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Sep 5, 2013

If you need any more evidence that LinkedIn is the sourcing tool of choice, then look to this new Jobvite survey on social media recruiting, which says 94 percent of recruiters who use social media use LinkedIn.

Jobvite-social-media-2013-popularThis sixth survey of recruiters and HR professionals shows the steady increase in the use of social media for recruiting, and especially LinkedIn’s dominant position as the network of choice. From 2008, when 78 percent of respondents said they will or are using social media, to today’s report when 94 percent say that, LinkedIn’s popularity has been a constant.

In that first report, 80 percent of the survey takers said they use LinkedIn to find candidates. Facebook then was used by 36 percent. So thoroughly has LinkedIn preempted the field, that in today’s survey sourcing doesn’t even appear in the top five uses recruiters make of Facebook.

LinkedIn scores big in most categories

LinkedIn, however scores big for just about every activity involved in sourcing and hiring workers. By overwhelming percentages the survey takers said they use LinkedIn to:

  • Search for candidates (96 percent)
  • Contact candidates (94 percent)
  • Keep tabs on potential candidates (93 percent)
  • Vet candidates pre-interview (92 percent)
  • Post jobs (91 percent)

Recruiters-use-social-media-sites-250x246Facebook and Twitter, the two next most popular sites with the survey respondents, aren’t even in the same league. Neither site rates anywhere close as a sourcing tool, and even posting jobs to them — one of the earliest Twitter services — is favored by less than half those using LinkedIn for that purpose.

Instead, both sites are most used for brand building and generating employee referrals. Some 65 percent of the respondents say they use Facebook for showcasing their brand. That’s the top rated use recruiters make of the site.

Yes, social media recruiting really works

Both Facebook and LinkedIn offer company pages; Facebook calls them Facebook for Business. Using LinkedIn for employer branding didn’t make Jobvite’s list of the top five uses, but that’s most likely because of the high percentage of recruiters who use the site for sourcing and direct hires.

Accounting for the popularity of social media recruiting is that it works. Three years ago, only 58 percent of the Jobvite survey takers said they’d made a hire via social media. In this survey, that number has jumped to 78 percent.

What the survey doesn’t report is how many hires employers attribute to social media. CareerXroads, which surveys its roster of clients, most of whom are in the Fortune 500, found employee referrals, company career sites, and job boards to be the source of well over half the external hires. Social media accounted for 2.9 percent.

Other benefits

Jobvite, however, found that social media recruiting has other benefits. According to the report:

  • 49 percent of the respondents say the quality of candidates is higher;
  • 43 percent say the quantity is higher;
  • 60 percent estimate that the value of the hires they make through social media is greater than $20,000 annually; 20 percent put the figure at better than $90,000 annually.

No surprise then that almost three quarters of the respondents say they plan to invest more this year in social media recruiting.