![]() Title:sales company:“social talent” school:harvardĮxcept there’s a catch. The keyword we’re looking for in each field should be directly after the colon (in other words, no spaces). Title: company: school: firstname: lastname:įield commands are written in all lower-case (opposite to our Boolean operators, AND OR NOT, which must be written in upper case). LinkedIn has once again introduced field commands (they were a thing many, many years ago!), similar to the field commands used in Google and Bing, which allow you to search for keywords in specific sections of a LinkedIn profile. Many of you have even seen this little add-on to the search bar in the last fortnight: Location Filters goes by City name/Country, rather than by zip-code or postal code, so if you wanted to find someone in Encinitas, zip-code 92007 and a 25 mile radius, your search radius has now been dramatically increased to encompass the entire Greater Los Angeles Area. While the new Search in the LinkedIn interface does accept Boolean search operators (AND, OR and NOT), our searches were less accurate because we couldn’t refine our search to look for particular keywords in specific places, mainly the job title.Īlso, we cannot select what Location we want to search for prior to hitting “Search” – we must select one of the new filters on the right to get our desired location once we get search results. That capability was removed for users of, forcing users (even those who already pay for LinkedIn) to upgrade to vastly expensive products like LinkedIn Recruiter. You’re annoyed that you no longer have an Advanced Search feature and individual search fields, where you could search for candidates by job title, zip-code, radius and company. So you’ve now received the new user interface and it’s new search bar. ![]()
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