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Where to find employees when LinkedIn isn’t working

Where to find employees when LinkedIn isn’t working

LinkedIn is exhausting these days, y’all.

What used to be a straightforward professional networking site has been completely TikTokified. Half of the feed is people posting long, emotional essays about what their morning coffee taught them about B2B sales. The other half is a barrage of recruiters and auto-bots. But that’s the business model, right? 

LinkedIn makes money from everything except helping you hire efficiently. The platform that was supposed to connect employers with serious professionals has become a content farm with a résumé tab.

And for small business owners and hiring managers, LinkedIn is rapidly losing its utility.

You post a job, and you are instantly hit with a tidal wave of “Easy Apply” bots; candidates who blindly tap a button without reading a single word of your job description.

Even worse, the platform has become a hotbed for ghosting. You reach out to a solid candidate, set up a time to chat and then poof – crickets.

Currently, 52% of employers say their biggest recruitment challenge is a lack of quality candidates, according to ZipRecruiter data. Notice it doesn’t say a lack of candidates. There are plenty of warm bodies out there. But finding someone who will show up, do the work and not no-call, no-show on day three? These days, that requires stepping outside the LinkedIn echo chamber.

If the biggest platform on the internet isn’t working for you, here is where you actually need to be looking.

Why the “Big Platforms” Might Be Failing Your Small Business

When you post on a massive social network, you are a small fish in a giant, chaotic ocean. You are competing against Fortune 500 companies with dedicated employer branding teams and bottomless ad budgets.

Worse, social-first platforms are built for passive scrolling, not intentional job hunting. A candidate might click “apply” because it took zero effort, not because they actually want to work for you. 

It’s time to shift from posting and praying to proactive sourcing by finding the exact talent you want and tapping them on the shoulder, virtually speaking.

The Power of Proactive Sourcing

According to a ZipRecruiter survey of U.S. job seekers, four out of five would be more interested in a role if an employer reached out to them directly, and most are more likely to respond to employers who make the first move.

This is where having access to a dedicated talent pool changes the game. In fact, a survey by ZipRecruiter of U.S. hiring decision-makers and influencers, more than 90% of employers say having a database of job seekers for proactive outreach speeds up the hiring process and saves them time.

Instead of waiting for the algorithm to pick your job post, use a tool like ZipRecruiter. ZipRecruiter’s internal data shows that employers gain access to a massive Resume Database of 53 million resumes, with over 320,000 new ones added monthly. 

You can enter specific skills, certifications and locations, find the exact person who fits your needs and use the Invite to Apply feature. When you send a personalized invitation to top candidates, you receive eight times as many quality matches. 

The results are even better when employers use the Invite to Apply feature. In fact, ZipRecruiter found that throughout 2024, those jobs attracted over 11 times as many candidates in the first 24 hours alone.

With ZipRecruiter, you aren’t hoping the right person scrolls past your ad; you are knocking directly on their digital front door.

Leveraging Industry-Specific Niche Boards

If you’re looking for a specialized skill, stop shopping at the general store. You need to go where the practitioners are:

  • Tech and Developers: GitHub, Stack Overflow, or specialized Discord servers. Developers don’t hang out on LinkedIn; they hang out where they code and complain about code.
  • Creatives and Designers: Behance, Dribbble, or even specialized subreddits. You want to see their portfolio first, not their work history.
  • Media and Writing: Niche newsletters (like Study Hall or specific Substack communities) often have job boards that yield incredible, highly vetted talent.

When you post on a niche board, the sheer volume of applicants will plummet – in the best possible way. You are trading volume for intent.

The Power of Community-Based Networks

Some of the best hires don’t come from job boards at all, but closed digital communities where professionals actually talk shop.

Slack and Discord Communities

Almost every industry has a professional Slack channel now. Whether it is a local chamber of commerce group, a specific software users group or an industry mastermind, these are goldmines. People in these groups are usually there to learn and genuinely network, not just blindly apply for jobs. Engage in the channels, offer value, and when you mention you are hiring, you will get warm leads from people who already respect you.

The “Side Hustle” Network

Don’t overlook candidates who are currently employed but looking for a change or extra work. According to the ZipRecruiter New Hires Survey, a significant portion of the workforce is juggling multiple income streams or looking for better primary fits. Sometimes, reaching out to someone doing great freelance work in your industry can result in a fantastic full-time hire.

How to Reach the People Who Aren’t Looking

Here’s a reality most new hiring managers don’t think about: the best candidates for your role might not be job hunting. They’re employed. They’re reasonably happy. They’re not browsing job boards at midnight.

These are called passive candidates, and reaching them requires outreach rather than postings. You have to go find them.

This is where those 53 million resumes in ZipRecruiter’s Resume Database earn their money. Search by skills, certifications, location and recent activity to find people who match your needs — even if they haven’t applied to anything. Pair that with the Invite to Apply feature, and you’re not waiting for anyone to come to you. 

The old model was: Post a job, sit back and cross fingers. The new model is: Identify who you want, reach out and make the case for why they should work for you.

Turning Your Current Network into a Recruiting Powerhouse

If you want to bypass the ghosting and the bots entirely, look at the people already sitting in your office (or Slack channel).

Your current top performers are the best recruiters you have. “A” players usually hang out with other “A” players. They worked with them in past positions, they went to school with them or they know them from local industry events.

Create a structured, highly incentivized employee referral program. 

Now, I don’t mean a $50 gift card. If a recruiting agency is going to charge you 20% of a candidate’s first-year salary (which can be tens of thousands of dollars), why wouldn’t you happily pay your own employee $2,000 for bringing you a reliable, vetted hire?

When a quality employee refers someone, they are putting their own reputation on the line. Chances are, they won’t recommend someone they wouldn’t be proud to work alongside. They are going to recommend the person who will make their own job easier.

Stop Competing on Their Turf

If you’re a small business trying to hire on the same platform as Amazon and Goldman Sachs, you’d better be up for a fight. You don’t have the budget, the brand recognition or the recruiter headcount. 

But here’s what you do have: speed, flexibility, and a shorter distance between the candidate and the decision-maker. Big companies take six weeks and four rounds of interviews to hire someone. You can move in days. That is a massive competitive advantage, and most small businesses waste it by copying the same slow corporate playbook.

Reach into niche channels where the big guys aren’t looking. And when you find someone good, move fast. Send the offer before they get buried in a corporate hiring pipeline that won’t get back to them until September.

Finding employees right now takes grit. If the traditional social networks are draining your energy and wasting your time, stop playing their game. 

Go proactive, get specific and put the tools that do the hunting for you to work.

Source – https://nypost.com/business/linkedin-hiring-alternatives/


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