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Simply type your question or job search query in natural language. JobLeap’s AI understands context and intent, so you don’t need to use specific keywords or formats.

Simple Query Examples

Find me entry-level data scientist positions in New York
Just ask naturally! You don’t need to worry about exact phrasing or keywords. JobLeap understands variations like “jobs”, “positions”, “roles”, and “opportunities” interchangeably.

Advanced Search Techniques

Refine your searches by including specific criteria in your queries:

Location Preferences

Specify where you want to work:
Data analyst jobs in San Francisco

Salary Requirements

Include compensation expectations:
DevOps engineer roles paying above $120,000

Experience Level

Specify your career stage:
Entry-level frontend developer positions

Skills and Technologies

Mention specific technical requirements:
Python developer jobs also requiring JavaScript

Company Preferences

Filter by organization type or characteristics:
Software engineer roles at early-stage startups

Exclusion Criteria

Tell JobLeap what you don’t want:
Data analyst jobs that don't require SQL

Complex Multi-Criteria Searches

Combine multiple criteria in a single query:
Remote senior data engineer positions at healthcare startups
using Python and SQL, paying above $140k, that don't require
a Master's degree

Search Tips

Begin with a general query like “data scientist jobs” then use follow-up questions to add filters:
  1. “Data scientist jobs”
  2. “What about ones in New York?”
  3. “Show me only remote positions”
  4. “Filter for roles not requiring a PhD”
Don’t overthink it. JobLeap understands:
  • Questions: “What are the best remote developer jobs?”
  • Commands: “Find me entry-level analyst positions”
  • Descriptions: “I’m looking for product manager roles at startups”
JobLeap remembers your conversation. You can reference previous searches:
  • “What about senior-level?”
  • “Show me similar roles in Boston”
  • “Which of these don’t require on-site work?”
If results aren’t quite right, rephrase your query:
  • “Software engineer” → “Full-stack developer” → “Backend engineer”
  • “AI roles” → “Machine learning positions” → “Deep learning jobs”
Be clear about requirements:
  • Must-have: “Python developer jobs requiring React experience”
  • Nice-to-have: “Python developer jobs, preferably with React”

Example Conversation Flow

See how a real search might evolve:
1

Initial Query

You: “Data analyst jobs in Texas”JobLeap: Returns 50+ results with AI summary about the Texas data analyst market
2

Narrow by Salary

You: “What about ones paying over $80,000?”JobLeap: Filters to 25 results meeting salary requirement
3

Add Skill Requirement

You: “Which of these use Python instead of just Excel?”JobLeap: Narrows to 12 Python-focused analyst roles
4

Focus on Remote

You: “Show me only the fully remote positions”JobLeap: Final list of 5 remote Python data analyst jobs in Texas paying $80k+
5

Research Companies

You: “Tell me about the company culture at [Company Name]”JobLeap: Provides company profile with reviews, culture info, and insights

Search Modifiers

Use these patterns for specific search types:

Comparison Searches

Compare software engineer salaries: San Francisco vs. Seattle
What's the difference between data analyst and data scientist roles?

Trend Searches

What companies are hiring the most ML engineers right now?
Which skills are most in-demand for product managers?

Advisory Searches

What skills should I learn to become a data engineer?
Is a bootcamp enough to get a frontend developer job?

Market Research

How competitive is the job market for entry-level analysts?
What's the typical career path for a UX designer?

Common Search Patterns

Career Switchers

“Entry-level software engineer jobs for bootcamp graduates”“Data analyst positions for people with finance backgrounds”

Specific Tech Stack

“Full-stack developer roles using React, Node.js, and PostgreSQL”“DevOps engineer jobs with Kubernetes and AWS experience”

Work-Life Balance

“Software engineer roles at companies with good work-life balance”“Remote jobs with flexible hours and no on-call”

Career Growth

“Junior positions with strong mentorship programs”“Companies known for promoting from within”

What to Avoid

Don’t use Boolean operators or special syntaxJobLeap uses natural language, not search operators. Instead of:
  • “software AND engineer NOT junior”
  • “data scientist OR machine learning”
Just say:
  • “Senior software engineer positions”
  • “Data scientist or machine learning engineer roles”
Keep it conversationalIf you’d say it to a recruiter, you can type it into JobLeap. The AI is designed to understand human language, not search syntax.

Next Steps

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