JobsDB
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
JobsDB.com is a recruitment website founded in 1998. With headquarters in Hong Kong, it has quickly expanded its operations and services to cover 12 regions, spanning Australia, China, Hong Kong, India, Indonesia, Korea, Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore, Taiwan, Thailand and USA. Today, the JobsDB Group employs more than 1,200 staff in total.[1]
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JobsDB has developed a job search engine for job seekers to search and apply for jobs. For employers, JobsDB provides a recruitment platform through which they post their job ads and get access to a continuously expanding job seeker database.
Over the years, JobsDB has built a database in Asia Pacific with over eight million job seeker members.[1] JobsDB provides 100,000 jobs per day, and its monthly average number of unique visitors is six million.[1]
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According to the Nielsen survey, JobsDB.com is the most used recruitment channel among job seekers in Hong Kong [2].
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In March 2008, JobsDB has successfully organized a public career fair which has managed to attract tenth of thousands of jobseekers around Malaysia.
Wednesday, August 26, 2009
JobStreet.com

JobStreet.com
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
JobStreet.com is a job portal founded in 1997. Founded in Malaysia, it has expanded its operations and services to countries like Singapore, Philippines, India, Bangladesh, Japan and Thailand. On 8 March 2008, JobStreet completed the acquisition of Autoworld.com.my, making the Malaysian auto website a wholly owned subsidiary of the company.[1]
JobStreet is now Southeast Asia's largest online employment company, according to Forbes.[2]
As of early 2007, JobStreet.com services over 40,000 corporate customers and over 4 million jobseekers.[3]
JobStreet is now Southeast Asia's largest online employment company, according to Forbes.[2]
As of early 2007, JobStreet.com services over 40,000 corporate customers and over 4 million jobseekers.[3]
JobStreet.com’s became a public listed entity in 2004 when parent company JobStreet Corporation Berhad was listed on the MESDAQ Market of Bursa Malaysia Securities on 29 Nov 2004. Thereafter, JobStreet.com fulfilled the criteria for a listing on the Main Board and submitted the transfer application in July 2007, which was subsequently approved by the Securities Commission in October.[4] JobStreet Corporation Berhad is quoted on the Main Board under its new stock short name, JOBST.
JobStreet has developed a job matching engine named LiNa that matches registered jobseekers to suitable positions / vacancies posted on JobStreet.com. LiNa currently sends out about 2.5 million emails a day on job matches to its registered jobseekers.
For employers - JobStreet.com provided a job posting platform where companies can post job advertisement online or perform database searches.
On September 16 2008, SEEK Limited, an Australian internet job recruitment company, bought a 10% stake in Malaysian employment site JobStreet Corporation for $19.3 million.[5]
On September 19 2008 - for the second year in a row, JobStreet.com was selected by Forbes Asia as Best 200 Under a Billion company.[6]
As of 3 October 2008, JobStreet.com is ranked no. 848 based on Alexa ranking.[7]
On April 6 2009, JobStreet.com launched PitchYourTalent.com, a site which focuses on highlighting talents.
Thursday, July 30, 2009
What God wants you to tell today...
On this day of your life, we believe God wants you to know...
... that it's OK.
Just rest for a moment. It's OK. Yes, things are crazy, yes, the world is going nuts. Yet, deep underneath the stormy waves, there, in the core of your being, there is pure silence, pure love. And ... it's ... just ... OK.
... that it's OK.
Tuesday, July 21, 2009
Economy of the Philippines - JOBSTREET
Economy of the Philippines
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The economy of the Philippines has a mixed economic system, and one of the newly industrialized emerging market economies of the world. In 2007, it was ranked as the 37th largest economy by the International Monetary Fund according to purchasing power parity. It was one of the fastest-growing economies in Asia, posting a real GDP growth rate of 7.3% in the year 2007. Growth slowed to 4.5% in 2008 as a result of the global financial crisis.[1]
Important sectors of the Philippine economy include agriculture and industry, particularly food processing, textiles and garments, and electronics and automobile parts. Most industries are concentrated in the urban areas around metropolitan Manila, while metropolitan Cebu is also becoming an attraction for foreign and local investors in recent dates. Mining also has great potential in the Philippines, which possesses significant reserves of chromite, nickel, and copper. Recent natural gas finds off the islands of Palawan add to the country's substantial geothermal, hydro, and coal energy reserves.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The economy of the Philippines has a mixed economic system, and one of the newly industrialized emerging market economies of the world. In 2007, it was ranked as the 37th largest economy by the International Monetary Fund according to purchasing power parity. It was one of the fastest-growing economies in Asia, posting a real GDP growth rate of 7.3% in the year 2007. Growth slowed to 4.5% in 2008 as a result of the global financial crisis.[1]
Important sectors of the Philippine economy include agriculture and industry, particularly food processing, textiles and garments, and electronics and automobile parts. Most industries are concentrated in the urban areas around metropolitan Manila, while metropolitan Cebu is also becoming an attraction for foreign and local investors in recent dates. Mining also has great potential in the Philippines, which possesses significant reserves of chromite, nickel, and copper. Recent natural gas finds off the islands of Palawan add to the country's substantial geothermal, hydro, and coal energy reserves.
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