San Francisco: Facebook on Wednesday began letting businesses in the US or Canada post jobs and take applications from jobseekers, posing a challenge to Microsoft-owned LinkedIn.
The platform´s users will be able to find help-wanted posts at business pages on Facebook or by looking in a new ´jobs´ bookmark on the leading social network´s mobile application.
"Businesses and people already use Facebook to fill and find jobs, so we´re rolling out new features that allow job posting and application directly on Facebook," the California-based internet giant said in an online message.
Job postings may appear in news feed streams if companies pay to promote them.
Clicking on an "apply now" button will open an online form already filled out with relevant information from a person´s Facebook profile, according to the social network.
Applicants will then be able to add, edit, and review forms before submitting them, according to Facebook.
Company representatives managing business pages at Facebook will be able to examine applications and then contact potential candidates using the Messenger text communication service.
Facebook said it tested the new tools in the US and will be rolling them out more broadly here and in Canada in coming weeks.
Microsoft recently reported a rise in profits over the past quarter, showing gains in cloud computing and other new areas of focus as it absorbed the LinkedIn social network.
The US tech giant, which is shifting away from dependence on software to a broader array of services, said the LinkedIn acquisition boosted its revenue in the last three months of the year but dragged on profit.
Microsoft also owns a small piece of Facebook due to an investment in the social network about a decade ago.
-
Blood Moon: When and where to watch in 2026
-
Elon Musk’s Starlink rival Eutelsat partners with MaiaSpace for satellite launches
-
Blue Moon 2026: Everything you need to know
-
Scientists unravel mystery of James Webb’s ‘little red dots’ in deep space
-
ISS crew of four completes medical evacuation with safe splashdown off California
-
Annular solar eclipse 2026: Here's everything to know about the ‘ring of fire’
-
World’s first ice archive created to preserve fast-melting glaciers’ secrets
-
NASA, DOE to develop Nuclear Reactor on the Moon by 2030