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  • Report:  #32152

Complaint Review: Resume Blaster -

Reported By:
- San Jose, CA,
Submitted:
Updated:

Resume Blaster
www.resumeblaster.com/ U.S.A.
Web:
N/A
Categories:
Tell us has your experience with this business or person been good? What's this?
Resume Blaster is an Internet service heavily promoted to job seekers. It promises to send your resume to up to 4600 recruiters, selected by your job specialty and target geographic area. The recruiters join this service for free, by opting in. According to Resume Blaster, no email goes to recruiters who have not requested it; hence, this is not spam.

I found several things about Resume Blaster disappointing to the point of feeling like I was scammed.

1) Only after paying my fee was I told of the delay in "blasting" - in my case nearly a full business week!

2) Only after paying and blasting did I become aware that the recruiters emailed were not the targeted group that had been promised according to the "Recruiter Calculator".

3) My resume was sent to many companies that clearly do NOT handle my type of specialty. I am a manufacturing manager and many of the firms I was blasted to handle ONLY advertising, health care, trucking, insurance, finance, clerical temps, and other irrelevant (to me) positions. This, despite my careful selection of specialties relevant to me.

4) My resume was sent to many companies that clearly do NOT handle my geographic area. Again, most were trucking/banking/clerical outfits in the Midwest and East Coast, not the engineering and manufacturing firms from Silicon Valley that would be of interest. I made the correct geographic selection, but it was apparently ignored.

5) The list of "recruiters" is cluttered with non-existent, marginal, or non-recruiter names. I attempted to verify the existence of a sample of the recruiters my resume was supposedly sent to. Only about 40% could be verified to exist. Others were either demonstrably non-existent, or so sketchily named that they could not be proved to exist ("Management Resource", "engel", etc.).

6) Most of the email responses were "form" responses from recruiters inviting me to fill in one of their profile sheets with the exact same info I had so painstakingly entered into the Blaster profile. It took a lot of reading and research to determine which of these were actually worth replying to.

7) The time "saved" from not having to send out your resumes is fully eaten up my wading through the "auto-responses" disguised as real responses. (One recruiter used "I've seen your resume and I think I can help!" as the subject of his auto-generated email.)

8) Recruiters get these "blasted" resumes free - I am beginning to think that they take them as being about worth that much. It costs them nothing to sign up for the service, fire up their autoresponders, act like they are interested, and ask for 15 minutes of your time to re-enter all that resume info in their own specific format. 100 recruiters * 15 minutes each = 25 hours wasted.

9) The few interesting nibbles I got were from recruiters who did not read my profile, who wanted to offer me positions in Kansas, New England, North Carolina, and Texas. They must not have read the "No relocation away from Silicon Valley" part of my Resume Blaster profile. The lovingly crafted profile was hardly read even by their search agents let alone their eyes.

10) Upon becoming aware of how far short Resume Blaster fell of its promises, I requested a refund. According to their Web site "At ResumeBlaster.com, customer satisfaction is our utmost desire. .." The sole adjustment offered was a 10% discount on a repeat run of Resume Blaster. I responded to let them know this was inadequate and they never replied to me.

As an effective alternative to Resume Blaster, let me suggest using the method that actually got me my desirable director position at a fast-growing Silicon Valley firm. I suggest finding lists of executive recruiting firms. These are readily available on the Web. Choose only the ones that actually handle your geographic area and specialty, and send them more tightly targeted and personalized emails, highlighting your marketable qualifications. Of course, attach your resume.

Stephen

San Jose, California


2 Updates & Rebuttals

LOL In

HB,
California,
U.S.A.
Don't use this service

#2Consumer Suggestion

Tue, October 11, 2005

I was told that my resume would be in queue position number one, and I never received one call while my resume according to their selection criteria went to over 1,500 recruiters. Don't use them, just try to get the job yourself or go to a local marketing recruiter to learn how to market yourself (not that I beleive in doing such a thing like paying $300 to have them write my resume). Why do people rip off those unemployed. Scam, don't use!


Jody

Long Beach,
California,
I agree 100% (from a recruiter's perspective)

#3Consumer Comment

Wed, October 16, 2002

As a recruiter for a highly specialized agency, I must agree with your assessment for resume blaster. We signed up with this service, stating that we recruit Japanese bilinguals in the Southern California and Tokyo areas. However, we were flooded with resumes from non-Japanese speakers from anytown USA as well as individuals outside the US (or Japan for that matter) who are not able to legally work in the countries we are recruiting for. We asked to be taken off their list within a month. I must say I am glad that this "service" did not cost us any money. The kicker is that my husband is currently in the job market. He was e-mailed through a hotmail account by resume blaster and was about to register when I walked in the door and stopped him in the nick of time. In short, from the recruiter's perspective, resume blaster is a waste of time. From the job seeker's it's a waste of money.

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