Here's a quick article on what day to apply:
A study, by Bright.com, a website matching job-seekers and recruiters,
analyzed more than half a million job applications and more than 15
million views of postings on its site. It defined "success" as a
job-seeker's moving forward in the hiring process - for example, being
invited by an employer to come in for an interview.
The
study excludes jobs that don't require resumes, such as ones in
agriculture, construction and food service, Bright.com senior analyst
Jacob Bollinger says. Excluding those, he adds, Bright.com's listings
are a representative sample of up to 80 percent of all jobs in the
United States. The median pay for jobs on the site is $58,000, compared
with the U.S. Census Bureau median of $51,017.
The
site's data show that 30 percent of people who apply for a job on
Mondays, advance to the next stage of the hiring process. That's better
than the success rate for any other day. Saturdays are the least
successful day, when only 14 percent of applicants advance.
Most
job-seekers apply on Tuesdays (37 percent), but only 20 percent of them
succeed. Saturday, with the lowest number of applicants (about 5
percent), is also the worst day to apply, with a success rate of only 14
percent.
Bright.com says its findings don't explain why Monday seekers do best, simply confirming that they do.
Applications
that come in on a Monday might be less likely to be overlooked than
ones that come in later in the week, as resumes pile up on hiring
managers' desks, Bollinger notes. Then, too, it's possible that Monday
applicants might be more eager, go-getting people.
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