Want to see our job search data?
We pulled together a sample set of around 100 job searches into a database.
I've attached a screenshot taken in August 2024.
Here's a key:
1. Perceived Salary Increase: This column represents the increase in salary that the customer perceives they have gained as a result of using the service. The data is gathered by answering how much additional income the customer made because they used Relentless as suggested by customer interviews or written communication.
Note: This does not ask "how much more money are you making relative to your past job?" but "If you ran your job search on your own, how much money do you think the offer you accepted would have paid you?"
2. Perceived speed increase in months: This column represents the increase in the speed of achieving milestones, measured in months. The data is gathered by answering how many months the customer saved because they used Relentless as suggested by customer interviews or written communication.
3. Perceived hours saved: This column quantifies the number of hours the customer perceives they have saved due to the service. The data is gathered by answering how many hours the customer saved because they used Relentless as suggested by customer interviews or written communication.
4. Total compensation received: This column lists the total compensation amount that the customer has received. This is sometimes a mix of salary, bonuses, and equity although sometimes it's just the base salary the customer received.
5. Days needed to get a job: This column calculates the time taken from joining the service to receiving an offer.
Here's a few interesting insights:
1. All our outcomes have outliers - 409 day job searches and 4MN dollar offers happen.
2. We select people with more ambitious goals. Our average candidate's income is 5X the national average.
3. Our data may skew negative relative to the standard population.
People typically apply to work with us because "traditional" methods aren't generating optimal results for them or because they don't have the time to run their search so we have "harder" searches than what might exist in a random sample of the population.
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