What do the following job reactions mean?
The first three are obvious. What does it mean if I give a job a unicorn? What about crying hysterically. And doesn't :( mean thumbs down?
This is very confusing. At least some tooltips would help, right?
What do the following job reactions mean?
The first three are obvious. What does it mean if I give a job a unicorn? What about crying hysterically. And doesn't :( mean thumbs down?
This is very confusing. At least some tooltips would help, right?
Here is how I'm currently using them (my opinion):
The reason I'm reacting to jobs is because I believe SO may use this in the future to understand how I feel about jobs and use some ML to recommend better jobs for me. It can also help recruiters to better understand how people feel about the job.
In my opinion it should not. For a dream job I'd use the Heart reaction.
The difference is that a unicorn job might be doable for very few people. I don't see a unicorn job necessarily as bad or impossible. Laughing on the other hand is just absurd, it's my way of telling other people they should not pay attention to that job.
Not at all, I just wanted to share my opinion, as it may be useful for the staff and other people. The idea is to discuss and elaborate on the subject. I like to think that any "reactions" feature in any platform has no right/wrong way of using, since they just represent your emotions in relation to something (e.g. a job), and emotions are very personal.
As I said, this is only my opinion, as this question has discussion tag, I thought it'd be fine sharing it.
Job reactions are a new feature that we're testing at the moment. They are currently visible to approximately half the users on Jobs. This is one of the ideas we're experimenting with as part of our push to measure and maintain job quality as we grow the job board.
Several factors affect job quality, some of which are easier to detect automatically. For example, a listing with barely any description or a listing that has nothing to do with software are much easier to classify as low quality in an automated way. Beyond this, applications and dismissals are the only signal we have on how candidates feel about listings. That's what we're hoping to learn with job reactions.
If we see enough engagement with this feature, we plan to iterate on it. This includes experimenting with the specific reaction types. The current set of reactions is our first attempt at the problem and we didn't want to be prescriptive at this stage with a strict positive/neutral/negative system. Hence, we included the 'heart', 'sad', and 'laughing' reactions. As for the unicorn? Sparkles just had to make an appearance!
At this time, we aren't sharing this data with employers and we aren't using this data in our search or matching algorithms. With this initial test of reactions, we wanted to learn about what gets candidates to... well, to react.
Tooltips are a good suggestion to help users identify the different reaction types. We'll keep that in mind for our next iteration on this feature.