It seems the idea is that you just have a public CV if you are not looking for a job and "file" your CV when you are looking for a job. At the moment you can file your CV for three years! I would be a touch upset, even in the height of a recession, if it took me three years to get a job! Surly this policy is going to end up creating a lot of stale filed CVs which will put off recruiters? Maybe one to six months would be a better time frame?
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The expectation is not that it will take you three years to find a job. Those who opt in early get the benefit of using careers.stackoverflow.com for a job search at any time for the next three years. Whether they'll need it or not, that's up to them. Basically, it is our way of saying "thanks" to those who are willing to be the early adopters. |
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You never know what's round the corner when it comes to employment. I try to treat my CV as a living document at all times, not just something that gets resurrected whenever I need a new job. I tend to note all the milestone achievements/projects as they happen. Otherwise I'll forget something important that might have tickled potential employer's fancy. You never know, you might just get an unbelievable offer simply because you keep on top of your CV and keep it fresh and up-to-date. So in short, I don't think three years is a long time to file your CV. |
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I will only keep my CV visible until I find a job. However there are people that are not planning to start looking for a new job yet, they will just hide their CV until they need a new job. These people can take part in the beta and get the discount due to the 3 year limit. Also contactors will be looking for me then one contract over a 3 year period. |
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If a person isn't looking for a job, then it's up to them to 'de-publish' it. But 3 years presents a heck of a cost-savings. Knowing that if anything happens in the next 3 years that I have a go-to place for having my resume put in front of good hiring managers is quite comforting. That's what Stack Overflow careers has that other sites do not; the people that hire here are definitely looking for the best. |
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If something is $99, then you'd like to think that you would definitely only need it once. I think 3 years covers nicely for this - it has the feel of "the foreseeable future" about it. i.e. I think it will more than cover my needs for the foreseeable future. Let's say they had given you 12 months: what if it took you 6 months to find a job, you have 3 months notice (very common in the UK at least) and then you found pretty quickly that the job wasn't what you thought and you want to start looking again? |
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Refraining from a full quote: http://stackoverflow.com/questions/247217/do-you-actively-look-for-a-better-job/247233#247233 I always keep my CV up-to-date. Never know when it'll come in handy :) |
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Joel gave a plug for the launch of careers during the recent DevDays tour:
During the plug Joel mentioned that it should also be possible to blacklist certain employers so that you don't show up in their searches, with the default being all employers on your CV. I can't see any evidence of this feature yet though. |
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