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Classifieds and RSS
Published on May 17, 2005 By joeKnowledge In Blogging

More news on the job front. On blogger writes about how RSS feeds and classifieds could join forces to share content.


SiliconBeat wonders if classifieds ads could shift from newspapers to eBay-craigslist to RSS:


The ability of web site owners to publish feeds of their content, known more commonly as RSS, could soon allow sellers and buyers, or employers and potential employees, to more efficiently find each other.

Consider XYZ Corp., which wants to hire five programmers. Its human resources team can place ads in newspapers and with Internet jobs sites Monster and Career Builder. Or, for free, it can create a constantly updated jobs feed that individuals can subscribe to with their aggregators, and that search engines can index and make available for searching.

Former Overture Services and Knight Ridder Digital executive Tony Gentile and Scott Rafer, CEO of Feedster are among those who have promoted the idea. Rafer, in fact, is testing a service at http://jobs.feedster.com that allows users to scour RSS feeds for job listings.

Rafer says the Monsters and Career Builders of the world may someday become largely irrelevant once companies create RSS feeds of their job listings. will not be able to make money on listings in the same way they do now. Instead, their revenue may come from offering fee-based services -- such as background checks on potential hires -- that complement the listings and tap into their expertise about the jobs market. (Clarification via Scott.)

"Really what's going on is, if you have all the job postings, ads, whatever, people have to come to you,'' he said. ''What we're seeing is a world where if you want to see all the software jobs east of the Mississsippi, I can aggregate that and give it you cheaply.''

The concept extends beyond job listings. What about individuals who want to sell their furniture or digital cameras? Today they go to craigslist, eBay or the local paper.

But what happens when they begin publishing their own classified ads on their own web sites? Blogging tools make it a cinch for anyone to quickly and cheaply become a publisher and instant advertiser. In the new world order, they could post their classified ads on their blogs and wait for a Feedster or Technorati or Google to scoop up the XML feeds, categorize them, and make them find-able by anyone on the Web.

"An XML feed for anyone who wants one,'' Rafer said. "This puts Monster in a new position. It puts eBay in the buyer insurance business, or something other than the listings themselves. It's exactly why web services exist.''

Taken further, the concept would allow people on both sides of the transaction (buyers and sellers, recruiters and job-seekers) to publish ads. A smart search engine would automatically notify them when it finds the right matches (think Semantic Web ).

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This is sort of what Indeed.com does. Well not sort of; it actually does it. In some ways hopefully if developed be me, so will knowledge net and joeknowledge.com


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