Job market that is structured in favor of people looking for a position

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I am looking for a term that could concisely describe job market, in a way similar to seller / buyer market. Is there something like that.
- I am not sure if I'll be able if I find anther position in this area.
- Don't worry, it is ...
single-word-requests
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up vote
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I am looking for a term that could concisely describe job market, in a way similar to seller / buyer market. Is there something like that.
- I am not sure if I'll be able if I find anther position in this area.
- Don't worry, it is ...
single-word-requests
New contributor
user318117 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
I'm not sure how the two bullet points (above) related to your question but what about the word "auction?"
â DJohnson
51 mins ago
add a comment |Â
up vote
1
down vote
favorite
up vote
1
down vote
favorite
I am looking for a term that could concisely describe job market, in a way similar to seller / buyer market. Is there something like that.
- I am not sure if I'll be able if I find anther position in this area.
- Don't worry, it is ...
single-word-requests
New contributor
user318117 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
I am looking for a term that could concisely describe job market, in a way similar to seller / buyer market. Is there something like that.
- I am not sure if I'll be able if I find anther position in this area.
- Don't worry, it is ...
single-word-requests
single-word-requests
New contributor
user318117 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
New contributor
user318117 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
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asked 1 hour ago
user318117
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user318117 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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Check out our Code of Conduct.
I'm not sure how the two bullet points (above) related to your question but what about the word "auction?"
â DJohnson
51 mins ago
add a comment |Â
I'm not sure how the two bullet points (above) related to your question but what about the word "auction?"
â DJohnson
51 mins ago
I'm not sure how the two bullet points (above) related to your question but what about the word "auction?"
â DJohnson
51 mins ago
I'm not sure how the two bullet points (above) related to your question but what about the word "auction?"
â DJohnson
51 mins ago
add a comment |Â
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
up vote
4
down vote
accepted
Just use seller's market.
Seller's market is used in exactly this context and completes your example sentence without difficulty, and there doesn't seem to be any reason given in your question not to use the phrase - other than perhaps a lack of confidence on your part that it does suit.
If you want to clarify, you could say:
Don't worry, it's a seller's market for widget-makers out there.
(The 'out there' is optional.)
Some examples found 'in the wild' follow:
The Job Market Is Turning into a SellerâÂÂs Market.
But Do You Know How to Sell Yourself?
..For the first since the dot-com bubble burst in late 2000, the job market is turning into a sellerâÂÂs market. ThatâÂÂs especially true for well-educated, highly skilled workers...
Or, albeit used with quotes in the body of the text this time:
Employment - BuyerâÂÂs Market to a SellerâÂÂs Market
Are you struggling to find qualified candidates for your open
positions? Do you know anyone else with the same problem? Have you
noticed everywhere you look you see âÂÂHelp Wantedâ or âÂÂWe Are HiringâÂÂ
signs?
The employment world has changed from a âÂÂBuyerâÂÂs Marketâ to a
âÂÂSellerâÂÂs MarketâÂÂ. Candidates can find opportunities much easier today than they could five years ago...
Again:
For Node.js talent, it's a seller's market
Job listings for the new JavaScript-based server-side framework have climbed far faster than listings for Ruby, Python, or Java
A sure sign a new software technology has arrived is when it shows up in job listings as a required skill. OpenStack has enjoyed such a rise, and server-side JavaScript framework Node.js has also made steady gains.
According to statistics from job search site Indeed.com, job notices involving Node.js has jumped from zero to 4,000 active listings since 2011...
Use in this context is even in the following dictionary entry's example sentences for seller's market:
seller's (or sellers') market (phrase)
An economic situation in which goods or shares are scarce and sellers can keep prices high.
All the sellers are going to say this is a seller's market.
The buyer's market for auditors - in which accounting firms cross-sold consulting services and pandered to clients - has been
transformed into a seller's market.
It's a seller's market now and there are tremendous opportunities out there.
In a seller's market for skilled workers, employees are more demanding about what they want and less appreciative of what they get.
(The second last example sentence very probably relates to the job market from the jobseeker's perspective too.)
add a comment |Â
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
up vote
4
down vote
accepted
Just use seller's market.
Seller's market is used in exactly this context and completes your example sentence without difficulty, and there doesn't seem to be any reason given in your question not to use the phrase - other than perhaps a lack of confidence on your part that it does suit.
If you want to clarify, you could say:
Don't worry, it's a seller's market for widget-makers out there.
(The 'out there' is optional.)
Some examples found 'in the wild' follow:
The Job Market Is Turning into a SellerâÂÂs Market.
But Do You Know How to Sell Yourself?
..For the first since the dot-com bubble burst in late 2000, the job market is turning into a sellerâÂÂs market. ThatâÂÂs especially true for well-educated, highly skilled workers...
Or, albeit used with quotes in the body of the text this time:
Employment - BuyerâÂÂs Market to a SellerâÂÂs Market
Are you struggling to find qualified candidates for your open
positions? Do you know anyone else with the same problem? Have you
noticed everywhere you look you see âÂÂHelp Wantedâ or âÂÂWe Are HiringâÂÂ
signs?
The employment world has changed from a âÂÂBuyerâÂÂs Marketâ to a
âÂÂSellerâÂÂs MarketâÂÂ. Candidates can find opportunities much easier today than they could five years ago...
Again:
For Node.js talent, it's a seller's market
Job listings for the new JavaScript-based server-side framework have climbed far faster than listings for Ruby, Python, or Java
A sure sign a new software technology has arrived is when it shows up in job listings as a required skill. OpenStack has enjoyed such a rise, and server-side JavaScript framework Node.js has also made steady gains.
According to statistics from job search site Indeed.com, job notices involving Node.js has jumped from zero to 4,000 active listings since 2011...
Use in this context is even in the following dictionary entry's example sentences for seller's market:
seller's (or sellers') market (phrase)
An economic situation in which goods or shares are scarce and sellers can keep prices high.
All the sellers are going to say this is a seller's market.
The buyer's market for auditors - in which accounting firms cross-sold consulting services and pandered to clients - has been
transformed into a seller's market.
It's a seller's market now and there are tremendous opportunities out there.
In a seller's market for skilled workers, employees are more demanding about what they want and less appreciative of what they get.
(The second last example sentence very probably relates to the job market from the jobseeker's perspective too.)
add a comment |Â
up vote
4
down vote
accepted
Just use seller's market.
Seller's market is used in exactly this context and completes your example sentence without difficulty, and there doesn't seem to be any reason given in your question not to use the phrase - other than perhaps a lack of confidence on your part that it does suit.
If you want to clarify, you could say:
Don't worry, it's a seller's market for widget-makers out there.
(The 'out there' is optional.)
Some examples found 'in the wild' follow:
The Job Market Is Turning into a SellerâÂÂs Market.
But Do You Know How to Sell Yourself?
..For the first since the dot-com bubble burst in late 2000, the job market is turning into a sellerâÂÂs market. ThatâÂÂs especially true for well-educated, highly skilled workers...
Or, albeit used with quotes in the body of the text this time:
Employment - BuyerâÂÂs Market to a SellerâÂÂs Market
Are you struggling to find qualified candidates for your open
positions? Do you know anyone else with the same problem? Have you
noticed everywhere you look you see âÂÂHelp Wantedâ or âÂÂWe Are HiringâÂÂ
signs?
The employment world has changed from a âÂÂBuyerâÂÂs Marketâ to a
âÂÂSellerâÂÂs MarketâÂÂ. Candidates can find opportunities much easier today than they could five years ago...
Again:
For Node.js talent, it's a seller's market
Job listings for the new JavaScript-based server-side framework have climbed far faster than listings for Ruby, Python, or Java
A sure sign a new software technology has arrived is when it shows up in job listings as a required skill. OpenStack has enjoyed such a rise, and server-side JavaScript framework Node.js has also made steady gains.
According to statistics from job search site Indeed.com, job notices involving Node.js has jumped from zero to 4,000 active listings since 2011...
Use in this context is even in the following dictionary entry's example sentences for seller's market:
seller's (or sellers') market (phrase)
An economic situation in which goods or shares are scarce and sellers can keep prices high.
All the sellers are going to say this is a seller's market.
The buyer's market for auditors - in which accounting firms cross-sold consulting services and pandered to clients - has been
transformed into a seller's market.
It's a seller's market now and there are tremendous opportunities out there.
In a seller's market for skilled workers, employees are more demanding about what they want and less appreciative of what they get.
(The second last example sentence very probably relates to the job market from the jobseeker's perspective too.)
add a comment |Â
up vote
4
down vote
accepted
up vote
4
down vote
accepted
Just use seller's market.
Seller's market is used in exactly this context and completes your example sentence without difficulty, and there doesn't seem to be any reason given in your question not to use the phrase - other than perhaps a lack of confidence on your part that it does suit.
If you want to clarify, you could say:
Don't worry, it's a seller's market for widget-makers out there.
(The 'out there' is optional.)
Some examples found 'in the wild' follow:
The Job Market Is Turning into a SellerâÂÂs Market.
But Do You Know How to Sell Yourself?
..For the first since the dot-com bubble burst in late 2000, the job market is turning into a sellerâÂÂs market. ThatâÂÂs especially true for well-educated, highly skilled workers...
Or, albeit used with quotes in the body of the text this time:
Employment - BuyerâÂÂs Market to a SellerâÂÂs Market
Are you struggling to find qualified candidates for your open
positions? Do you know anyone else with the same problem? Have you
noticed everywhere you look you see âÂÂHelp Wantedâ or âÂÂWe Are HiringâÂÂ
signs?
The employment world has changed from a âÂÂBuyerâÂÂs Marketâ to a
âÂÂSellerâÂÂs MarketâÂÂ. Candidates can find opportunities much easier today than they could five years ago...
Again:
For Node.js talent, it's a seller's market
Job listings for the new JavaScript-based server-side framework have climbed far faster than listings for Ruby, Python, or Java
A sure sign a new software technology has arrived is when it shows up in job listings as a required skill. OpenStack has enjoyed such a rise, and server-side JavaScript framework Node.js has also made steady gains.
According to statistics from job search site Indeed.com, job notices involving Node.js has jumped from zero to 4,000 active listings since 2011...
Use in this context is even in the following dictionary entry's example sentences for seller's market:
seller's (or sellers') market (phrase)
An economic situation in which goods or shares are scarce and sellers can keep prices high.
All the sellers are going to say this is a seller's market.
The buyer's market for auditors - in which accounting firms cross-sold consulting services and pandered to clients - has been
transformed into a seller's market.
It's a seller's market now and there are tremendous opportunities out there.
In a seller's market for skilled workers, employees are more demanding about what they want and less appreciative of what they get.
(The second last example sentence very probably relates to the job market from the jobseeker's perspective too.)
Just use seller's market.
Seller's market is used in exactly this context and completes your example sentence without difficulty, and there doesn't seem to be any reason given in your question not to use the phrase - other than perhaps a lack of confidence on your part that it does suit.
If you want to clarify, you could say:
Don't worry, it's a seller's market for widget-makers out there.
(The 'out there' is optional.)
Some examples found 'in the wild' follow:
The Job Market Is Turning into a SellerâÂÂs Market.
But Do You Know How to Sell Yourself?
..For the first since the dot-com bubble burst in late 2000, the job market is turning into a sellerâÂÂs market. ThatâÂÂs especially true for well-educated, highly skilled workers...
Or, albeit used with quotes in the body of the text this time:
Employment - BuyerâÂÂs Market to a SellerâÂÂs Market
Are you struggling to find qualified candidates for your open
positions? Do you know anyone else with the same problem? Have you
noticed everywhere you look you see âÂÂHelp Wantedâ or âÂÂWe Are HiringâÂÂ
signs?
The employment world has changed from a âÂÂBuyerâÂÂs Marketâ to a
âÂÂSellerâÂÂs MarketâÂÂ. Candidates can find opportunities much easier today than they could five years ago...
Again:
For Node.js talent, it's a seller's market
Job listings for the new JavaScript-based server-side framework have climbed far faster than listings for Ruby, Python, or Java
A sure sign a new software technology has arrived is when it shows up in job listings as a required skill. OpenStack has enjoyed such a rise, and server-side JavaScript framework Node.js has also made steady gains.
According to statistics from job search site Indeed.com, job notices involving Node.js has jumped from zero to 4,000 active listings since 2011...
Use in this context is even in the following dictionary entry's example sentences for seller's market:
seller's (or sellers') market (phrase)
An economic situation in which goods or shares are scarce and sellers can keep prices high.
All the sellers are going to say this is a seller's market.
The buyer's market for auditors - in which accounting firms cross-sold consulting services and pandered to clients - has been
transformed into a seller's market.
It's a seller's market now and there are tremendous opportunities out there.
In a seller's market for skilled workers, employees are more demanding about what they want and less appreciative of what they get.
(The second last example sentence very probably relates to the job market from the jobseeker's perspective too.)
edited 31 mins ago
answered 56 mins ago
tmgr
936412
936412
add a comment |Â
add a comment |Â
user318117 is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
user318117 is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
user318117 is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
user318117 is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
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I'm not sure how the two bullet points (above) related to your question but what about the word "auction?"
â DJohnson
51 mins ago