What the world is searching for...

the buzz log

Add to My Yahoo! View RSS Feed Add an Alert

Working in Glass Houses

By Vera H-C Chan
Thu, June 12, 2008, 1:51 pm PDT

Transparencies about salaries and job satisfaction? Sounds like a communist plot brewing.

Only a few days old on the Web, Glassdoor is already blanketed in buzz. The site allows working Joes and Janes to dish on their corporate life, from salary to CEO (dis)satisfaction.

While built on the same free concept as travel site TripAdvisor or real estate tell-all Zillow (whose CEO happens to be a Glassdoor founder), the rating system does require participation to see all company reviews.

The most practical appeal may lie in the naked dollar. Despite—or perhaps because of—a rabidly capitalistic bent, Americans are loath to reveal their compensation... except through the magic of anonymity and aggregation. While the San Francisco Chronicle summed up the possible legal brouhahas in revealing the information, Salon already charted a software engineer salary graph—even though Glassdoor boasts only 3,300 reviews at launch.

Middle management and HR hair-pulling aside, will Glassdoor work? Its launch this week already pushed the term into the top 40,000 searches. The initial Silicon Valley bias naturally has brought in online onlookers from the San Francisco-Bay Area and Sacramento, but interest also hails from Chicago, New York, Houston, Philadelphia, and Dallas-Fort Worth. Despite the heavy tech emphasis, women make up 40% of queries.

To compare: Zillow's 2006 launch attracted six times more buzz, and now ranks in the top 1,000 searches this past week. Arguably, there may be more homeowners curious about their assets (and their neighbors') then people comparing their corporate lot.

Then again, Glassdoor's timing during the highest unemployment jump in years may not necessarily be bad: People who feel stuck may find the site a good place to vent, brag or whistleblow. If this were around when Scott McClellan was in the White House...

Filed under: Employment, Jobs, Careers, Internet, Web 2.0, Salaries

It's The Economy, Stupefying

By Vera H-C Chan
Sun, March 09, 2008, 9:00 am PDT

The money experts didn't need to tell ordinary no-longer-working joes that the economy isn't good, but who doesn't appreciate a little validation? In the past several days, the most popular news stories (other than primary coverage) have been about some unwelcome all-time highs: auto repossessions (highest since 1998), job cuts (deepest since 2003), oil prices (highest ever), and foreclosures (highest ever).

Not everything was a high—the dollar set a new low against the Euro before bouncing back like a bad check.

The news got so bad that the president comped to a "clear" slowdown while reminding people about the "booster shot" coming their way. The reminder put aside searches for "surviving a recession" long enough to revive impatient queries into "economic stimulus package" and "rebate checks." Indeed, even the term "irs spokesman john" came under Search fire, after one John Lipold confirmed in an AP story that IRS letters were coming—at a $42 mil cost—to explain how the checks were coming.

Search signs of a sick market have risen as well: "Stagflation" queries have more than doubled since January, and "recession" searches continue to rise unabated. It takes two negative quarters to have a recession, which the economy hasn't suffered, but the lookups speak to the perception. Questions about "what is inflation" rose +102% in the past 30 days, and people have been estimating the "inflation rate" on their own by checking an online "inflation calculator." Opportunists who scoured "foreclosure listings" and "government tax foreclosures" have dropped off, and "real estate investments" searches have declined.

Despite cold hard economic numbers, people have been been making do: figuring out whether to "rent or buy a house" (+235%), using a "cheap gas price finder" (+137%) to save at the pump, seeking "credit card debt relief" (+37%), and finding a way to support themselves, as the below list of employment and unemployment shows.

  1. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (+209%)
  2. California Department of Unemployment (+201%)
  3. Walmart Employment Applications (+189%)
  4. Indiana Unemployment Uplink (+129%)
  5. Wisconsin Unemployment Weekly Claim (+115%)
  6. City of Houston Employment (+61%)
  7. Temporary Employment Agencies (+24%)
  8. USPS.com/employment (+10%)
  9. City of Chicago Employment City Jobs (+9%)
  10. Target Stores Employment (+8%)

Interestingly, number one is a federal agency which recently released a report denoting another misbegotten high: a rise in job discrimination complaints. And according to one source, a worsening economy likely begets more complaints. Forget booster shots—maybe radiation therapy's in order here.

Filed under: Finances, Employment, Jobs, Money, Housing, Economics

Homebodies at Work

By Vera H-C Chan
Wed, August 01, 2007, 9:49 am PDT

Back in the good ol' pre-industrial days, working from home wasn't such a bold notion. As the public sphere takes us farther and farther away, our hankering to return to the hearth intensifies. Child care costs, better technology, even higher gas prices have all made the argument—and buzz—for telecommuting even stronger.

The yearning desire to "work from home" ranks in our top 2,500 searches this month. The wanna-be working homebodies hail from coast to coast, with Colorado, Missouri, and Florida leading the job search in the past week. While traditional envelope-stuffing gigs are popular, searches for "home online jobs" such as data entry are much higher, likely due to better home computers and faster Web access.

Women account for more than two-thirds of the nesting searches. Another rapidly growing job query revolves around "work at home moms," aka WAHMs or mompreneurs, and an increasingly popular home-work force.

The buzz for "telecommute," a notion nearly a quarter-century old, isn't as fervent as the desire to work from home. Still, the interest in securing time away from the official office environment has more than quadrupled since last summer.

Not everyone has the discipline to get the job done at home, and people will have to assess whether home is where the productivity is. At least the cure for cabin fever lies in the modern-day labor center: the neighborhood "internet cafe" (+10%).

Filed under: Employment, Work, Jobs, Telecommuting

< Previous | Next >

top leaders

Rank Subject Move  Score 
1Black Friday+413 1016 
2Elizabeth Lambert-677 263 
3NFL+66 235 
4New Moon+74 213 
5Bing+83 209 
6Kelly Osbourne+193 199 
7Hulu+7 139 
8Nicole Richie+124 130 

what's the buzz?

A subject's buzz score is the percentage of Yahoo! users searching for that subject on a given day, multiplied by a constant to make the number easier to read. Weekly leaders are the subjects with the greatest average buzz score for a given week.


For more detailed information, visit our FAQ.