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Find Resumes with Phone or Email using Bing.com

 Source: eGrabber Newsletter You can program or restrict your Internet resume searches to return only resumes that contain phone or email address inside them. All the major search engines allow you to write search scripts that let you do this. The search syntax to find resumes that contain phone or email from Bing.com is "Keyword" intitle:resume phone email For example, to search for profiles of Certified Public Accountants, the search string will be Certified Public Accountant intitle:resume phone email You can even eliminate sample resumes in your search by including the following at the end of the above search string -submit -openings -template -tips -submission -sample -examples -wizard  

Use Online News Sites to Find Passive Candidates

Did you know that you can use online news websites to prospect for passive candidates? The Google search syntax to search news sites is site:online news website "keyword" For example, if you are interested in sourcing Software Architects from The Seattle Times' website, the search string will be as follows site:seattletimes.nwsource.com "software architect" You can also use the OR operator to search multiple news sites (site:seattletimes.nwsource.com OR site:al.com) "software architect" If you do not know the URLs of websites of newspapers, go to www.onlinenewspapers.com to look them up.

Inhale Resumes from Job Boards, Search Engines and Social Networks

In today’s tech-dominant world, resumes are found everywhere. Job boards, search engines, social networking sites,  free resume portals, blogs, personal websites, alumni associations are some of the major sources of resumes. It is quite encouraging for recruiters and hiring managers, but the challenge lies in how quickly you can find the resumes and extract resume & contact information from them.  Typically, recruiters and hiring managers visit various resume sources and manually extract resume and contact information to the database. It is a strenuous task for busy recruiters and it eats up most of the productive hours. Surveys reveal that recruiters spend most of their time to source resumes and extract the resume information. Eventually, it leaves very little time to contact the prospective clients or candidates. This is where a resume inhaling tool can help recruiters inhale resumes from almost any source. A resume inhaling tool with built-in resume parser intellig...

How to quickly build resume database from the Internet?

A resume database is one of the most primary and powerful tools that recruiters or hiring managers should always have in their kitty. It is a consolidated list of qualified candidates or some times prescreened candidates that recruiters and hiring managers can quickly reach out during various recruiting assignments. There are some steps involved in building a resume database. The first step is to identify the targeted audience and search resumes. Typically recruiters search for resumes from various sources like job boards, search engines, professional networking sites, social networking sites, forums, personal websites, blogs, user groups, resume portals, etc. A simple resume search, for example in Google, will fetch you resumes along with a lot of other unwanted data. You have to manually filter the resumes from the search results. Expert recruiters use Boolean search scripts to eliminate the unwanted data and narrow down the search results to appropriate resumes. So you need to...