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To attract the right candidate your job order should be as specific
as possible listing all the skills, tools and experience the hiring
authority is looking for. To get this specificity you will have to
interview the hiring authority to see what his hot buttons are and
what will make him respond in your favor or the favor of your candidate.
If the hiring authority refuses to be specific you can get a clue
that the company just wants to look like it is hiring for corporate
image but it isn't really hiring. That happens all too often. You'd
like to put your efforts into job opportunities that are really
productive, so you can put your efforts where they belong and ignore
instances where there is no specificity.
You compose the job order highlighting the important skills, tools and
experience. These are your keywords, and they should focus the
attention of search engines. All of the keywords should be included.
If they are discussed more than once, their chance of coming up in a
search increases.
Keywords attract and they also eliminate. If an applicant doesn't
have all keywords then they have reason to believe that they have
little chance at getting the job. The really bright ones will compose
their resumes to speak directly to the keywords in the job order.
It is like my college professors grading on a curve determined by how
they were parroted in the exam. This same effect will influence your
hiring authority in your applicants favor and ultimately your favor.
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