Getting Started Three steps to finding a job:
1. Type words into the box marked ‘Job Type’ that describe the kind of
job you are looking for, such as a job title, skill or employer name, e.g.,
"nurse" or "cardiac nurse" or "Rush University Medical Center".
2. Type into the box marked ‘Job Location’ the City, the State or the
zip code where you want to find a job, e.g., "Dallas" or "Texas" or "75201".
3. Click the ‘Find Jobs’ button or hit Enter on your keyboard.
Jobs will be returned that match your keywords within 25 miles of the location
you have specified. If you enter two or more keywords, it will return only
those jobs that contain ALL your words (you don’t have to include ‘and’ between
the words).
Exact Phrases
To find jobs containing an exact phrase, put double quotation marks around the
words.
For example, enter:
"real estate sales"
Capitalization
The search isn’t case sensitive. It makes no difference whether you enter upper
or lower case letters – e.g. "administrative assistant" will give you the same
results as "Administrative Assistant".
Narrowing Your Search
If your search returns a large number of jobs, there are several things you can
do. Look at the text links in the left hand column entitled 'Refine Your
Search' box. Click on those that fit what you are looking for, which will
return a subset of your original search results.
Alternatively, try adding more keywords to the ‘Job Type’ box and search again,
e.g., "electrical engineer" not "engineer". Also, don’t forget to use the ‘Job
Location’ box – using just your zip code works well.
Another great feature is to exclude jobs containing certain keywords. Just type
"not" or a minus sign(-) before any terms you don't want, e.g., surgeon not
cosmetic.
Broadening Your Job Type
To find all jobs that fit your interests, you may need to broaden your keyword
search. One way is to remove keywords from the ‘Job Type ’ box and search
again. It is often more effective, though, to use ‘or’ between terms. If you
are looking for a management position, for example, you could enter:
manager or director. This will return all jobs that contain either the
word ‘manager’ or the word ‘director’.
Abbreviations
Some names and phrases are better known by their abbreviations than their full
forms. To make sure you don’t miss any jobs, however, use both abbreviated and
unabbreviated forms together. For example, enter:
pr or "public relations"
Company Names & Job Titles
You may limit your search to show just jobs from a particular company or with a
specific job title.
For example, enter the following into the keyword box to return all jobs at
General Motors:
company:"general electric"
Or, to return all jobs that include the word 'engineer' in the job title, enter
this:
title:engineer
If there are multiple words in the company name or job title, use double
quotation marks. For example:
title:"business development"
Complex Phrases
You can use complex phrases, often called ‘Boolean’ logic, to fine-tune your
search.
e.g.
(manager or director) and healthcare
This will return all jobs that contain the term healthcare and either the word
manager or director.
You can keep revising your search string to improve your results set. The
example above could end up looking like this:
(manager or director) and (healthcare or pharmaceutical) not sales