Job boards
- Sarah Lee

- 7 days ago
- 2 min read

Most people search, few search well
For most job seekers, the hunt starts the same way. Open LinkedIn or Indeed, type a role, and scroll. Within minutes, everything looks identical. The problem is not the number of listings. It is the absence of a strategy.
What a job board actually is
A job board is a platform where companies post openings and candidates apply. There are two types: boards that host listings directly, and aggregators that pull from multiple sources. Both are useful for different purposes. Aggregators are better for broad discovery. Direct boards and company career pages are better for intent.
Where to look and why it matters
General boards like LinkedIn, Indeed, and Glassdoor are entry points, not endpoints. They surface volume. Niche boards are better for specific outcomes: remote-first roles, tech and engineering, healthcare, trades, or executive positions. Company career pages are the most reliable signal that a role is real.
A 2024 Greenhouse report found that 78 percent of candidates who applied through a company’s own career page received a faster response than those who applied through third-party boards. Going direct is slower to find but faster to move.
How to use them without burning out
Set narrow filters. Use specific job titles rather than broad categories. Turn on alerts so early applications happen automatically. Apply to a manageable volume of well-matched roles rather than blasting a generic resume across every listing.
CoBlack pulls from ATS feeds and company career pages directly, not public boards. That means fewer ghost listings, earlier access, and applications that reach the employer, not an aggregator queue.
The one rule that holds
Volume without quality is noise. A targeted application with a tailored resume outperforms ten generic ones on every measure that matters. The board is the starting point. What you do with it is the job.




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