
Developers: Everything you need to incorporate O*NET information into your application can be found in the O*NET Resource Center, including URLs for linking directly to O*NET OnLine and code for O*NET web services. For detailed study, download the database itself to directly view the data, as well as statistical metadata describing the quality of the information. Researchers: The Research and Technical Reports section contains over 30 papers on the development and evolution of the O*NET database and tools and scores of other papers on specific O*NET topics. Learn more about occupations using O*NET OnLine. Business: The O*NET Toolkit for Business contains examples and case studies illustrating how O*NET information can help you with writing job descriptions or human resource planning. If you've already got an occupation in mind, learn more about it from the occupational profiles, including necessary skills, education, and certification. Students: Discover occupations you might enjoy, by taking the Interest Profiler assessment located at My Next Move. If you need to find an O*NET profile for an existing job, try the keyword search at O*NET Code Connector.
For self-directed career exploration, My Next Move is a great starting point.
Counselors: Connect people to appropriate occupations with resources like the Career Exploration Tools and O*NET OnLine.Below are possible user groups and how they can engage the system: O*NET information is relevant to many different audiences.