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Several industry-specific sites Trovit: Europe and Latin America General classified ads Based in Spain Universal Jobmatch: U.K. General Government affiliated, connected with Monster.com Upwork: International Freelance USAJobs: U.S. Federal civil service jobs Government affiliated WayUp: U.S. General Working in Canada: Canada General
ClearanceJobs was founded in July 2002 by Evan Lesser and his wife. While they had the idea as early as the late 1990s while living and working in Northern Virginia, they didn't launch the site until 2002, after they moved to Atlanta and were spurred on by the need for qualified cleared talent following 9/11.
Dice.com is a career website based in New York City with primary sales and development operations in Urbandale, Iowa and Denver. It serves information technology and engineering professionals, [ 2 ] as well as contract and permanent engineering staffing firms.
USAJobs (styled USAJOBS) is the United States government's website for listing civil service job opportunities with federal agencies. [1] [2] Federal agencies use USAJOBS to host job openings and match qualified applicants to those jobs. USAJOBS serves as the central place to find opportunities in hundreds of federal agencies and organizations. [3]
For example, at the end of an auction, the C2C site notifies the buyer via e-mail that he or she has won. The C2C site also e-mails the seller to report who won and at what price the auction finished. At that point it's up to the seller and buyer to finish the transaction independently of the C2C site. C2C sites make money by charging fees to ...
Opening a C2C site takes careful planning. [5] Examples of C2C include Craigslist and eBay, who pioneered this model in the early days of the internet. [3] Generally, transactions in this model occur via online platforms (such as PayPal), but often are conducted using social-media networks (e.g., Facebook marketplace) and websites (Craigslist). [2]
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Monster's first Super Bowl ad, "When I Grow Up", (created by Mullen for the 1999 Super Bowl) asked job seekers, "What did you want to be?"It was the only commercial named to the "Best of Television 1999" list by Time.