Understanding the job market gives you an advantage
More than just crawled listings. We track the health of the job market itself: how many roles are open, where they are, and which sources they're on. Updated every 12 hours as the scraper runs, so you can see the latest trends as they emerge.
These companies have money
Companies that closed funding in the last 90 days. Where the budgets just landed.
Understand the labor market
Unemployment, participation, JOLTS. Every official labor metric, country by country.
The numbers the headlines won't tell you
Negative real wages, hidden slack, and where the jobs actually went. The editorial cut on US labor.
What does your role pay?
Median and 10th percentile annual wages for ~100 occupations across every US state. BLS OES.
Dig deep on layoffs
WARN-Act filings across 45 US states, plus daily workers-affected counts. Layoff signal in real time.
Where the services jobs went
Stacked services-sector employment by country, 1991 onward. ILOSTAT survey data. The offshoring story in one chart.
Tracking higher education
University enrollment by country and level, plus the bilateral flow of students across borders. UNESCO and World Bank data.
Where did the junior jobs go?
Software, devops, and creative hiring by seniority, and how entry-level roles fared as AI spread. Live board data plus Indeed Hiring Lab.
What jobs are most likely to be remote?
A heatmap of remote-or-hybrid share by industry and job family, from our live board. Darker means more flexible.
Jobs in our database
Every job posting we've crawled and saved since we started. The line going up is the size of our archive, not the number of jobs you could apply to today (the "currently open" tile above is what you could apply to right now). The slope tells you how fast we're finding new listings to add.
Lifetime count as of the last scrape, 12-hour refresh cadence. Sources: 52 ATS platforms (Greenhouse, Lever, Ashby, Workday, and others), the major aggregators (USAJobs, Adzuna, YC Work at a Startup), and government job boards. The line is cumulative, with each prior day back-computed from today's lifetime total minus subsequent additions.