Visualizing the Long Tail of UN Job List vacancies

Earlier today I was mentioning in a tweet that there seems to be a long tail (also see here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Long_Tail ) for UN Job List vacancies. To illustrate what I mean, have a look at the graph below. The chart shows external views of vacancies listed on the UN Job List over the past 7 days. There are a few vacancies on the very left side that are excessively high in demand. And then interest seems to fall off pretty quickly.

My take: try to find vacancies that don’t show too much interest and still fit your interest. Don’t just apply because there seems to be “low” competition but be realistic about what are the odds of being “the one” of the many thousand applicants…

UN Job List Twitter Accounts

The UN Job List exists since I believe that great people make the UN System great. And I wanted to make it as easy for great people to find their spot in the UN System as possible. So to achieve that, I added not only offer bookmarking friendly search results pages, custom RSS or e-mail alerts but also to offer the job updates via Twitter.

@UNJobList has been pumping out jobs via Twitter for a while and to take care of different tweet formatting, I added @UNJobList_DL and @UNJobList_DS at a later point, too. Whenever I found interesting resources to share, or implemented any new thing on the UN Job List, I threw these news into the existing streams.

However, there are people out there who are not interested in the jobs directly but want to get the updates and others who just want to get the jobs and not the updates. Also, there are a lot of jobs and so there is a flood of job tweets which makes it hard to follow the news tweets. It was time to do something about this setup and so as of today there will be a new account @UNJobList_news which is dedicated to conversations with UN Job List users and the occasional news announcement.

In a nutshell this is what the setup looks like:

  • @UNJobList_news: Conversations, news, announcements, questions interesting links.
  • All jobs land on Twitter as soon as they are discovered by the UN Job List
  1. @UNJobList: Tweets carry Post Title & Job Level
  2. @UNJobList_DL: Tweets carry Post Title & Application Deadline
  3. @UNJobList_DS: Tweets carry Post Title & Duty Station

Note: All three job feeds carry the same content, the only difference is the formatting so no need to follow more than one.

I personally recommend you following the @UNJobList_news and any of the other feeds according to your taste to get the full coverage. But make sure you follow @UNJobList_news to stay up to date with what is happening on the UN Job List.

Talk to you soon,
Sebastian

PS: Just to make things perfectly clear: Everything I say on Twitter (and on Facebook and also here on my blog) is my own. I don’t speak for neither my employer nor for anyone else.

Update from “the List”: Interest indicator for vacancies beta test

One of the most frequent questions I receive from job hunters is about the competitiveness of different vacancies. Applying to a job is very time consuming if done properly and of course we all want to know what we are up against when applying to a job.

Since I have no insight into the data of the actual agencies I obviously can’t answer the question on how many people applied. Also, if we assume that most people apply shortly before the deadline, the number of applications as information would be too late to be of any real value. However, what I can do to gauge interest is to measure the number of click-throughs to the actual vacancy. What I mean by that is the number of times people decide to leave the UN Job List and view the vacancy on the organization’s homepage.

I have now implemented this view counter and shown the data for this counter on the UN Job List’s vacancy detail page. You will see two graphs on any vacancy detail page: One listing the views per day over the past 5 days:

Views per dayPlease note: The graph is capped at 20 views per day.

And another graph that shows how this vacancy relates to other vacancies on the UN Job List:

Interest in the vacancy

The graph displays the overall average views per day in relation to the average views of all UN Job List listed jobs. This graph is also updated daily and since there is always a higher initial interest in any new job especially after the job has been twittered, this graph is biased towards the “high interest” spectrum right after it has been discovered by the UN Job List.

Please let me know what you think of these statistics and graphs in the comments below – thank you!

Update from “the List”: Send to friend and vacancy stats

Over the past weeks there have been further updates to the UN Job List or “the List” how many people call the UN Job List.

Some of these improvements are minor, for instance I’m working on making sure that non US-ASCII characters are displayed properly and that the funny “�” symbols disappear from the site. Two other new features on “the List” that I want to highlight are the new vacancy statistics and the “send to a friend” function.

Send to a Friend

I was requested to implement a ‘send to a friend’ function since many people want to share interesting jobs with their friends. To make that easy for you I added a little button on the vacancy details page that allows you with one click to send this job to a friend per e-mail, tweet the job on Twitter or share it on Facebook. I see more and more people using this feature and it just makes sense: Good friends share good opportunities with their friends.

Vacancy statistics

Another new feature is a click counter for vacancies. Again, on the vacancy detail page you can see how many times a vacancy has been viewed from the UN Job List. It’s a nice way for you to get an idea how much competition you are up against when you consider applying for this job. Just remember that despite the impressive number of views from the UN Job List there are other ways people find these vacancies, too. For instance many vacancies are also shared within the organization, too and of course the “the List” only counts views via the UN Job List itself.

Please let me know if you have other ideas on how to improve the UN Job List and I will try to do what I can do to implement your suggestions.

UN Job List E-Mail Alerts and issues with Boxbe

If you don’t know what “Boxbe” is, you have nothing to worry about and you can ignore this post.

If you use Boxbe and you haven’t put the UN Job List’s e-mail on your guest list, chances are you will receive a note from me telling you that I deactivated your e-mail and that you will not receive the UN Job List E-mail Alert in the future.

Here is what you need to do in order to use the UN Job List e-mail alert together with Boxbe:

  1. Make sure that you put the UN Job List’s e-mail on your Boxbe guest list
  2. Please make sure you tell Boxbe to not send me any messages
  3. That’s all it takes, you’re all set

A bit of background: “What’s wrong with Boxbe?”

Boxbe is a service that promises you to get rid of SPAM. All you need to do, is give it your e-mail password and let Boxbe do the magic. In my opinion, using any service like Boxbe is not a great idea and I will try to explain why. We all don’t like SPAM (and hosting the UN Job List gets me a lot of SPAM, trust me I really don’t like SPAM) and I’m all for anything that reduces my SPAM. But fighting SPAM by spamming all your friends is not a great idea in my book. Unfortunately that’s what is happening if you use Boxbe and are not carefully managing your guest list. The issues I observe are:

  1. For every user that uses Boxbe I get a message requiring me to solve a CAPTCHA before the UN Job List e-mail alert is delivered to the user. The UN Job List has thousands of users. If I would start solving CAPTCHAs for every every alert my users want me to send, I would not do anything but solving CAPTCHAs (remember that I’m doing the UN Job List in my private spare time and don’t get paid for providing this public service)
  2. The system Boxbe uses does not send real bounces and so I don’t know if my mails are reaching the recipient or not. My server resources are expensive and I have no reasons for sending messages that are not wanted. If you don’t need the UN Job List any longer, please click the link in the message I send and you will never hear from me again. If Boxbe prevents me from knowing if my messages are wanted, how I can make sure that only people who want my alerts receive them? I spend a lot of time sending my e-mail alerts. I also spend a considerable amount of time working on e-mail error messages and pride myself in keeping my newsletter very clean so that no message is wasted. So not only Boxbe wastes my resources by asking me to solve CAPTCHAs but also Boxbe wastes my resources by not telling me which messages are received or not.
  3. Lastly, I think it is good practice to not trust anybody with your mailbox credentials. It’s bad enough that you need to trust your e-mail provider with your digital life but letting anybody, be it Boxbe, Facebook’s Friend finder, Twitter etc. into your e-mail account is not a great idea. Remember that your e-mail account is your life. Your bank, your taxes, your Facebook, Twitter and virtually all other services are setup using your e-mail. And most of these services offer to reset your password sending it to you via e-mail. Anybody who has access to your e-mail controls your digital life. See why I recommend to NEVER let any service have access to your e-mail account? (Just for the record: I would never imply that Boxbe, Facebook or any other service is not dealing well with your e-mail credentials but errors, hacker attacks and other things happened to pretty much every service that’s out there and the fewer people have access to your account, the better).

So what can you do to minimize the amount of SPAM you get?

There are many different ways and this blog is not the best place to list it all but the things below helped me to deal with the issue:

  1. Don’t give out your e-mail unless you need to. It’s not a secret that most commercially driven sites use your e-mail for all kinds of advertisements etc.
  2. Have an e-mail for the important things in life (e.g. the UN Job List e-mail alert) and a second e-mail for your “less important” things. Sometimes you need to give out an e-mail in order to download a program, sign-up to see information etc. Provide an e-mail address that you check every now and then and not daily. Any SPAM piling up in this mailbox is not going to bother you too much.
  3. Have your e-mail be “complicated to guess”. Spammers “guess” your e-mail but going through a combination of [name]@[popular ISP]. Chances are that joe@[domain].com will get a lot of spam but aW2432JU4eai3w2er234@[domain].com will not get too much. However this is a balance you need to get right; keep your poor friends in mind who may need to remember you e-mail which is not that easy if it is a complicated and long word.
  4. Advanced users: Use existing standards to deal with SPAM. If you have the means look into DKIM/SPF and other standard conform ways of dealing with SPAM. And if you host a server, reject the connection if you suspect SPAM to give legitimate senders a chance to check their bounces.

Alright, thanks for your attention and if you have questions or ideas on how to improve this post, please let me know in the comments below.

The UN Job List Widget for your Website

Some of you may already discovered the UN Job List Widget which is in the lower right side of my blog. The reason for creating this widget is that I wanted to create a simple and easy way to include UN Job List jobs into websites and blogs. Of course you can always use any of the many RSS feeds that the UN Job List produces – you probably know that every search result on the UN Job List creates a custom RSS feed just for you. But the widget is a nice and optically appealing way of listing UN Job List vacancies in your blog.

The UN Job List widget is available for WordPress as a regular plugin and for any other website via an iFrame code. The way it works is pretty simple: Get your UN Job List widget code over at the UN Job List Search page. The widget code can be quite long depending on your search but essentially it tells the widget which kinds of vacancies you would like to display in your website. Play with the search results and make sure you really get the jobs you want to before you proceed.

Finally, enter the widget code into your WordPress plugin or into your iFrame code. The instructions on how to do this are on the widget documentation page.

Please let me know in the comments below if you have any questions on the widget and how to improve it – thanks!

UN-REDD added and UN Inspira jobs updated

The UN Job List is continuously growing and with 2011 being the year of the forests, what better thing to do than to add UN-REDD to the UN Job List? UN-REDD is online now (sadly there are not all that many vacancies up there yet) but have a look at the UN-REDD jobs.

On a related note I wanted to let you know that I received some feedback that the UN Job List listings of UN Inspira jobs were having the wrong dates to them. So I fixed the issue and discovered a number of new departments in the UN which are now added to the UN Job List, too.

Please let me know if you have further ideas or even discover an agency that’s not on the UN Job List yet. Thanks!

Which UN organisation is hiring? The 2010 UN Job List Statistics

According to tradition it’s time to look back and reflect on where UN jobs are coming from so after the 2007, 2008 and 2009 statistics here is the summary for 2010.

Again the results are no big surprise for those who know the UN landscape. The top three organisations/departments are still UNDP, WHO and UNOPS. However, UNICEF is a very strong number four, followed by FAO, IAEA, UNFPA, IOM, UNRWA and UNEP. Note that the secretariat is not listed as a whole but rather according to its different departments in the same way the UN Job List lists the secretariat.

Also note this year in particular my disclaimer on data accuracy: For instance the UNICEF data feed has only been implemented in August so my UNICEF data is incomplete for 2010. All data represents a collection of vacancies posted by the UN Job List. Thus the data can not be used as an accurate estimation of how many posts an organisation actually fills, since the UN Job List neither tracks internal vacancies nor has a way of knowing which of the advertised vacancies are filled eventually.

For further details have a look at the UN Job List Resource Page where you can see what the last three days look like, how 2011 is building and how the past years were.

UN Job List Twitter accounts

This is a brief update for the Twitter folks out there: As you know it is very hard getting all the relevant vacancy information in less than 140 characters. And different people find different information most useful so it is hard to decide what to include into different tweets.

To provide users out there with some options the UN Job List now has three Twitter feeds:

  1. @UNJobList: The format for tweets on this feed is “Title” plus “Grade”. So you will see things like this:
    “#IOM: Programme Manager (Beautiful Kosovo) | Grade: P2 http://unjoblist.org/r/?248035 #UNJL”
  2. @UNJobList_ds (DS for Duty Station): The format for tweets on this feed is “Title” plus “Duty Station”. These tweets look like this:
    “#IOM: Programme Manager (Beautiful Kosovo) | In: Pristina http://unjoblist.org/r/?248035 #UNJLDS”
  3. @UNJobList_dl (DL for Deadline or Closing Date): On this feed tweets feature “Title” plus “Deadline”. The format is:
    “#IOM: Programme Manager (Beautiful Kosovo) | Closing: 2011-01-12 http://unjoblist.org/r/?248035 #UNJLDL”

All three feeds will tweet the same jobs so there is no need following more than one feed. The different hash tags should allow you to search and sort different feeds easily. If you have further ideas on how to improve the tweets, please let me know in the comments below.

Thanks a lot,
Sebastian

PS: Do you know that the Little Peacekeeper is on Twitter, too? Check it out at @LittlePeacekpr!

Contract Types and Job Grades in the UN System

This post is an update to an older post on UN Contract Types that I did before the UN implemented the contractual reform so with the contractual reform almost completed it is time for an update. As usual, please note my disclaimer: I can’t speak for the UN and if you would like to know the details about a contract, please contact the organization you are interested in directly. Also, if there is something you feel is incorrect, please drop me a comment and I will update this post.

Contract Types
The contractual reform in the UN system cut back on many different contract types. But the UN still knows different contract types and the distinction between staff contracts and non-staff contracts still exists. So let’s start with the Staff Contracts:

Continuous Appointment (CA)
As far as I know Continuous Appointment (CA) contracts are not implemented in all UN organisations yet. The contract is running continuously.

Fixed Term Appointment (FTA)
The most common “regular” staff contract are the Fixed Term Appointments (FTA). These are the jobs that you will find in a lot of places in the system. The duration of Fixed Term Appointment (FTA) contracts is usually a year or two. Even though FTAs do not carry any expectation for renewal there is no limit and/or break in service in case the organization decides to extent an FTA.

Temporary Appointment (TA)
Temporary staff contracts for up to a year minus one day of duration are Temporary Appointment contracts. This contract type may be closest to what used to be  “Assignment for limited durations (ALD)” or “Temporary Fixed Term (TFT)” but is strictly limited in terms of duration (both ALDs and TFTs don’t exist any longer). Temporary Appointments carry a “break in service” blackout period to prevent a series of TA contracts.

Non-staff and Consultant Contracts
In the non-staff or consultant category things get complicated. First of all there is a very wide variety of contracts available. These contracts are typically called “Consultant Contract”, “Special Service Agreement (SSA)”, “Individual Contractor (IC)” or “Individual Contractor Agreement (ICA)”. The conditions for these contracts can be quite different from organization to organization. Also more and more organizations see these non-staff contracts not as HR contracts but administer these under the organizations procurement rules. Typically these contracts carry very few employee benefits. Consultant contracts are either time-bound or per deliverable and often short-term. Many organizations do have break in service rules to prevent continuous employment on non-staff contracts but all of the non-staff contracts carry benefits since allow for more flexibility than staff contracts.

Contract Levels
Within all these contracts different job grades (sometimes also called levels) exist. The International Civil Service Commission defined grades from ICS-1 to ICS-14 (let’s end at ICS-14 for simplicity reasons). And within these levels there are two big categories. The first is the General Services category up to ICS-7 and then the Professional category usually starting at ICS-8. General Services Jobs often times don’t require a Master’s degree whereas jobs in the Professional grades often require a Master’s degree (UPDATE: Also see comment below).
General Service jobs are national jobs which means that these jobs are usually reserved for nationals of the country the jobs are located in. Professional category jobs can be international and national. National jobs are often times called “National Officer” (NO). If you are on a national contract you can expect to stay in the country and you will not be required to move. If you are on an international contract you can be re-assigned to any other place in this world, a fact that is sometimes forgotten about and that can lead to conflict if an organization actually tries to re-assign internationals.

In terms of what job grade to apply to within your area of expertise I would strongly recommend reading the job vacancy very carefully. Please make sure that you satisfy all the requirements and assume that there are thorough checks. So if you are required to speak French for a job and you don’t speak French it’s not a good idea to apply. The same thing can be said for years of experience. If a job requires 7 years of experience, there is usually no way around that requirement. To give you an idea of what you should aspire to, let’s look at the example of International Professional jobs. These jobs are often following a logic where a P1 (ICS-8) does not require much of expertise experience (but these jobs practically don’t exist any longer), P2 (ICS-9) require 2 to 3 years of experience, P3 (ICS-10) 5 years, P4 (ICS-11) 7 years and so on. How years of experience are counted may vary, too. Some organizations say that you need to have the years of expertise after your master’s other organizations require relevant expertise which also can be before your master’s but needs to be relevant to your job.

For an overview over what the level and the contract type equivalents roughly are please check out the UN Job List Search page (scroll down). To estimate what your Salary could look like you can use the UNDP Salary Calculator.

UPDATE 30-Sep-17: Do you have any question on this? Discuss that in the FORUM