![]() |
|
|
CLICK TO ENLARGE
|
Length of the Average Job Search in 2006
According to the Department of Labor, the average length of unemployment lasted 17.7 weeks in late 2005, which is only incrementally better than in 1983, when the U.S. economy was emerging from the worst recession since the Depression. Although the economy has improved significantly, it is widely believed that the increase in the length of a job search is due to the reliance on job boards.
Monster.com writes that job views have increased by 22% and the number of resumes online has increased by 23%.
Recruiters and hiring managers do not consider the internet to be the most reliable source for finding high quality candidates. 92% claimed that they often receive irrelevant responses to postings, which only prolongs the process for qualified candidates. In fact, a leading international out-placement firm, Challenger, Gray & Christmas, reports that the average job search is now taking 23% longer.
![]() |
|
|
CLICK TO ENLARGE |