Monday, July 23, 2018

Researching Corporate Email Formats

Researching Corporate Email Formats



If we know someone’s name, company, and email format(s) used at the company, chances are that we could construct that business email address. Here are some ways to figure out the email format(s) specific companies are using.
1. Collections of Formats
Online collections of corporate email formats have been shared across our groups. I will list some of them here; please feel free to suggest other sites in the comments. Of course this information needs to be verified.
There is a collection of email formats, phone numbers, and more for the Fortune 1000 companies that I ran across, that can be found by Googling. Here is the file; I am not sure how precise the info is but this may be a good start.
2. Googling for Examples
When I search for a company email pattern, I pretty much never look them up in the sources like the above. I find it easier to do a few Google searches like this:
Here is a variation of this “Googling” method, using X-Raying LinkedIn. I am omitting “me“, compared to the searches above, since I expect to mostly see emails for people (vs. “info” “sales” “support” etc.) on LinkedIn profiles:
Please note that Google is still behaves pretty badly with Captcahs. If you do advanced searching using X-raying and asterisks, you may want to switch to a custom search engine I have created for this purpose. It is available here on the blog, or use its public URL.
3. Guessing and Verifying
Check the post from 2013:
4. Use This Custom Search Engine – Reveal Email Formats
This Custom Engine is based on a well-known site Zoominfo, that contains contact information, found on the Internet. To use the search engine, enter a company domain name, as an example, chevron.com, into the search box, and see what happens.
You can use its public link or just search below:
Reveal Email Formats


Here are some cool examples of its usage (Scroll down on each of these pages to see the results):

Thanks to booleanstrings.com for this wonderful Article...

Monday, July 9, 2018

What Does a Talent Sourcer Actually Do?

Talent acquisition is a constantly evolving field and, as the market becomes more competitive, acquiring the right talent for any role presents an increasing number of challenges. This often means that recruitment specialization (including sourcing) is key to having an efficient, effective talent pipeline. Furthermore, as part of a larger talent acquisition strategy, we believe that talent sourcing is an integral element of an effective recruitment process.
However, the role of a talent sourcer is often shrouded in mystery; some business leaders are able to value its efficacy, others, often through ignorance, suspiciously view it as something that is overly simplistic and narrow in scope. The question then remains: what does a talent sourcer actually do on a day-to-day basis and how does the role integrate into a company’s overall talent acquisition strategy?
In order to effectively incorporate talent sourcing within a larger recruiting framework, HR/recruiting leaders need to be able to effectively define the role of a sourcer. While there is a variety of interpretations, here is a simple one that can be used: a sourcer sources talent by employing proactive recruiting techniques to find and identify skilled candidates, both active and passive. That said, what this means in reality is somewhat open to interpretation. In fact, the sourcing role can be fulfilled either as part of a normal recruiter’s daily tasks or by a dedicated sourcing specialist. The role can be uniquely stretched and applied depending on the company’s needs and culture. Regardless of who takes up the sourcing position, a few key concepts define what it means to be a sourcer. Familiarizing yourself with these will allow you to determine exactly how the role should fit within your own organization.
Broadly speaking, talent sourcing can be split into two fundamental techniques:
  • Primary Sourcing
    Primary sourcing (otherwise known as telephone sourcing) leverages techniques to identify candidates and gather information that is not otherwise available in the public domain. This may involve cold calling individuals or companies to uncover data such as job roles, titles and responsibilities, email addresses, or current employment status. Once suitable talents are found using this method, the most effective way of contacting the candidates can be identified.
  • Secondary Sourcing
    Secondary sourcing (or internet sourcing) employs a variety of techniques for the deep mining of candidate information through online channels. This spans the gamut; from social media profiles to the more obscure places on the internet such as forums, blogs or private websites. Today, the wealth of information available online means that HR software has become a crucial weapon within a talent sourcer’s arsenal. Again, once a sourcer has identified a candidate through a particular online portal, the candidate can then be contacted using the most effective channels.
These two approaches are the nuts and bolts of talent sourcing, a solid foundation from which the best sourcers work. However, the daily tasks involved within the role can be further subcategorized, which begs the question: what does the day-to-day life of a sourcer look like?

Day-to-day — what is sourcing in recruitment?

It’s worth reminding ourselves at this point that talent sourcing is a proactive, rather than a reactive, methodology. Here, the proactive approach aims to identify both actively searching and passive candidates through the use of techniques such as headhunting or referral follow-ups (otherwise known as “push activities”) that reach out to a specific target audience. Proactive techniques that make up the core role of the talent sourcer include:
  • Boolean Sourcing — Using Boolean operators on major search engines or social media sites to find potential candidates through targeted keywords
  • Board Sourcing — Scanning job boards using keywords or search operators
  • Database Sourcing — Leveraging a company or organization’s existing database of potential talents
  • Network Sourcing — Utilizing network connections, both online and offline (LinkedIn etc.) to uncover potential candidates
  • Phone Sourcing — Cold calling or otherwise contacting potential candidates by phone
  • Mobile Sourcing — Engaging potential candidates through SMS text messaging
Additionally, sourcing personnel may specialize in particular areas of the discipline—allowing even greater scope for specific investigative skills to be integrated within a larger team. For example, one colleague may focus entirely on phone sourcing, whereas another may be invested in complex and highly refined Boolean search strings. Naturally, a talent sourcer with a specialization will focus on a more limited and defined set of daily tasks, which fit into a team’s wider strategy. However, it is important that sourcers remain versatile and flexible enough to competently fulfill all aspects of the role, with some taking up a jack-of-all-trades approach dependent upon the requirements of the department.

Where does sourcing fit into your talent acquisition strategy?

What makes sourcing so important in today’s market is the speed and specialization with which a talent sourcer can find and identify the right potential candidates for any given position—often providing insightful and surprising results that may have otherwise been overlooked. Whereas traditional recruiters may be more skilled in selling a candidate on a job or company, sourcers are often much better at discovering the candidates and determining what actions need to be taken to interest them in discussing an opportunity in the first place. This means that the integration of a dedicated talent sourcer is the ideal way to build and manage a hiring pipeline, filling it with leads that can be followed up on with recruiters who can close the deal.
If you haven’t already incorporated sourcing into your recruiting processes now is the time to start. Sourcing can help you build and maintain a competitive advantage in terms of the quality of people you hire. Without it you may struggle to fill your company with high quality employees.
Thanks for this wonderful post Dustin Robinson

Friday, July 15, 2016

Tuesday, May 5, 2015

50 Best People Search Engines to Track Down Anyone

50 Best People Search Engines to Track Down Anyone

The Internet has a wealth of information, and not surprisingly, lots of that information is about people. You can find just about anything you want about someone online, including public records, addresses, and high school photos. If you’re looking up a long lost friend or family member, be sure to check out these resources.
White Pages
White pages are great for helping you find addresses and phone numbers for people.
  1. Whitepages.com: The official WhitePages offers people search, reverse lookups, and beyond.
  2. Whowhere: Whowere is a great white pages resource, with a phone lookup and more.
  3. The Ultimate White Pages: The Ultimate White Pages makes it easy to search many different white pages all at once.
  4. Superpages: Superpages offers people search, public records, and more.
  5. Anywho: Find people by name and address using Anywho. This site offers searches on the iPhone as well.
  6. InfoSpace: You can find people through the white pages on InfoSpace, and even set your own default location.
  7. AOL White Pages: AOL’s people search directory offers an easy way to locate people.
  8. Switchboard: Switchboard’s website allows you to search by phone, find public records, and more.
  9. 411 Locate: Use 411 Locate to find people through white pages and even reverse phone lookup.
People Finders
Use these search engines to find basic information and beyond on just about anyone.
  1. ZabaSearch: ZabaSearch offers searching by name and telephone number, offering numbers and addresses for free.
  2. LexisNexis: LexisNexis is one of the most trusted names in finding information about people.
  3. Whozat?: In this people search engine, you can fill in as much information as you have to find people.
  4. Peoplebot: Peoplebot makes it easy to find addresses, phone numbers, satellite photos, and more.
  5. Yasni: Yasni offers information about anyone’s name online.
  6. Wink: With Wink, you’ll be able to find people based on highly refined searches, with distance, schools, groups, interests, and more taken into account.
  7. Spock: Spock will help you find out where your friends are online with pictures, blogs, social networks, and web links.
  8. CVGadget: Check out this search engine to find people on a variety of people searches at once.
  9. Pipl: Find people by username, phone, email, or names on Pipl.
  10. PeekYou: PeekYou profiles make it easy for people to find your websites, social networking, pages, and other stuff about you online.
  11. Infopeople: Infopeople’s search makes it easy to use a variety of search engines at once to find people.
  12. iTools: This search tool will look at a variety of different people searches, including international locations.
  13. ZoomInfo: ZoomInfo offers a great source for finding both people and companies.
  14. Spydentity: Spydentity will search all of the major search engines, social networks, image sharing sites, news, and blogs to find who you’re looking for.
  15. SquidWho: SquidWho offers a people-powered Who’s Who online for celebrities and regular people alike.
  16. Google: Even though specialized search engines are great, it’s hard to beat the firehose of information you can find about people on Google.
  17. Reunion: Get reunited with people from your past, and find out who’s searching for you on Reunion.com.
Public Records
Use these search tools to look up criminal records, marriage certificates, business information, and more.
  1. PublicRecordsNow: Using this search engine, you can find public records including date of birth, relatives, and addresses.
  2. PeopleFinders: With PeopleFinders, you can search for background checks, criminal records, and business ownership.
  3. Public Records Pro: Get an instant public background records search from this website.
  4. Background Check Gateway: Use this website to find information about identity theft, public records, background checks, and employment screening.
  5. Mamma: Mamma offers a people search as well as a public records search.
  6. Government Registry: With this website, you can find criminal files, court records, and more.
  7. Search Detective: Search Detective has a reverse phone lookup, public records, and more.
  8. Abika: Use Abika for free background checks, court record searches, and more.
  9. Intelius: Intelius has it all-background checks, reverse cell phone directory, screenings, and more.
International
Need to find someone outside of the US? Check out these resources.
  1. 411.ca: Find people in Canada using this local search engine.
  2. 192.com: Use 192.com to find personal records, people, and more in the UK.
  3. 123people: Here you’ll find a free people search for public records in the US, France, Spain, and beyond.
  4. People Search: People Search offers a free people search directory for Australia.
Social Media
Make use of these social media tools to find and connect with people online.
  1. Facebook: Facebook offers a fun and easy way to locate your friends online.
  2. LinkedIn: Search for people, companies, and more in your network and out through LinkedIn.
  3. iSearch: iSearch offers a way to search the social web.
  4. MySpace: MySpace is a great way to find old friends from school and work.
  5. Friendster: Using Friendster, you’ll be able to locate your friends within the social network.
  6. Twitter: Find the Twitter streams of your friends, family, and acquaintances using Twitter’s search option.
  7. Orkut: Discover new people through your friends and communities on Orkut.
  8. Ancestry.com: Ancestry.com’s search will help you find family around the world, current and past.
  9. Plaxo: Find out who you know and stay in contact with them easily using Plaxo.
  10. Ryze: Similar to LinkedIn, Ryze makes it easy for you to find your friends and networking contacts.
  11. Classmates: Classmates.com offers a great way to look up your old friends from high school, military, college, and more.

Tuesday, November 25, 2014

Eight Ways to Guess and Verify Email Addresses

emails




Suppose you are determined to find someone’s email address. With the new LinkedIn InMail policy, some say, this may happen in their practice more often. The post below outlines top eight ways to figure that email address out,starting with a list of guesses.
Before we go there: as the creator of one of the most popular email-finding techniques Rob Ousbey says,
With great power, comes great responsibility.
Let’s keep that in mind! (Don’t spam anyone.)
To find someone’s email address, you can try to come up with a number of guesses, using “email permutators”, known email formats for employers, and, perhaps, your imagination. For larger companies, try this custom search engine to find company email formats.
Note #1: Researching company email formats deserves a separate blog post; I am not covering it here in any detail.
Note #2: The eight verification techniques listed below can work with whole lists of guesses. Verifying just one or two email addresses can be done in some additional ways; that would be the subject of yet another blog post (coming soon).
Once you have a list of email address guesses, here are the eight ways to try and pinpoint the correct address. These eight methods all work in different ways, so if you are not successful with one, you can try another and you may succeed. Each of the 8 ways is quick to try; all are free except the last one.
  1. Find emails with Rapportive (by Rob Ousbey)LinkedIn recently changed Rapportive , so this technique is less powerful now: it won’t cross-reference against any Social Networks, other than LinkedIn, any longer. But the technique still works, by finding the LinkedIn profile registered with the correct address, if the profile exists.
  2. Find Almost Anybody’s Email Address with #LinkedIn: this, actually, works differently from Rob’s technique. This is dynamic cross-referencing; Rapportive provides cross-referencing against stored information, which can, in some cases, be incomplete or outdated. It’s pretty reliable and provides up-to-date information.
  3. Find Almost Anyone’s Email Using MS Outlook: this technique will check email address guesses against LinkedIn, Facebook, and possibly XING, depending on your Outlook version.
  4. Uploading a list of emails to Gmail will identify those with Google-plus accounts. Unfortunately, this is not 100% reliable in our experience, meaning, it may miss the correct profile even if it exists; it’s still worth a try, of course.
  5. The post Find People on Google-Plus by Emails  has a few more relevant hints.
  6. Uploading a list of emails to Gmail will let you to cross-reference them on Twitter. This will not work with large lists, as our experience shows, but will work just fine with a few dozen email guesses.
  7. You can verify a list of email guesses against Facebook. This option is not easy to find! On the page Invite Your Friends locate the link “Import your email addresses” and point to a text file with a list of emails. No worries, you can use it without inviting anyone. Cancel all the invites – and see which email address is right. Note that if you work with a larger volume of addresses to verify (say, for several people at once) and wanted to look at the imported list in detail, the page Manage Contacts is not that helpful, but exporting your Facebook data would be. In the exported data you will clearly see the addresses which have and have not been identified as belonging to members. (I guess there’s another blog post this can be expanded into.) The downside to exporting is that you can’t select only some data to download, so you’ll have to get a complete archive.
  8. Finally, tools like Mailtester.com provide free email checking for one address at a time. They “ping” email servers without sending an actual email. We know that they only work with some email servers. Checking email lists using that technique is offered by a good number of vendors for a price; I have not used that, so my comments will be minimal. Aaron Lintz has pointed me to this site as a good one.
Thanks to irina for Great Post....

Tuesday, July 29, 2014