Ask HN - Please help me improve my app (Twitter job search) (twhired.com)
Dear HN,
The job posting/search arena in Twitter is wide open, so I built this little app. It's nothing special yet but I think a good foundation. It's human filtered and has full-text search. Where to go from here? I just noticed that #tweetmyjobs is a trending topic on Twitter -- how can I get twhired on there by making it useful to people? (A better source stream is one obviously, I'm using a pretty basic twitter search RSS right now. Pagination, location . . . what else? Would any Ruby/Sinatra folks like to work on it with me?
10 comments
[ 4.5 ms ] story [ 40.2 ms ] threadThe job posting/search arena in Twitter is wide open, so I built this little app. It's nothing special yet but I think a good foundation. It's human filtered and has full-text search. Where to go from here? I just noticed that #tweetmyjobs is a trending topic on Twitter -- how can I get twhired up there by making it useful to people? (A better source stream is one obviously, I'm using a pretty basic twitter search RSS right now. Pagination, location . . . what else? Would any Ruby/Sinatra folks like to work on it with me?
2) Auto-suggest would be really helpful in the search, to make it easier to make my location string well-formed.
3) Letting me just pick a state/city from a list craiglist style would be nice, although I can see how that would be a bit of UI clutter.
4) Some of your 'view this job posting' urls are broken, i see @jobshouts
#jobs Territory Sales / MKTG / Consulting Positions - F/T - \"Leads and Pre-Set Appts\" - (OUTSIDE SALES) in Atlanta,Georgia ...
leads to http://jobs/ You also appear to be escaping quotes in a way that's showing up on the homepage =P.
That's just from a few minutes browsing. Looks like it could be a useful tool, keep up the good work!
So, uh, I appreciate that you're focusing on making yours more useful. Long-term approval usually comes from products made with care.
While searching for a job, I physically am usually limited to a few applicable dimensions (physical location, field, experience range). If I could tailor the experience on Twhired to target those dimensions then it would make my interactions much more effective. A focus on mining or transcribing accurate location and field metadata plus an interface for drilling down based on those would be a good way to fit my needs as a user.
You need to look at similar features on major job search engines and integrate a few of them if possible. I knwo it won't work as well, but that woud be nice.
Also, the ability to turn a search result (i.e. design San Francisco) into an RSS feed.