Spotlight for Career Services Professionals
Spotlight for Recruiting Professionals
May 23, 2012
New college graduates are embracing social media as a job-search tool, according to NACE’s 2012 Student Survey. Approximately 41 percent of 2012 college graduates in the market for a job are using social media to help them land one.
Students are most likely to use social media in the job search to network with employers, according to survey results. However, the survey also found that students are nearly as likely to use social media as a means for researching employers—and this use is gaining in popularity.
Nearly one-quarter of 2012 graduates using social media identified it as a research tool, up from 17 percent just a year ago, and up from 15 percent among 2010 graduates. Students are using it to seek out salary and compensation information, job descriptions, and information about the employer’s training and development programs.
Social media as a job-search tool has gained traction since NACE began tracking its use in 2008.
In fact, just 7 percent of the Class of 2008 reported interacting with an employer through social media, and more than half said they didn’t even notice employer ads on social networking sites. Today, data show this has changed significantly.
The current study also found that responding seniors using social media in their job search are most likely to use Facebook and LinkedIn.
NACE’s 2012 Student Survey was conducted mid-January through April 30, 2012. Nearly 48,000 college students nationwide, including 15,715 seniors at the bachelor’s degree level, took part in the survey. A report based on results from graduating seniors will be available this summer.