Archive for February, 2010

Who’s Hiring Week of 2/22/10

The business services, hospitality, telecommunications, retail, banking, health care, and defense verticals are the top industries currently hiring based on a survey of active job advertisements from the nations’ leading job boards (source: http://www.reCareered.com)

Business Service topped this week’s list with IBM, Deloitte,and Booz Allen continued strong hiring. Hospitality also continued strong employment as Pizza Hut, Marriott, Cracker Barrel, Friendly’s, and Boston Market were among the top hiring firms this week.

Telecommunications firms are still looking, with AT&T, T-Mobile and Verizon still staffing actively. Retail continues staffing into February, as Sears, Kmart, JC Penny, Flying J, Murphy, Macy’s, Radio Shack and Walmart were top hiring firms.

Banking continued recruiting as JPMorganChase and PNC were included in the top hiring companies. Health care hiring continued its strong past quarter, led by HCR ManorCare, and UnitedHealth in the top 10, joined by Amedisys Home Health, Gentiva Health, Fresenius Medical Care, Genesis Healthcare, DaVita, Quest Diagnostics, and Kindred Healthcare among the health care top hiring companies.

Defense companies also continued staffing as General Dynamics Raytheon, and US Army made the list.

Top 40 this week:

  1. IBM
  2. PizzaHut
  3. AT&T
  4. Deloitte
  5. Sears, Roebuck and Co.
  6. JPMorgan Chase
  7. HCR ManorCare
  8. UnitedHealth Group
  9. General Dynamics
  10. T-Mobile
  11. Raytheon
  12. U.S. Army
  13. Amedisys Home Health Services
  14. Aflac
  15. Kmart Corporation
  16. Gentiva Health Services
  17. Fresenius Medical Care
  18. Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
  19. Booz Allen Hamilton
  20. Marriott
  21. JCPenney
  22. Genesis Healthcare
  23. Flying J
  24. Cracker Barrel Old Country Store
  25. Murphy USA
  26. PNC
  27. DaVita
  28. Friendly’s
  29. Boston Market
  30. KinderCare Learning Centers
  31. La Petite Academy
  32. TruGreen
  33. Verizon Wireless
  34. Macy’s
  35. Quest Diagnostics
  36. Kindred Healthcare
  37. Columbia University
  38. Combined Insurance
  39. RadioShack
  40. Walmart

Questions? Call me – 800.876.5506



Companies hiring week of 2-15-2010

The Business Services, Telecommunications, Healthcare, Retail, and Banking verticals are the top industries with new job postings added during the past seven days. Based on surveys of US job advertisements in the top job board aggregators, the following companies added the most job openings:

  1. IBM
  2. PizzaHut
  3. Accenture
  4. Sears, Roebuck and Co.
  5. U.S. Army
  6. JPMorgan Chase
  7. AT&T
  8. Deloitte
  9. Kmart
  10. General Dynamics
  11. UnitedHealth Group
  12. Raytheon
  13. T-Mobile
  14. Amedisys
  15. JCPenney
  16. Gentiva Health Services
  17. Fresenius Medical Care
  18. Booz Allen
  19. Verizon Wireless
  20. Marriott
  21. HCR Manorcare
  22. Flying J
  23. Cracker Barrel Old Country Store
  24. Murphy USA
  25. PNC
  26. Genesis Healthcare
  27. Snap-on Tools
  28. DaVita
  29. Friendly’s
  30. Boston Market
  31. KinderCare Learning Centers
  32. La Petite Academy
  33. Hilton Hotels
  34. Quest Diagnostics
  35. Hgi Healthcare
  36. Aflac
  37. Columbia University
  38. Combined Insurance
  39. RadioShack
  40. Kindred Healthcare

Sources: CareerBuilder, Monster, Indeed, SimplyHired, HotJobs, Google. Excluded: Recruiters, Staffing firms, Training, Franchise, and Work-from-home opportunities. http://recareered.blogspot.com



Where the Jobs Will Be in 2010

A terrific article from Businessweek.com, outlining areas of anticipated growth, by both geography and industry. Basic points are:

1) Biggest/fastest job growth will be in metropolitan areas that are international trading ports or cities that border Mexico.

2) Also leading job recovery are metros based on tourism, retail, hospitality, energy, education, military, and manufacturing.

Full article appears below. Questions? Call me, 800-876-5506.

Where the Jobs Will Be in 2010

(http://www.businessweek.com/lifestyle/content/nov2009/bw2009115_287334.htm)

Regions across the U.S. will see job growth in the first quarter of 2010. But the growth will be sporadic and many areas will continue to lag

By Prashant Gopal

The recession might be technically over, but unemployment is rising month after month even in most of the nation’s strongest job markets.

A full-fledged job recovery seems to be a long way away. But some metros are poised for significant job growth by the first quarter of next year. BusinessWeek.com teamed up with Moody’s Economy.com to identify America’s 25 next recovering job markets. These metros were ranked based on Economy.com’s projected job growth in the first three months of 2010.

Topping the list is Mount Vernon, Wash., a small town about 60 miles north of Seattle with just 48,000 workers. The town, which lost jobs quickly during the recession, could see a rebound, in part because tourism, retail, and hospitality will make a comeback as the economy improves. Additionally, the weak dollar will provide a boost to communities with international trading ports and metros that border Mexico, such as Brownsville, Tex. (a port town that is No. 4 on our list), and border town McCallen, Tex. (No. 3). Our list was also packed with towns that are closely linked to the energy industry (Billings, Mont., Houston, Tex., and Farmington, N.M.), college towns (College Station, Tex., Tuscaloosa, Ala., Auburn, Ala., and Lawrence, Kan.), and military towns (Columbus, Ga., Augusta, Ga., and Texarkana, Tex.).

None of the metros on the list experienced a housing bubble that had a disastrous pop. Miami, Las Vegas, Phoenix, and Stockton, Calif., will likely be in a funk long after many Texas metros are in growth mode.

“These are areas that had little or no housing cycle and stand to benefit from the renewed firmness in commodity prices,” said Chris Lefakis, an economist at Moody’s Economy.com. “This could be an export-lead recovery with the replenishment of inventory leading to a resurgence in manufacturing.”

Room for Growth in Manufacturing

The manufacturing sector has taken such a battering that it has a lot of room for improvement. Inventories have fallen to such low levels that manufacturers will have to increase production even to keep up with existing demand, Lefakis said.

A plant opening or just expanding can have a magnified impact on a small metro, giving a swift boost to the job market, said Joel Naroff, president of Naroff Economic Advisors in Holland, Pa. But job growth elsewhere mostly will be slow and incremental, he said. Companies will be cautious about hiring and will expand overtime hours and bring on temporary workers before making permanent hires.

The good news is that overtime pay and the increase in temp workers will push up wages nationwide, which could result in more consumer spending, he said.

“If the economy begins to grow, it will be enough [for companies] to add slowly to payroll,” Naroff said. “I’m not expecting a vigorous upturn.”

Travel, hospitality, and retail could see more dramatic growth. Throughout the recession, Americans have cut down on travel, eating out, and shopping. If the economy improves, they’ll add more entertainment to their budgets, he said.

“People might not go to Disney World,” said Naroff. “But they might start going out to dinner once week.”

New York City, which didn’t make our list, could also have a great year, especially now that Wall Street is giving out bonuses “like 2008 never existed,” he added.

The federal government will also play a key role in the recovery even as it begins to phase out tax incentives and other economic stimulus spending, Moody’s Economy.com Chief Economist Mark Zandi said on CNBC Nov. 3.

“Without the government, the consumer would be pulling back,” Zandi said. “By early next year job losses will abate … so we will start to see wage and salary growth and government can begin to pass that baton off [to the private sector]. But it will be a tricky handoff.”