Job Boards - A few notes: If you go this route, write a good job description. You’ll want to include a description of your company, a list of requirements, a list of responsibilities for the person, and contact info. You should write it truthfully (obviously) but make it sound as interesting as you can. If you’re a hot startup that’s been featured in the Wall Street Journal and just closed a $15mm round of financing,
say so. You can use my
job description templates to get you started.
Finally, consider doing the
turing test: add a challenge to your job description to help figure out if the respondent is a computer or a human. OK, they're all human, but some people actually care about your job and would make a good candidate. Others simply throw out a resume to every job posted, and its hard to separate the wheat from the chaff. Somewhere near the bottom, I like to bury a sentence with a challenge:
If you've read this far, and really want this job, here's what you need to do: find the last name of our CEO, and put it in the subject line of your email. We're filtering these responses into a separate box for special consideration. Some people who are resume spam-bots will still do it, but most won't. Your signal to noise ratio will go up a lot.