Small businesses still hiring, survey says

Austin Business Journal Related News

The nation’s small businesses are still planning to put out the help-wanted signs, just not as frequently and with fewer spots to fill, according to a survey by TriNet Group Inc. The TriNet HR Trends Survey found that 55 percent of small businesses intend to hire someone during the year, down from 80 percent in the survey conducted in November and December of last year …

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Tech Sector: 4th year of job growth in 2008

By Mass High Tech staff

The technology sector, for the fourth consecutive year, added jobs to the U.S. economy, according to the Cyberstates report, a publication from technology-focused trade association TechAmerica.

Nationwide, the report found that 77,000 net jobs in the high-tech industry were added in 2008, bringing the total number of U.S. tech workers to 5.92 million. In 2007, 79,600 high-tech jobs were added, and 2006 yielded an
additional 139,000 jobs in the field. The majority of the gains in 2008 stem from software service and engineering and tech service jobs.

The report provides the most recent national data from 2008, as well as state-by-state data from 2007.

Among its 2007 findings, the report shows Massachusetts as having the second highest concentration of tech workers — 87 per 1,000 workers in 2007 — trailing only Virginia.

High-tech workers also tended to make 88 percent higher wagers, on a national level, than average private sector workers in 2007, TechAmerica reported. Massachusetts was ranked second, behind California, in average high-tech wages at $100,500.

Elsewhere in New England in 2007, Connecticut ranked 11th in high-tech wages, with the average being $84,200, and 24th in high-tech employment. Maine ranks 44th in high-tech employment and 42nd in high-tech average
wages, at $58,000. New Hampshire is the 34th state in high-tech employment rankings, but 13th in high-tech average wage, at $81,300. Rhode Island is ranked 42nd in high-tech employment and 26th in average wage, at $69,500.
And Vermont, ranked 45th in high-tech employment, holds the 28th spot in high-tech average wage, at $68,000.

New England’s additional 5,000 high-tech jobs in 2007 over 2006 stemmed mainly from job growth in Massachusetts and Connecticut. However, those same two states are largely responsible for nearly 15,000 high-tech job losses in the five-year span from 2002 to 2007, the report shows.

The report notes that nationally the industry lost 23,100 high-tech manufacturing positions and 12,700 communications service jobs in 2007, and it said that a fifth year of growth in the sector is “questionable” at this
point in the economy.

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Networking Rocks: Source of Hire study

Courtesy of Gerry Crispin & Mark Mehler, CareerXroads:

  1. Internal Transfers and Promotions were 38.8% of ALL the full-time positions a company fills. Nine firms are at or above 50%. We think it worth noting that the significant increase in the proportion of internal to external fills in 2008 versus 2007 (28%) is at least partially due to the deteriorating economic climate during 2008. We think this conclusion is further supported by the survey respondents’ estimate that the number of contingent workers employed by their respective firms decreased from 18% in 2007 to 10% in 2008. Cleary the data reflects a shift in emphasis to filling internally and squeezing external hires. We still don’t understand why more firms don’t tout their internal movement numbers as a means to prove their commitment to development. This continues to be a missed opportunity.
  2. Referrals (employee, alumni, vendor, etc.) make up 27.3% of all external hires and is arguably the number one external source. (Employee referrals make up most of this category but Alumni referrals are growing.)The efficiency of referrals is one of the single most important characteristics of US hiring practices. 26 firms tracked the number of referrals as well as hires from referrals. More than 17,000 positions were filled from just fewer than 200,000 referrals or 1 hire for every 11.2 referrals!
  3. Job Boards (not including the company site) represent 12.3% of external hires. We believe this SOH (source of hire) has indeed peaked and predict it will diminish in the future. Within the category, Monster has lost ground to CareerBuilder. The two of them account for half the job board hires but both are losing ground to the “long-tail” of niche sites, social networks and other online search engine marketing capabilities that are expanding their reach. The gray area where boards are morphing into much broader suites of services makes it difficult to draw hard and fast conclusions.
  4. Company Website hires are a problem for us (we maintain that the company web site is a destination not a source) and essentially represents one of every five external hires. There is no question about the importance of the company site’s staffing pages as a critical “channel” but its acceptance by corporations as a source likely occludes other, more relevant starting points driving prospects and candidates.

When reviewing the CareerXroads findings, think about how you are currently spending your job search time. What percentage are you putting into networking versus responding to online ads? Time to rethink your strategy? Use the above stats to determine how you spend your time. Set up some networking meetings.

Want more tips to get the most from your networking efforts? Check out our newsroom: www.knocks.com/news.aps.

Now go get ’em!

Get a Haircut, Get a Job and other cool posts

Good stuff on the web:

Phil Gerbyshak in Slacker Manager:

“Get a Haircut” Phil, your advice is dead on! And of course I like No. 10. 🙂

Hutch Carpenter in I’m not actually a geek:

“How to Tweet Your Way Out of a Job”

Dana VanDen Heuvel for Marketing Profs:

“Thought-leading Your Way to Premium Brand Status” – Note: check out this article and see how you can apply Dana’s concepts to your job search. Cool stuff!

Want more help on branding and your career? Check out these cool stories.