Report No. 60 79788 South Asia Human Development Sector Mobile Phone and Employment December 2011 Discussion Paper Series Report No. 60 South Asia Human Development Sector Mobile Phone and Employment December 2011 Discussion Paper Series     Discussion Papers are published to communicate the results of the World Bank’s work to the development community with the least possible delay. The typescript manuscript of this paper therefore has not been prepared in accordance with the procedures appropriate to formally edited texts. Some sources cited in the paper may be informal documents that are not readily available. The findings, interpretations, and conclusions expressed herein do not necessarily reflect the views of the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development / The World Bank and its affiliated organizations, or those of the Executive Directors of the World Bank or the governments they represent. The World Bank does not guarantee the accuracy of the data included in this work. The boundaries, colors, denominations, and other information shown on any map in this work do not imply any judgment on the part of The World Bank concerning the legal status of any territory or the endorsement or acceptance of such boundaries.     Table of Contents .......................................................................................................................................... i  Acknowledgments  1.  Introduction ......................................................................................................................................... 1  2.  Overview of the Organizations Interviewed ......................................................................................  1  3.  Value Proposition of the Use of Mobile Phone in Jobâ€?Placement Industry ..................................... 3  4.  The Use of Mobile Phone in Jobâ€?Matching Business Process ........................................................... 4  5.  Sustainability ........................................................................................................................................ 6  6.  Success Factors .................................................................................................................................... 6  7.  Risks ...................................................................................................................................................... 7  8.  Impact of the Service ...........................................................................................................................  7  9.  Case Studies .......................................................................................................................................... 8  Annex .......................................................................................................................................................... 10  References .................................................................................................................................................. 12  Tables   Table 1: Job-Matching Business Development .............................................................................. 2 Table 2: Value Propositions for Mobile-to-Web Job Matching Service ........................................ 3 Table 3: Use of Mobile Phone in Job-Matching Business.............................................................. 5 Table 4: Basic Information of Interviewed Organizations ........................................................... 10     Author   Saori Imaizumi     Acknowledgments This paper was written by Saori Imaizumi as an input for 2012 Information and Communications for Development: Maximizing Mobile report published by the World Bank in 2012. The author would like to thank all the interviewees, including Mr. Asim Fayaz (PULS), Mr. Aaron Zinman (Konbit), Mr. David M. Reich (Assured Labor), Mr. Vir Kashyap (Babajob), Dr. V.Gayathri (LabourNet), and Ms. Kristen Roggemann (Souktel) for their valuable inputs in writing this report. i    1. Introduction   Mainly three functions of the mobile phone are utilized in developing countries: (i) Voice, (ii) SMS, and (iii) Mobile Application. Through combining these functions, mobile phones have been used to collect data, provide information and services, and act as an intermediary platform to solve issues in different sectors. In regards with an employment issue, due to a coordination and information failure between the demand and supply side of the labor market, even those who are qualified and received training and education have not been able to get a job. While the demand for employment exists both in the formal and informal sectors, access to this information is limited to those who have a strong social network and references or have access to a job portal on the Internet. As a potential solution for equalizing information asymmetry, the mobile phone can act as an intermediary to connect job providers with job seekers. This paper explores six business models (Pakistan Urban Link and Support (PULS), Konbit, Babajob, Assured Labor, LabourNet, and Souktel) from the Middle East, Latin America and South Asia solving existing coordination and information failure in the labor market. Phone interviews were conducted with each organization to collect primary data in October and November 2011. 2. Overview of the Organizations Interviewed   The six organizations interviewed are positioned in a different stage of business development. Table 1 shows general steps for developing a job-matching business based on the information collected from the interviews. As the Table 1 indicates, PULS and Konbit have developed their system but have not been able to start their service yet. In the case of PULS, they are still struggling with advertising their service under their limited budget. Asim from PULS mentioned that there is a need for the service since manpower agency in Pakistan overcharges for their service and PULS can reduce the cost of job matching service dramatically. However, building trust among potential users and getting employers has been difficult. In the case of Konbit, due to a lack of employers, a service could not commence even after the completion of job seekers’ registration. Konbit recruited over 10,000 job seekers in a week through their successful marketing strategy, including the use of famous local radio personality to advertise the service on the radio, and the provision of free call-in number for registration and 3-4 minutes air time credit as an incentive through partnering with Digicel, one of the biggest telecom companies in Haiti. However, once the service was set up and the job seekers were registered, the situation has changed. Konbit was originally launched in response to an issue of low hiring rate of local labor force due to workers brought from abroad for NGOs working in Haiti. Konbit’s intention was to create a platform accessible by local Haitians to connect with available employment opportunities. Unfortunately, originally planned potential employers - NGOs and international organizations working in Haiti- did not have any job openings when the service became available. In addition, without a big presence of corporations working in Haiti, 1    jobs in private sector were also not available. Thus, Konbit is still waiting for potential employment opportunities to activate their service in the near future. On the other hand, Babajob, Assured Labor, Labournet, and Souktel are successfully running their businesses, yet most of them are still in the growth stage. Thus, organizations are focusing more on delivering a good service (i.e. increasing the number of successful job matching) and increasing the number of users. Consequently, not all the organizations have enough capacity and time to conduct user satisfaction survey or impact assessment in an organized manner. Each organization takes its own approach to assess their service. Assured Labor and Babajob measure the level of employer satisfaction by the number of repeat job posts. For instance, the reposting rate of employers using Babajob is over 40%. According to them, employers seem to be satisfied as job providers keep posting their jobs through their service and the number of registered job seekers is increasing. Labournet has conducted a simple survey to assess the level of satisfaction from the users and found that job providers are not satisfied with the level of skills that job seekers have and job seekers are also not happy with how they are treated by job providers. In order to increase the rate of satisfactory job matching, Labournet plans on providing a distance training using mobile phone for job seekers to upgrade their skill sets. In the case of Souktel, they conducted an impact assessment, results of which show positive impact from their service in Palestine. Table 1: Job-Matching Business Development 1.Software 2.Job Seeker 3.Job 4.Job 5.Service Development Registration Provider Matching Assessment Registration Service PULS (Pakistan) X In progress Konbit (Haiti) X X Babajob (India) X X X X X Assured Labor X X X X X (Nicaragua, Mexico) Labournet (India) X X X X X Souktel (Palestine, X X X X X Morocco, Somalia) 2    3. Value Proposition of the Use of Mobile Phone in Jobâ€?Placement Industry   Given the fact that those who are skilled, educated, and from relatively good socio-economic background already have access to existing web-based job matching services such as “Monster.com,â€? and they do not need extra training for fine-tuning their CVs, mobile-phone based job matching service can play an important role for those who do not have access to these services. Mobile-to-web technology will be beneficial for those who possess certain level of skills, education, and potential for conducting an entry level and low-skill jobs, but do not have enough knowledge to make a marketable CV, or access to online resources. Employers also have hard time finding low skilled workers for entry-level job in developing countries because an existing job-matching service target mainly highly skilled candidates. Thus, mobile-to-web technology can connect these gaps. As discussed in the previous section, building trust from users is the most challenging task for this business. Each organization offers additional and customized services to meet the specific needs of local users, including interview, resume writing, networking skills and training for job seekers, and access to special database for employers to assess job seekers further. Common value propositions that each organization advocates are summarized below. Table 2: Value Propositions for Mobile-to-Web Job Matching Service Target Value Propositions Audience Employers ï‚· More qualified candidates can be hired through increasing the candidate pool by expanding a recruiting channel from traditional newspaper or radio advertisements to mobile phone users ï‚· Reduce recruiting cost by switching the recruiting channel from manpower agency (ex. Rs.1,000 for middlemen and Rs. 100 for LabourNet) ï‚· Reduce recruiting time through receiving candidates’ latest information on a real time basis ï‚· Be able to hire people for entry level and low-skill level job, which is difficult to conduct with existing recruiting service ï‚· Increased hiring efficiency due to automatic match filtering that only lets those qualified ‘see’ the job posting, thus reducing applicant volume and increasing applicant quality Job Seekers ï‚· Reduce time and cost for registering their profile to find a job, which have been previously done through manpower agency, website, or paying someone to professionally create their CV ï‚· Reduce time and cost for job search by cutting a travel cost from rural to urban area and receiving job matching information via mobile phone ï‚· Increase the chance of employment through getting access to more job openings information in a quick and cost-efficient manner, and receiving advice, training and services to make their work experience and skills look more professional and attractive to employers 3    4. The Use of Mobile Phone in Jobâ€?Matching Business Process   Depending on the target job seekers and country of operation, a mobile phone is used in different aspects of a job-matching business process. While each organization has a slightly different business model, Table 3 summarizes major processes. Based on the collected data, most of the organizations use mobile phone for registration and job match notifications for job seekers. Actual job matching service is conducted mostly on the website. Also, traditional interview process is not replaced by technology. Once the employers become interested in certain candidates, they will get an access to job seekers’ information and able to contact them directly by calling to set up an interview. In regards with job seekers’ registration process, organizations’ target job seekers and employers become a determinant for the registration channels. Because most employers need a good amount of information to feel comfortable interviewing a candidate, Assured Labor’s core offering focuses on job seekers that only have sporadic access to the internet. On the contrary, in India, where multiple languages are spoken, languages become an issue for registering through SMS. Consequently, various registration methods, including calling, face-to-face, SMS and web are used to include as many job seekers as possible. Voice messages are particularly useful for recruiting job seekers who have difficulties reading and writing as seen in the case of Konbit. Among all organizations, only LabourNet provides a job-matching service in person. This is because they focus on particular industry (construction and facility management) where a group of labor force is needed and not an individual. Also, the employment opportunities in this industry happen in an unorganized manner, thus, web-based job matching service is not appropriate. 4    Table 3: Use of Mobile Phone in Job-Matching Business Business Target Tool Organizations Process PULS Konbit Assured Babajob LabourNet Souktel Labor Registration Job Mobile SMS Voice SMS & SMS, Call, SMS (used for job SMS, Voice Seeker Message WAP for Mobile Web seekers' skill assessment some and registration services, notification) Call Web Web Web Web In At the office Facilitators visit Person or through potential job seekers' field agents households and register visiting them where blue- workers live Job Mobile SMS Call SMS, Call Provider Web Web Web Web Web Web In Business development Person team reaches job providers Job Job Mobile Mobile SMS, Call Matching/ Seeker/ Application Searching Provider Web Web Web Web Web Web Web In Staff brings job seekers Person who are assessed as a group to livelihood camps called Job Camp to conduct matching with employers. Employer usually want to hire people as a group due to the nature of the construction industry Job Job Mobile SMS SMS SMS, Call SMS, Call SMS, Voice Message SMS/Voice Matching Seeker Notification Web Email, Web 5    5. Sustainability   In terms of sustainability, in order to become profitable, targeting business sector instead of households as job providers seem to be a key. Especially, business from formal sector will be important. In fact, Assured Labor and Babajob changed their target sector from informal to formal in order to become more commercially viable. As a source of revenue, Babajob, LabourNet and Souktel use SMS user fees, which require a certain volume of users to make the organizations sustainable. Assured Labor charges Medium and Large businesses and offers a free service to Small and Medium Business and candidates. Already a commercially sustainable organization, Souktel, takes a franchise model to get more stable revenue. In this model, any local organization in developing countries can pay for the franchise fee to use Souktel’s software and service, and generate certain amount of revenues through membership fees from potential users. While commercial viability is important, inclusion of informal sector labor market and low- income job seekers is also needed for a social purpose. Government can potentially collaborate with one of these commercially sustainable companies to let them provide the same service for informal sector and less educated and lower-income population through providing subsidies. This approach could also tackle the issues of low employment rate of graduates from public vocational and technical training centers and schools. 6. Success Factors   The main challenge of the job-matching business is to make users use their service and expand the business efficiently. Thus, success factors boil down to actions overcoming this issue: effective marketing, trust building, and partnership building. Although its business has not been in operation yet, Konbit was successful in getting job seekers – 10,000 in one month-. As a trust building and marketing strategy, they used local famous radio personality, Bob Lemoine, to advertise their service. In addition, through partnering with Digicel, Konbit gained access to promote their service to Digicel’s existing customers and could provide financial incentive such as a free call number for Digicel customers and a free airtime credit purchased at a reduced rate from Digicel. With media coverage, Konbit’s service received further attentions and successfully increased the number of job seekers registering for the service. In order to increase the number of users, partnering with local organization is also a key. Souktel partnered with local universities and the head of the student organizations to advertise their service at career fairs and other career-related events. Babajob and Assured Labor also partnered with local telecom companies to advertise their services through their branch offices. Additionally, Assured Labor has partnered with Media Companies, Universities and NGOs to impact more individuals. Babajob is trying to expand their partnership to non-telecom companies, including microfinance institutions, retailers and payment/distribution networks to tap into their existing clients to advertise their services. 6    7. Risks   Main risk of this business is to lose trust from users. Currently, almost all organizations do not conduct due diligence of job seekers. Although LabourNet does conduct assessment of job seekers, there is a risk of providing unqualified workers. Also, there is a risk of unsatisfactory matching between job seekers and employers. In order to mitigate this risk and increase the rate of successful matching, many organizations started to include training services for job seekers and job seekers’ identity and skills verification service through collaborating with training organizations and other local organizations. 8. Impact of the Service   Except for Souktel, impact of the service has not been measured in each organization as they still focus on expanding their business and getting more users. Taking Souktel as an example, positive outcomes are observed in the reduction in time spent looking for employment (from average 12 weeks to 1 week or less for Souktel), wage increase (64% of matched Palestine job- seekers surveyed in 2009 reported a 50% increase in mean monthly wages, from avg. $500/month to avg. $750/month), and reduction in hiring costs and time (70% of Palestine employers surveyed in 2009 reported a 50% of greater reduction in hiring costs and time, and 75% of the same sample confirmed a mean 5% increase in annual profits, after hiring staff through JobMatch). Since other organizations have not conducted a tracer study yet, only measurement used has been the number of repeating users both from job seekers and providers and satisfaction survey. As the more impact assessment will be conducted in the future, more impact will be revealed from this service. 7    9. Case Studies   Case 1: Souktel; JobMatch Founded in 2005 by graduate fellows at Harvard University, MIT, and the Arab-American University of Jenin (Palestine), Souktel launched a trial service in 2007 in Palestine. Within a year of pilot use by 400 new college graduates, 25% of users found work and internships and more than 60% of employers using the service cut the recruiting time and cost by 50%. With a $100K grant from the World Bank, they launched the service on four Palestinian college campuses, in partnership with the country’s Ministry of Education. Currently, they run their service in Palestine, franchises in Somalia, Morocco, UAE, and are in progress of launching in Egypt and Rwanda. Souktel was launched to solve the problem in the labor markets – a lack of tools to connect employers and job seekers-. Leveraging the high penetration rate of mobile phones, Souktel developed a job information software platform to link job seekers with employers via mobile phone. The name comes from "souk," the Arabic word for "marketplace," and "tel," or "telephone. Although at least 80 percent of people in Palestine have access to mobile phones, most people have Internet access only in cafés or public places. In addition, traveling from rural to urban area for job search was costly. Thus, Souktel’s JobMatch service helped solve these issues. One of the unique characteristics of Souktel is its franchise business model. Souktel took this model to achieve a rapid growth into new markets between 2008 and 2009. Each country uses a customized version of the JobMatch platform for a franchise fee and a recurrent annual support fee. In return, per-use revenue from local user fees charged to job-seekers and employers accrue to the franchisee, helping to ensure each franchise’s long-term cost coverage and sustainability. As a way of measuring the impact, Souktel uses various approaches: 1) Weekly database tracking of service use (searches, match requests, job alerts). 2) Monthly phone surveys of “matchedâ€? job-seekers and employers. 3) Bi-annual “match retention “phone surveys; institutional partner surveys. While they also face challenges, such as working with different mobile carriers and the cost of SMS, their service has been bringing positive impacts in the labor market. Source: Author Interview with Souktel, http://www.slideshare.net/guest923d97/souktel-jobmatch-overview 8    Case 2: Babajob Inspired by the paper entitled “Escaping Poverty and Becoming Poor: Who Gains, Who Loses, and Whyâ€? by Anirudh Krishna from Duke University, a former employee at Microsoft, Sean Blagsvedt founded Babajob in 2007. Through this paper, he learned that income diversification is the key for getting out from the poverty trap and decided to create a village version of professional online networking site, LinkedIn.com. He first started a social networking site for base of the pyramid customers called Babalife to connect people to get jobs through their references and word-of-mouth. However, he realized that job matching not only comes from connection, but also needs to take languages, skills type, salary, and timing into considerations. As a result, Babajob was launched, providing a more specialized job-matching service. Compared to other similar services, Babajob’s approach is the most inclusive for job seekers as seen in the number of available registration options for job seekers. As a face-to-face registration, they not only use telecom’s branch offices to advertise their service, but also visit where blue-class workers live to explain their services face-to-face. If the job seekers are illiterate, they can also listen to automated voice messages by calling Babajob and following their service menu, including registration, job information and changing their profile and etc. Once job seekers are registered, employers can search for potential employees by looking at skill sets, pictures and preference of working location, and availability. Once employers find the candidates, they can set up an interview by calling them and/or sending text messages. Final hiring process still happens in a traditional hiring manner, such as face-to-face or phone interviews, but the users are satisfied with Babajob’s service as they can reduce the time and cost of finding and hiring the right person and can also replace one employee to another if they are not satisfied with the quality of workers. The main challenge facing Babajob is to scale up their business and get the word out. Although increasing media coverage has helped them become more visible, their challenge is to attract a more diverse set of job seekers and becoming more sustainable. 9    Annex   Table 4: Basic Information of Interviewed Organizations PULS Konbit Assured Labor Babajob LabourNet Souktel Founded Year 2010 2010 2008 2007 2005 2005 Type of Non-Profit Non-Profit For Profit For Profit Non-Profit Social For-Profit with NGO Organization Enterprise derived from entity in Palestine that an initiative of MAYA manages Palestine (Movement for portfolio Alternatives and Youth Awareness), a NGO Based in Pakistan Boston New York India India Palestine Target Country Pakistan Haiti Nicaragua, Mexico India India Palestine, Morocco, (Latin America) Somalia, Egypt, Uganda (Middle East and North Africa) # of Registered Job 0 10,000 225,000 (Mexico) 220,000 100,000 12,000+ (Palestine) Seekers # of Registered Job 0 0 Undisclosed 44,000 45,000 600 Providers Revenue Source Unknown University Employer Posting fees Job seeker usage fee billed via External funds, fees Franchise fee of their grants and PSMS revenue telecom provider. Fees from from job seekers (Rs. system and a recurrent Employers for premium 150-400) annual support fee services and database access. Profile of Job Working Poor (skilled Illiterate and Age 20-28, 50% of Majority of job seekers are in Age 18-45 mostly men Age 20-25, College seekers but undereducated literate them not graduated their mid-20s since this service graduate domestic workers from college. focuses on construction (cooks, drivers, guards, and facility gardeners, tailors etc), >50% have graduated management sector independent labors, and from high school. which mainly hire men. self-employed craft Job seekers mainly 10    PULS Konbit Assured Labor Babajob LabourNet Souktel people ) come from rural area to get jobs in urban area Profile of Job Informal and formal NGO and Formal sector (local Started with household jobs Informal sector Multinational providers sector Educated Elite Government branch offices of such as maids, drivers and (LabourNet focuses on corporations including (tertiary educated organizations, multinational cooks, but now shifted to unorganized sector HP, MIT and Deloitte employers and formal- and third-party companies and local business. Retail, sales, and including construction in Palestine. Internship sector professionals) employers mom-and-pop shops) marketing industry are the and facility and part-time Mostly Operations, major job opportunity (need management sector) opportunities will be Administration and for deliverer, payment also provided soon. Sales positions collector, warehouse packing people) Extra Service N/A N/A For Employers: For Employers: Feature their For Job Seekers: Provision other than Verify identification of job posting to be able to hire Provision of ID card, matching job seekers, assistance faster, provide job seekers’ bank account, insurance with interview process police verification and health coverage, social insurance listing for protection, skills For Job Seekers: Skill employees assessment, distance building for job search learning through mobile process (at no For Job Seekers: Mentor phone (planned) additional cost). Also, Program in which middlemen English language and would be paid for connecting computer skill training job seekers with employers through partnerships with local organizations and training institutions 11    References   References Assured Labor: http://www.assuredlabor.com/, http://www.empleolisto.com.mx Babajob: http://www.babajob.com/ Konbit: http://konbit.media.mit.edu/ LabourNet: http://labnet.in/web/ PULS: http://puls.pk/home.php Souktel: http://www.souktel.org/ Interviewees Assured Labor: David M. Reich, Founder & CEO, Assured Labor, Inc. Babajob: Vir Kashyap, COO, Babajob Konbit: Aaron Zinman, Founder, Konbit LabourNet: Dr. V.Gayathri, CEO, LabourNet Services India Private Limited PULS: Asim Fayaz, Project Coordinator, PULS Souktel: Kristen Roggemann, Team Leader - Client Outreach, Souktel, Inc. 12  Â