Welcome to the born analytics. Every hour of every day we monitor the job vacancies on the UK's leading job boards, to measure the 'health' of the job board market. The data and our analysis is availble at no charge via our online tools (below).

Job Index

Advertising Index

Track the highs and lows of the UK's online recruitment sector with the born Job Advertising Index.

Analyse Job Boards

Job Site Analysis

Interested in a particular job site's advertising levels? Look no further than our analysis tool.

Compare Job Boards

Compare Job Boards

Looking for statistics on the UK's job boards? Check out our job board anlaytics.

Widget

Volume Tracker

Want to keep an eye on the volume of jobs adverts on multiple job boards? Use our customisable widget to create a tracker, for your site or iGoogle homepage.

 
 

Disclaimer: The data found on this web site has been collected using technology which is currently undergoing beta testing. All figures, comments and analysis are subject to change and should not be used to formulate opinion: legal, financial or otherwise. The born Job Advertising Index, its data and its analysis, do not reflect the financial or business performance of a company and/or job board. The Index attempts to monitor only one aspect of a business's product portfolio and does not take into account the financial implications of other products, advertising mix, advertising rates etc. Any job board may, at any time contact us if they dispute the figures, data or analysis presented on this web site. We are committed to correcting any mistakes or omissions promptly.

 

Other stories on the born blog:


Early NORAS 2009 Traffic Statistics


ABC Electronic
ABC Electronic has started to publish audit figures for those job boards participating in NORAS 2009. So far audit figures for seven sites are available, including <more..>


Local Online Advertising, For Local People


Local
The intricate manner in which online advertising constantly evolves, not just from a technology perspective but a business perspective, never fails to impress me. At the moment geographic concerns seem to be important... <more..>