Employers spent more on online recruitment advertising than newspaper job ads--$5.9 billion to $5.4 billion--for the first time in 2006, according to a new study released Tuesday by market research
firm Borrell Associates Inc. The report says this online shift will continue over the next five years as Internet job listings hit $10 billion in 2011--or 13.7% of overall recruitment dollars compared
to 6.5% for newspaper ads.
In order to boost its share of local job ads, Monster has forged partnerships with newspapers dumping CareerBuilder such as The Philadelphia
Inquirer, the Wilkes-Barre Times Leader and the Akron Beacon Journal. Yahoo's HotJobs also made a play for more local classifieds, striking agreements with eight publishing companies
representing more than 200 newspapers nationwide.
The report questions whether these alliances will benefit newspapers in the long-term. "In the end, the newspapers that fled to Monster or
HotJobs wound up doing exactly what they shouldn't: Abandoning a billion-dollar investment in their own product and building up brands they have spent years trying unsuccessfully to degrade," the
report stated.
--Mark Walsh
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