Research
Mobile is the Purple Squirrel Magnet
Maren Hogan
Maren Hogan, Author at Glassdoor US | Jun 27, 2015
We’ve all read best practices about attracting top talent; there are about 4,987 blog posts dedicated to finding these coveted few. A recent Jobvite study has highlighted one major element of attraction in their “Job Seeker Nation: Mobility in the Workforce Study”.
High mobility workers are defined as the portion of the labor market that has the opportunity and experience to switch jobs more frequently. They are considered the in-demand workers who have advancement opportunities within the labor market. Simply put, these are the folks you probably want working for you. Not to be confused with job-hoppers.
What does the high mobility worker look like?
They make up a surprisingly small portion of the workforce. Here’s the math: 36% of job seekers have a college, or post-graduate degree. Of those job seekers, 80% are full-time employed. To get more detailed, the in-demand fields of these highly mobile job seekers are technology, manufacturing and retail. Again, the people you’re trying to attract.
The magnet part…
Back to how “mobile is the purple squirrel magnet”. This highly mobile sector of the workforce has been proven to prefer the emerging, non-traditional methods in their job searches. In fact, twice as many of them used recruiters or social networks to find their current job. Their social site of choice is LinkedIn, while the majority of low-mobility workers (those in career fields with less advancement opportunities), turn to Facebook for their SoMe job hunt. While 94% of recruiters use LinkedIn to scout out candidates, only 34% of job seekers are - but it looks like it’s the right 36%.
Nearly a quarter (24%) of highly mobile job seekers find the ability to apply for jobs on mobile important, and 21% find an optimized, mobile website to be important during the job search. For some, these might seem like “no-duh” statistics, but a recent LinkedIn study revealed that only 13% of employers are adequately investing in mobile recruiting.
What are they looking for?
Well we know that LinkedIn is their job search social media platform of choice, so who better to look to for the answer?! The same LI study defines exactly what job candidates are looking for when they reach your mobile career site.
- 94% of candidates want to see current job openings on the mobile career site.
- 72% of visitors to a mobile career site expect to find a description of the company culture.
- 61% of candidates want to learn about the company history.
- 56% of mobile job seekers expect to find benefits information.
- 45% want to explore profiles of employees.
Maren Hogan
Tags:Labor Market



