Find a Job

Find a job on social media

How to Find A Job on LinkedIn, Facebook, Twitter, MySpace and other Social Networks
Schepp and Schepp
2010

Career books are always going to be my trigger in collection management. Social media leads for jobs isn’t outdated, per se, but this book is now over 10 years old and that already makes the information questionable. The platforms themselves have been changed several times since this was published.

“The pandemic is now becoming a mile marker for collection development. There will be items throughout the range of topics that will render many items obsolete. The large shifts in how the world works has dramatically changed the entire employment landscape from both the employer and employee perspective. “The pandemic is now becoming a mile marker for collection development. There will be items throughout the range of topics that will render many items obsolete. The large shifts in how the world works has dramatically changed the entire employment landscape from both the employer and employee perspective.

“Fasten your seatbels; it’s going to a bumpy night” Margo Channing, All About Eve 1950

Mary

back cover
social media -linkedin
facebook for jobs
twitter for job hunters
my space is a showcase for your skills
myspace jobs

7 comments

  1. The last paragraph begins with quotation marks, but doesn’t close them or identify a source. It also repeats two sentences.

  2. That Dominos sidebar ad is now preserved forever in the Library of Congress!

    Also what web browser were they using to get these screenshots? IE 4.01? Look at how it misrendered the link lists outside the box they belong in!

    1. Early IE was, as you’ll remember, incredibly un-interested in following standard web protocol coding. Which is why everyone back then used IE only to download Netscape/Chrome. Eventually they decided to follow the world’s standards and not just their own.

      More proof that this was written by marketdroids and not techies. Who also didn’r care we’d had adblock for years.

  3. I would imagine most books about computer technology have an extremely short shelf-life.
    (There are couple of typos in the quote at the bottom.)

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