How are you using Boolean and X-ray to source and search for candidates at your company? Check out our current opportunities! Are you a Developer? Support Login Sign Up. Would you like to receive similar articles straight to your inbox?
Post navigation. Vivek Ravishankar, Co-founder at HackerRank. Category : Sourcing. One of the most popular ways to find great candidates is by using Boolean search strings. This technique makes searching for good profiles easier, as it compares the search string to the profile it is searching. This way, you will only see profiles that match your search. If you want to find out what the real power of Boolean search is, consider reading this blog post about Boolean search for recruitment.
X-ray search sounds awesome, right?! It sounds quite powerful. As if you can see through everything with your search, and frankly, you kind of do.
X-ray searching refers to the technique of using search engines such as Google or Bing to find information, usually candidates, in online databases. Online databases can be phone directories, job boards, social media channels such as LinkedIn or Facebook and every other website on the web.
Actually, scientists and researchers have been using it for years to find relevant sources and research concerning their research topic on websites featuring other academic research. Basically, you enter Boolean search strings in a search engine to find results on a specific website.
As a recruiter, you can use this technique to find candidates on websites that are otherwise difficult to search. Almost every website can be searched with X-ray.
So you can do an X, I call it Google X ray. But you can do this in other search engines too, like being and the other ones that are out there. So deep Boolean searching with search engines such as Google, all the standard operators work so and not or etc. The thing is with the NOT operator that is a standard for Boolean is when you use that in a Google X ray search, it becomes a hyphen.
That makes sense. But the main ones that are going to help you with recruitment are site which which instructs Google to search for a specific website, in URL, which says to Google, I want you to look for these words in the URL of the search results. In title, which tells Google I want you to look in the title of the search results in text, which means the body text and another cool thing that you can do with Google X ray is search file types file, so Excel files word by word docs, etc.
So you can do that as well. And then how to become a project manager is the title. So I just wanted to, I was hoping to be able to do this live and give you some live searches. But because of the internet connection, I thought that was going to be a pretty bad idea. So si t colon, LinkedIn Comm.
But if you wanted to do your own research, you probably probably find that as well. As I said, Do this logged out of your own LinkedIn, all of the operators on Google X ray, lowercase now, I think someone must have been having a bit of a laugh because all of the standard buildings Operators are uppercase. So you need to remember that the operator always immediately is always immediately followed by the colon.
And you must add the domain suffix. So you get rid of those and then that will bring more of what you do like if you go the other way and start smaller, and try to go broader. And I think it works as well that way.
So you can go in there and type. And that can be quite a useful tool for bringing up some results for you. Hopefully that one that I actually was going to unmute you, Sophia. Hopefully that one that I showed you.
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