Type of business | Public |
---|---|
Type of site
|
Job search engine |
Available in | Multilingual |
Traded as | : MWW |
Founded | January 1994 |
Headquarters | Weston, Massachusetts, U.S. |
Founder(s) | Jeff Taylor |
Key people | Mark Stoever (CEO) |
Industry | Internet |
Services | Online employment |
Revenue | US$770 million (2014) |
Employees | 4,000 (2014) |
Parent |
Randstad Holding (2016–present) |
Slogan(s) | "Your calling is calling" "Find Better" |
Website |
www www |
Alexa rank | 868 (March 2015[update]) |
Commercial | Yes |
Registration | Required |
Current status | Active |
Monster.com is an employment website based in the United States which is owned and operated by Monster Worldwide, Inc. It was created in 1999 through the merger of The Monster Board (TMB) and Online Career Center (OCC). Monster is primarily used to help those seeking work to find job openings, for lower to mid-level employment, that match their skills and location.
Monster.com is one of the most trafficked employment websites in the United States as ranked by Alexa (see the Alexa ranking in the infobox to the right, as compared to other employment websites). In October 2010, Indeed.com passed Monster.com to become the largest job site in the United States. A provider of rankings of the amount of unique viewers per month—comScore Inc—in January 2013, ranks Monster.com third behind Indeed.com and Careerbuilder.com, which is not far behind Indeed.com. Monster.com is one of the largest job search engines in the world. In 2008, Monster had over a million job postings at any time and over 1 million resumes, in the database and over 63 million job seekers per month. The company has approximately 5,000 employees on its payroll in 36 countries. Monster is headquartered is in Weston, MA in the United States.
Monster also maintained the Monster Employment Index.
Jeff Taylor founded The Monster Board and served as CEO and "Chief Monster" for many years.
Jeff Taylor contracted Christopher Caldwell of Net Daemons Associates to develop a facility in an NDA lab on a Sun Microsystems SPARCstation 5 where job seekers could search a job database with a web browser. The machine was moved to sit under a router in a phone closet in Adion (a human resources company owned by Taylor) when the site went live in April 1994.