• On TV.com: THE GIRLS NEXT DOOR photos
February 21, 2007 6:00 AM PST

Launch your own job board in a heartbeat: JobCoin

Posted by Rafe Needleman
  • Font size
  • Print

When TechCrunch launched its Web 2.0 job board last year, it was joining--and was soon joined by--several other similar job boards. And now, anyone can get in on the action. Using JobCoin, you can create a job board on your own site with practically no effort. The service is a job board host. You tell it how much you want to charge for a posting, upload your logo, and bam, you've got a board. Here's ours: webware.jobcoin.com. (Our current fee for posting a job: $0. Go wild, but keep it clean.)

The new Webware job board

(Credit: CNET Networks)

It's a great idea for people running popular blogs or sites. A lot of blogs have very focused and dedicated audiences, and this tool makes it possible to make money from one of the best advertising forms out there: help wanted notices. We're not talking chump change here, either: a good job board can charge $200 a posting. Get a few of those a month and you're talking real money. JobCoin is free to use, but the company keeps 30 percent of all revenues collected.

JobCoin could become an excellent resource for people who post jobs, too. In the future it will be possible for recruiters to post a job to one site and have it appear on other relevant sites. The exact mechanism for determining which jobs go where isn't complete yet, but if JobCoin CEO Keith Schacht can figure it out, he'll really have something. Especially if he can also figure out how to reward the owners of sites where posts are first entered.

Nearly every business on the planet needs to hire people. Successful blogs have highly specific audiences that people in particular industries gravitate toward. So JobCoin could make a lot of money for everybody involved: the bloggers, the people who get neat new jobs, and JobCoin itself.

Schacht will be presenting tonight at the Stirr event in Palo Alto, which I will be moderating (tonight's event is full, I'm afraid). If you're looking to catch the Web 2.0 buzz in person, the Stirr events are great, and there's one every month. Hit the site to apply for an invitation.

See also: Relationship management for job seekers: JibberJobber

Rafe Needleman writes about start-ups, new technologies, and Web 2.0 products, as editor of CNET's Webware. E-mail Rafe.
Recent posts from Webware
Googlepedia for Firefox brings Wikipedia to you
Tiltshiftmaker turns photos into miniature scenes
Resumator makes hiring collaborative, paper-free
LG Blu-ray players stream Netflix, CinemaNow, and YouTube
Tech layoffs: The scorecard
Opera's new SDK: Better browsing on the Wii?
Daily Tidbits: GrandCentral making its way to...Spain?
Zuckerberg: New year, 150 million Facebook users
Add a Comment (Log in or register) 2 comments
Great summary
by krschacht February 22, 2007 11:56 AM PST
Rafe,

Great summary of JobCoin! One thing I'll add to is that job listings are unlike traditional ads. Right now, you're visitors probably "put up with" ads on your site because your providing them free content. Job listings, on the other hand, are a form of relevant content for your visitors *in addition* to being a source of revenue.

If you decide to try out JobCoin, send a quick note to me and let me know what you think! keith (at) jobcoin [dot] com

-Keith
Reply to this comment
by karimbenkarim April 2, 2008 6:27 AM PDT
please visit this link if you wanna make money
http://www.AWSurveys.com/HomeMain.cfm?RefID=karimbenkarim
Regards
advertisement

About Webware

Say No to boxed software! The future of applications is online delivery and access. Software is passé. Webware is the new way to get things done.

Add this feed to your online news reader

Webware topics

In the news now

Apple: DRM-free tunes, unibody MacBook Pro

roundup At Macworld, Phil Schiller touts 10 million songs sans DRM, plus 69-cent songs, a unibody 17-inch notebook, iLife updates, and more.


Countdown to CES

special coverage The tech community descends on Las Vegas as the Consumer Electronics Show gets ready to kick off in all its gadgety glory.


advertisement

Inside CNET News

Scroll Left Scroll Right
-->