So JobVent.com was recently profiled by TechCrunch. Not the most flattering review, but in the case of JobVent.com there’s no such thing as bad press. The TechCrunch review led to one being written by a Salon.com blogger, which was a little more forgiving.
A lot of the comments regarding JobVent.com were that the design is terrible. I’ll be the first one to admit that. I’m not a web designer. I’m a developer. But don’t get me wrong; in the development and maintenance of JobVent.com there has definitely been a design philosophy that we’ve kept to, and I think it has served us well. That philosophy has been: keep it simple.
No, JobVent does not look like your typical Web 2.0 style site. I do not use flashy icons that look like glossy 3-D buttons. JobVent is about information, and that is exactly what is presented: raw, un-edited information provided by JobVent.com visitors. I’ll want to eventually update the design to make it appealing to a broader audience, but 1) my own design skills are somewhat lacking to make this a reality 2) JobVent.com doesn’t exactly earn enough in ad revenue to support even the smallest of redesign contracts 3) I’m incredibly busy with other stuff right now such as PicMe
The design shouldn’t be an issue anyway: look at Craigslist.com. I tried to use pretty much the same design elements as Craigslist when I initially put JobVent.com online: simple text based links to accomplish everything you want on the site. And you know what? It works. There are thousands of reviews about thousands of companies on the site; if JobVent.com were designed truly poorly, the site wouldn’t have the needed to functionality to obtain all those reviews from non-technical users all over the internet.
On the competitive front, the listing by TechCrunch and Salon.com helped traffic. A lot. For about 2 days. Traffic is still a little higher than normal, but for 2 days or so we had about 3 times as much as our usual traffic. I actually thought a listing like that would have resulted in more, but Google analytics tells me otherwise.