Second Life Job Fair Brings Real Work

September 12, 2007 | by Christopher Nickson

Avatars interview for real life jobs at hosted jobs fairs in the virtual world.

Second Life might be a world of avatars, but it’s also a place that seems more and more to be an analogue for the real world, with gambling, commerce, and even job fairs.
 
Yes, real world companies are trawling for employees on Second Life. TMP Worldwide Advertising & Communications has already hosted two job fairs in the virtual world, and companies like Accenture, GE Money and U.S. Cellular attended, interviewing literally hundreds of avatars for jobs.
 

That’s doesn’t mean it’s been wildly successful yet. To date there’s been one confirmed hire: hire: food and services management company Sodexho found a new executive chef at the May job fair.

Chef Ray Giordano, 39, said that he spent a day learning to navigate in Second Life.

"My kids were standing behind me laughing," he said.

In many ways, with more and more corporations setting up shop in Second Life, job fairs are a natural extension of the process. A fair in August brought 150 applicants from all over the globe vying for interviews with one company. The good news is that 20 of them were viable job candidates.

 

Post Your Comment...Comments

shoppingbasket on Sep 12th, 2007 at 11:39 PM:

It does seem that companies are starting to explore such ideas on Second Life as an extension of their recruiting presence on the internet.

Another example is Auchan, the French grocery retailer, who has extended their September recruitment campaign to Second Life. Topic picked up at: http://shoppingbasket.wordpress.com/2007/09/13/auc...

Jason on Sep 16th, 2007 at 8:40 AM:

There are also places like Careerbuilder.com who have Job listings in Second Life. In game jobs like working for Joshua Sao (Sao Estates) or various other people can pay more than $10 an hour in real money. I think places like Second Life will present a new global employment market and it's just in the infant stages.

Comment on this article




Please keep your comments relevant to this article. Email addresses are not displayed, they are only required to verify you are human.

When you submit your comment, an email will be sent to your email address with a confirmation link. Once you have clicked on that confirmation link your comment will be posted.

HTML is not allowed.




Join our newsletter to keep up to date on the latest Digital Trends content like Videos, Reviews, News and more delivered directly to your email!


Plus, get early access to contests and specials from our partners. Join today!





Loading...