Piercy, Cameron W.Lee, Sun Kyong (Sunny)2020-11-162020-11-162020-10-26Piercy CW, Lee SK (Sunny). Reconsidering ‘Ties’: The Sociotechnical Job Search Network. International Journal of Business Communication. October 2020. doi:10.1177/2329488420965680https://hdl.handle.net/1808/30852This study explored how job seekers perceived human and technological sources in their sociotechnical ego-networks. United States residents (N = 285) who had sought jobs in the past 2 years responded to questions about their perceptions of sources used during the job search (n = 1297). Participants rated each source they used across a variety of perceived attributes. We measured tie strength using an amalgam of frequency of interaction and closeness, and strong tie sources included humans contacted online and in-person as well as websites. In contrast, the weakest tie sources were direct online application, employment agencies, and career events. Results showed a newly developed perceived bridging scale, social support, ease of access, and homophily were all positively related to tie strength. Influence was negatively related to tie strength. Information quality was not related to tie strength. We discuss implications for network and job search research, theory, and practice.Copyright © 2020, © SAGE Publicationshttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/Computer-mediated communicationJob searchEgo-networkSociotechnical networkBridgingStrength of weak tiesReconsidering ‘Ties’: The Sociotechnical Job Search NetworkArticle10.1177/2329488420965680https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1431-3086This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.openAccess