Daily Endeavor Blog

This blog is about leading a work life worth living.

This blog is about leading a work life worth living.

Posts tagged “job graph”

Linkedin/Daily Endeavor Mashup: A whole new way to browse through your professional network

Since December you’ve been able to sign up on Daily Endeavor using your Linkedin account, but I’m excited to share a new feature that takes the integration even deeper — Related People I Know.

Now when you connect with Linkedin on Daily Endeavor you can see who in your network is into what you’re into. dailyendeavor See Related PeopleWhen you pull up a Daily Endeavor job profile, first and second degree contacts in your network instantly appear.

When would this be useful? To start, it’s a whole new way to browse your professional network. Now you can leaf through jobs you may be interested in, and the related people you know automatically display inside the job guide.

If you’re doing informational interviews, it just got a whole lot easier. Let’s say you have a dream job in mind — or any type of job you happen to want to learn about — but the hard part is compiling the list of who you could meet. All you need to do is lookup a Daily Endeavor job profile, and instantly find contacts, and friends of friends, who can tell you more about the job you’re eyeing.

This is just the first of many applications in pairing up the social graph with the job graph. We’re really excited to be continue creating more. If there’s ones you want to see, let us know!

By the way, to make this mashup goodness happen our team worked closely with the team at Linkedin, using both their Profile Widget and the hot-out-of-the-oven JSAPI. The developer relations and api teams are great. Thank you gals and guys!

Why build a job graph?

We all have a home on the web. Whether it’s a Linkedin profile, Twitter feed or Facebook page, there’s a definitive place people can go to find you. When there’s a definitive profile, it’s easier to learn about and connect with you.

So everyone who wants to be found has a user profile. Similarly, every company has an About Us page. But what about every job? There’s no single place to learn about every type of job.

Wikipedia does a really good job providing an objective description of many of the industries that exist, but not every job in, say, investment banking is the same, and ongoing conversation about how to get or thrive in an investment banking job is not part of its mission.

There are millions of job listings that narrowly describe the needs of a certain company at a certain time, but any given type of job can have 20 or more different titles, so researching or tracking even one job is a huge hassle.

The idea to build a job graph is a simple one: we believe that every job should have a home page on the web — a definitive job profile. Each profile should be a place where you can learn about the job and join the conversation that’s happening around it. It’s a place where you can show what you know, or share what you want to learn. Business Development in Microinsurance at Daily Endeavor

While the idea was simple to start, building it has been anything but. Our initial research four years ago found that the largest classification system was the US Department of Labor’s. But there was a problem. Their coverage for the entire US economy added up to about 3,500 types of jobs. That’s less than 2% of our estimate of the 250,000 non-hourly jobs. We needed something much more comprehensive. So we decided to build one from scratch.

For three years we’ve been working with niche experts to develop a graph that’s representative of the types of jobs that exist today. While we’ve made a lot progress (15,000 and counting), we’ve only begun to scratch the surface. Nevertheless, we’re really excited about how a profile for every job can help job seekers better find personal matches, and hiring managers better find the needles in the haystack. If there’s job profile coverage you’d like to see, please let us know!

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