newsletters. Second, it raises and maintains your visibility on the search engines (i.e., Google, Yahoo) and job aggregators (i.e., Indeed, Simply Hired) - both from an organic and sponsored search perspective. Search engines and the vast content they power are currently a tremendously underutilized resource in the recruitment space (In December 2006, Yahoo! reported over 9.2 million career-related searches alone). Lastly, it engages with social networking. Introducing technology to the age old process of networking opens the doors to quality candidates many times removed from the original source. These are prospective candidates that you might never have had the opportunity to touch in the past.

So how do you craft a solid interactive media strategy? You probably can't change your interactive media strategy overnight, nor would we recommend you do so.

To learn more about our interactive capabilities, visit http://www.tmp.com/about_capabilities.aspx