As many of you know, I started a website called Poker Job Search about a year ago to list jobs that were available in the online poker industry. The site has been doing pretty well. Even though it’s a very narrow niche (people who are interested in jobs in online poker) it gets some pretty good traffic and I’ve heard anecdotally that many people have been able to find jobs using the site.
Well, it got me to thinking about how I could better serve the market. Before I offered recruitment agencies ads on the site but it seemed like a difficult proposition because I was going to list their jobs anyway. The one thing I do have to offer though is reach via Bill’s Poker Blog.
So, I put together a different value proposition. If you have a job opening that you would like to advertise, I’ll post it on Bill’s Poker Blog and on Poker Job Search. Not only do you get the initial exposure but I do my weekly wrapups which means that your job listing gets mentioned twice (some of my readers are slow and don’t get it the first time – haha).
Bill’s Poker Blog has over 1800 people subscribed to the full RSS feed and receive every single post via email or their RSS. And according to Google Analytics we average about 10,000 unique visitors every month. Considering that a large percentage of Bill’s Poker Blog readers are already involved in the online poker industry that’s a pretty targeted audience.
If you have a hard to fill opening that you’re trying to fill, please give me a shout and I’ll send you the rates for posting your job opportunities on Bill’s Poker Blog.
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Hi, my name is Bill Rini and this is my poker blog. I've been blogging about poker and the poker industry since around 2003-ish. Like most people I started out playing poker as entertainment in home games whenever we wanted to sit around and smoke cigars, drink beer, and eat pizza, and needed a good excuse. I started playing online shortly after the first online card rooms opened and it wasn't long before I was playing 20, 30, or even 40 hours a week or more. One day I received a phone call about a program manager position at Tiltware which was the company that consulted to Full Tilt Poker on software development and marketing. After Tiltware I spent about 2.5 years working at Party Poker where I was the poker room manager.
