The Influence of the Firm’s Career-Website on Job-Seekers’ Intentions to the Firm

Robert W. Stone, Lori Baker-Eveleth, Daniel Eveleth

Abstract


Currently organizations rely on its websites to engage and inform job-seekers, and as the primary method for job-seekers to submit applications for screening (Thompson, Braddy & Wuensch, 2008). Therefore a website must be able to influence job-seekers to react positively to perform behaviors such as submitting an application, returning to the site, recommending the company or site to others, and to engage the organization by transitioning to the organization’s social-media sites. Whether or not a job-seeker performs these behaviors is largely a function of the experience with the website. Understanding the website-related factors affecting a job-seeker’s intentions and subsequent behavior is, therefore, critical to the firm. The sample consisted of 199 usable responses and the results show website aesthetics, content and ease of use influence respondents’ intentions, indirectly, through perceived usefulness of the site. Social norms toward the firm have a significant, positive influence on respondents’ intentions.


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DOI: https://doi.org/10.5296/ijhrs.v5i3.8172

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International Journal of Human Resource Studies  ISSN 2162-3058

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