Facebook brings back job listings in the US
In Brief
Posted:

Three years after removing its job listings feature, Facebook is bringing it back to users in the U.S., focusing on helping people find local jobs in entry-level, trade, and service sectors.
Job listings, available to all users 18 years and older, can be found in a tab within the Marketplace section as well as in Groups and Pages.
Users can filter and sort jobs by category, distance, and job type. Facebook also says it will provide tailored recommendations for relevant opportunities based on users’ job browsing history. After submitting their applications, they can chat with companies via Messenger to arrange interviews.

The job listings feature initially launched in 2017 in the U.S. and Canada, and then expanded to over 40 countries a year later. However, in 2022, Facebook limited its support to only the U.S. and Canada, ultimately discontinuing the feature in 2023, likely due to the increasing use of LinkedIn.
Meta didn’t explain why it chose to bring back job listings now. However, it seems like it’s trying to go back to its roots and expand its purpose beyond just social networking. Back in January, Meta’s CEO Mark Zuckerberg mentioned wanting to see a “return to OG Facebook” as one of his big goals this year during the Q4 earnings call. This could also be a way for Facebook to appeal to younger people who are just starting out in their careers and to draw in more Gen Z users.
Plus, by prioritizing entry-level, trade, and service industry positions, Facebook aims to differentiate itself from LinkedIn, which tends to cater to medium- and high-skilled job roles. Facebook has more than 3 billion monthly active users, while LinkedIn is catching up with over 1 billion users.
Subscribe for the industry’s biggest tech news
Latest in Apps
Latest TechCrunch
- Waymo plans to launch a robotaxi service in London in 2026Waymo already has ties to the UK, which began after the autonomous vehicle technology company acquired Latent Logic in 2019.
- OpenAI has five years to turn $13 billion into $1 trillionSome of America's most valuable companies are now leaning on OpenAI to fulfill major contracts, notes the FT.
- Coinbase boosts investment in India’s CoinDCX, valuing exchange at $2.45BCoinbase's latest investment lifts CoinDCX's valuation from $2.15 billion to $2.45 billion.
- EVs take a backseat in Stellantis’ $13B US investment planFive new vehicles and a four-cylinder engine will be developed and produced through 2029 as part of investment into factories in Illinois, Ohio, Michigan, and Indiana.
- Sam Altman says ChatGPT will soon allow erotica for adult usersOpenAI says it will soon roll back some of ChatGPT's safeguards, and even allow the chatbot to engage in erotica for adult users.
- At Starbase, SpaceX is taking firefighting into its own handsSpaceX's company town has formed a volunteer fire department, extending control over both the emergency response and permitting process as the company looks to expand Starbase.