Fake Jobs
The US Bureau Of Labor Statistics publishes
a report that tries to
assess labor demand. For example, as of January 7, they say that there
were 8.1 million US job openings.
This report also accounts for hires, which the same report lists as
5.3 million. Go ahead and stop here and spend five seconds thinking
about this: 8 million job ads and 5 million people hired.
One possibility is that this data collection time period is seeing a
massive growth in employment opportunities (i.e. presumably there were
5 million job ads in the last report). This is almost certainly not
the case. Here's a chart from the same source showing that openings
are indeed way higher than hires (and separations, which do roughly
track).
So what's going on? The answer is fake job ads. Ghost jobs.
Here are some reasons I suspect this is being done.
- Companies, especially startups and other investment seeking firms,
want to give the impression that they are growing. By appearing to
ramp up for the big situation the CEO has been talking up, the
investment is more likely to pour in allowing that CEO to handsomely
cash out. Department managers also may post bogus openings to appear
busy and justify funding. They certainly want to be able to
immediately spend funding if it is allocated.
- Companies may have budgetary schemes or growth targets that try to
hire in some structured way. They might list the openings even if they
don't exactly have the funds to currently make the hire. Sort of
a wishlist approach.
- Sometimes companies are indeed shorthanded but not by much. They can
simply overwork their current labor force. But if they just tell the
those workers, "Oh hey, we're getting really busy these days but, no
worries, we'll just overwork you to the greatest extent possible,"
that will probably backfire. Instead they can tell the current
workforce, "We're going to hire tons of people to help you out!
Because we're totally on your side and looking out for you. Isn't that
great?" Only it's not because they're lying — or at best they have no
real motivation to incur unnecessary expense by following through with
hiring.
- Sometimes an employee is desperately needed, an opening is posted,
and hastily filled. But the company knows this hire is suboptimal.
They'd really like a better candidate to come along and take the job.
That can't happen unless the job ad stays up. Another variant is that
they are trying to build a network of consulting or freelance workers
without broadcasting as much to current employees, competitors, and/or
stakeholders.
- In the tech world, promising candidates are often given ridiculously
difficult tests. I have personally witnessed this from the hiring
side where the test consisted of especially thorny technical
conundrums that the company was facing. They were basically hoping to
use the free labor of the applicants to make technical progress. If I
have seen this personally we probably should consider that this is a
thing. I have taken many such tests as an applicant that seemed
strangely difficult and specific to the "hiring" company's product.
- Companies may post ads as a kind of survey of the labor market. How
many people are interested in working for them is an indication of
how much worse they can treat their current workforce. They can try
various recruitment platforms to figure out which is best at
generating good candidates. During mergers and acquisitions and
relocation plans the planners may want to know what kind of labor
force they can marshal. By stockpiling specific resumes over time, the
company can have a direct access to a pool of candidates when they
finally are really ready to hire.
- These days, creepy data harvesting should be the default assumption
for pretty much everything you do, including applying for a job. By
preying on the natural desperation of job seekers, all sorts of
unreasonably detailed data on regular people can be collected by
shitty operations and used for the same nefarious purposes data like
this usually is.
- A company might cite "restructuring" as a reason that everyone will
be changing jobs but really they're cutting head count. I once
worked for a large research group that did this. They made job
listings for everybody and told everyone they needed to reapply for
the new positions. I was one of the people who got rehired as
advertised but about half the people didn't get rehired and about half
of those were replaced by new people. Note that those new people were
hired based on a four to one ratio of job ads to actual hires. Like
magic, cutting ten people shows up as hiring forty!
- I suspect companies may sometimes post job ads to deceptively signal
that they are ramping up some activity. For example, I remember
seeing a lot of job ads for Apple's autonomous car program. They may
have actually had a program or they wanted to simply gauge its
feasibility and/or generate shareholder enthusiasm and/or
strategically induce competitors to do something. In the tech world
especially, it is common to see reports citing job ads as an
indication of what the company is up to.
- Decades ago when I first tried to get hired by a
factory that exports PhDs to hang in Chinese offices, I had many
very strange experiences. The most flagrant was a job interview for a
"programmer" position where they brought me in to interview with a
group of five people. Immediately something seemed off when they
started describing the role — it was a Windows Server job requiring
heavy knowledge of Windows, more Windows, exotic Windows, and only
Windows. Not at all what the job ad said, e.g. no programming.
Eventually I reached in my bag and pulled out a resume, slid it across
the table and said, "Did you guys actually get a chance to have a look
at my resume? Do you realize that I'm a Linux expert? I know nothing
about Windows." The stupid look on their faces was surreal. They
carried on with the "interview" while I sat there thinking what the
fuck is wrong with these people? Later after working at the university
for many years, I was able to reflect on that experience and
understand it. It turns out that the university has very explicit
hiring practices. Let's say you're the principal investigator for the
"Collects Data In Excel" Lab.
You have in mind a friend or relative or, most commonly, a grad
student slave already in the lab doing the job for free and who is
about to be released if you don't give them some compensation.
You know exactly whom you want/need to hire. Not so fast! The
university requires you to avoid cronyism and nepotism by interviewing
N (something between 5 and 10) other candidates. It is obvious exactly
how this will turn out. An "ideal" other candidate for the Excel job
would be the Linux guy who conspicuously avoids mentioning Excel
anywhere on his resume. I've had a couple of other interviews like
this. It seems most likely to happen when there is a big group all
present at the interview, as if it's a validating internal performance
of some kind and I'm just a prop: "See how fair and reasonable we are
to consider high quality outside talent? Unfortunately, he's a weird
Linux guy. That's why when I promote Bob Sycophant to the job it will
be totally merit based." At the other end of the professional
spectrum, I suspect unions are another source of this kind of thing.
What should we make of this situation? Well, the main thing is to
realize that if you're looking for a job, you should figure that
nearly half of the postings you see are problematic and probably
should be considered spurious. I think some industries are worse than
others — tech is very, very bad. This insight also hints that you
should be putting in an extra 40% more job applications than you had
planned on. This takes the form of applying for other jobs even while
you have a job — you know, just to see if they'll hire you and for
how much. Clearly this chicanery is reasonable as the companies
themselves are setting this standard of conduct.
Fortunately at this time I personally don't have to worry about this
problem. But there is a related problem I do have to worry about and
that is fake recruiters. Look, if you'd like me to work for you
doing something you think I'd be a good fit for, yes. The answer is
yes, I'll do it. Unless you're
setting
kids on fire, I don't even care what the job is or how much it pays.
I'm basically a terrifically good sport and I pretty much will do
anything for anybody who thoughtfully concludes that I'd make a
valuable contribution to their team.
But! Here's the thing — if you don't know me and never even looked at
my website or especially if you didn't even look at
my resume, well, then no, you have no sensible basis
to believe I'd be of any value to you. In other words, if you simply
used a key word search and are now sending out requests to "hop on a
call" to the thousands of people who came up in the results, well,
that's not recruiting — it's spam.
It's bad enough for those who are proactively looking for a job that a
huge percentage of the job listings are bullshit. But even when you're
minding your own business "recruiters" will be constantly badgering
you with the verisimilitude of recruiting while being categorically
bogus. I have yet to have one respond sensibly to my response question
"Why me?" They seem to not even understand the question. It is not a
valid answer to say, "Uh, but this is a job listing and it contains
some words in it that are also in your profile." As if I — a computer
expert — couldn't find literally eight million such postings myself.
I get it. Resumes are boring and reading them sucks. The rare times a
resume is interesting and exciting is if you personally need to hire
an exotically skilled person who is describing such qualifications
therein. How might we improve on mostly illiterate (its always "hop on
a call") middlemen running keyword searches? Well, I know somebody who
doesn't mind reading! Somebody who can read resumes all day and still
catch every typo! Not only that, they can also generate a custom text
explaining sensibly why they've chosen to reach out to you for this
job opportunity.
The funny thing is that being able to see the cure to both of these
problems (fake job ads and fake recruiters) is exactly the kind of
exotic skill that should be pretty valuable these days. And yet
our current system of making markets for labor
is completely blind to such skill. I'm sure some techbros are
hoovering up VC loot to, ostensibly, make this happen but it's already
embarrassing for all involved that the transition from a natural lack
of intelligence in recruiting to an AI approach has not already
happened.