Google’s fast-growing tool for searching job listings has been a boon for employers and job boards starving for candidates, but several rival job-finding services contend anti-competitive behavior has fueled its rise and cost them users and profits.

In a letter to be sent to European Union competition
commissioner Margrethe Vestager on Tuesday
and seen by Reuters, 23 job search
websites in Europe called on her to temporarily order Google to stop playing
unfairly while she investigates.
Similar to worldwide leader Indeed and other search services
familiar to job seekers, Google’s tool links to postings aggregated from many
employers. It lets candidates filter, save and get alerts about openings,
though they must go elsewhere to apply.
Alphabet Inc’s Google places a large widget for the 2-year-old
tool at the top of results for searches such as “call center jobs” in most of
the world.
Some rivals allege that positioning is illegal because Google is
using its dominance to attract users to its specialized search offering without
the traditional marketing investments they have to make.
Other job technology firms say Google has restored industry
innovation and competition.
The tensions expose a new front in the battle between Google and
online publishers reliant on search traffic, just as EU and U.S. antitrust
regulators heed calls to scrutinize tech giants including Google. Google so far
over the last decade has withstood similar accusations from companies in local
business and travel search.
Vestager, who has been examining job search on Google, leaves
office Oct. 31. But a person familiar with the review told Reuters that
Vestager is preparing an “intensive” handover so that her successor does not
drop it. Her office declined to comment on the handoff.
Lack of action could spur Tuesday’s signatories, which include
British site Best Jobs Online to German peers Intermedia and Jobindex, to
follow with formal complaints against Google to Vestager, a person familiar
with the matter said.
Berlin-based StepStone GmbH, which operates 30 job websites
globally, and another German search service already have taken that step,
another person said.
The Federal Trade Commission and Department of Justice, which
are examining online competition in the United States, declined to comment on
whether they are probing Google’s jobs search.
Industry executives universally expect that Google will sell ads
in the jobs tool, as is typical for its services, enabling the world’s biggest
seller of online ads to claw billions of dollars in revenue from rivals.
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Google long has been frustrated by other search engines filling
its results, because they both add a step in users’ quest for quick information
and pose a threat to its ads empire.
Nick Zakrasek, senior product manager for Google search, said
that the company welcomed the industry feedback on jobs search. Google said its
offering addresses previous antitrust complaints by allowing rival search
services to participate and includes a feature in Europe designed to give
rivals prominence.
“Any provider - from individual employers to job listing
platforms - can utilize this feature in search, and many of them have seen a
significant increase in the number of job applications they receive,” Zakrasek
said in a statement. “By improving the search experience for jobs, we’re able
to deliver more traffic to sites across the web and support a healthy job
search ecosystem.”
DIVISIVE TOOL
Google includes jobs only from websites that follow its guidelines,
which require postings to be structured such that its computers can easily
interpret them. Many leading players have conformed.
For instance, Weston, Massachusetts-based Monster Worldwide Inc
has implored customers through training materials to list salary ranges and
jobsite addresses on postings in hopes that following Google’s guidelines for
such items will generate more clicks.
Monster had lost users in recent years because poor website
formatting left it with low placement in regular Google results, its Chief
Executive Scott Gutz said. The new tool gave Monster a path back to the top.
- Reuters




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