Most job postings read like an internal HR document leaked into the wild: a wall of generic requirements, a vague company blurb, and a salary range conspicuously absent. Then employers wonder why the only people who apply are wildly under- or overqualified.
The candidates you actually want decide whether to read past the first paragraph in under 30 seconds. Structure is what earns those 30 seconds. Below is a 7-part anatomy that works, followed by a teardown of how Airbnb does it across hundreds of roles, plus a checklist you can run before publishing.
The 7-part anatomy
1. What your company does, in one sentence
One sentence a smart stranger could repeat to a friend. "We sell payroll software to Thai SMEs" beats "we are a leading technology-enabled solutions provider." If a candidate skimming twelve postings can't tell what you do from your opening line, they skip you.
2. Why your company exists
Name the problem you are solving and why it matters, in one short paragraph. Not a fluffy mission statement, a real tension. Quality candidates use this section to decide whether your work matters to them, and self-select out if it doesn't, which saves everyone time.
3. Why this role exists
The single most-skipped section, and the biggest reason quality candidates lose interest. In two or three sentences, tell them what triggered the hire: a new market launch, a process breaking under scale, a senior departure. "We are hiring a Senior Backend Engineer to lead the payments rebuild as we expand into Vietnam and Indonesia" tells a candidate the scope and stakes. "Join our growing team" tells them nothing.
4. What you'll actually do
Replace generic responsibilities with three to six concrete tasks the person will own. Compare:
- Generic: "Manage social media campaigns and analyze performance metrics."
- Concrete: "Own the LINE OA campaign calendar end-to-end. Plan four campaigns a month, brief the design team, ship the broadcasts, and present results to the head of marketing."
The first filters nobody. The second filters in people who can do the work.
5. Requirements, tiered
Long undifferentiated lists shrink your applicant pool to people who either ignore the list or match it perfectly. Split into two:
- Must-have (3 to 5 genuine deal-breakers). If you can't defend why an item is here, move it down.
- Nice-to-have (3 to 5 items that accelerate ramp-up but aren't required).
This is the single highest-leverage change you can make: it gives candidates permission to apply when they have most but not all of what you want.
6. Compensation and what makes the job worth taking
Post a salary range. Quality candidates assume "competitive salary" means "below market and we know it." Then list what genuinely makes the job attractive: equity, the team, the technical stack, the customer base, real flexibility. Skip table-stakes items (health insurance, paid leave) unless yours is meaningfully better than market.
7. Location, schedule, and how to apply
Be specific. "Bangkok-based, hybrid, Tuesdays and Thursdays in office" beats "flexible work arrangements." Close with one link, one form, the minimum fields. Each extra hoop loses applicants.
What Airbnb gets right
Pull up any open Airbnb role and the same shape repeats every time, with the same section names. Six things they do that most companies miss:
1. A fixed company paragraph at the top
Every posting opens with the same paragraph: the 2007 founding story, today's host and guest numbers, one line about the mission. Identical across hundreds of roles. Candidates who already know the company skim it, candidates who don't get a 30-second briefing. Write yours once, reuse everywhere, refresh once a year.
2. Section names written in the second person
Not "Responsibilities" and "Requirements" but:
- The Community You Will Join (the team)
- The Difference You Will Make (the role's impact)
- A Typical Day (responsibilities)
- Your Expertise (requirements)
- How We'll Take Care of You (compensation and benefits)
Same information, different psychology. "A Typical Day" puts the candidate in the role; "Responsibilities" puts the company on the page. Senior candidates notice.
3. Tiered requirements: Critical, Superpower, Ideal
Their "Your Expertise" section explicitly labels each requirement as Critical (deal-breakers), Superpower (rare skills that make a candidate stand out), or Ideal (accelerators, not required). Most companies dump twelve bullets into one list. Airbnb tells the candidate which lines actually matter, which is the difference between a qualified applicant applying and one self-rejecting.
4. A real "Difference You Will Make" section
This is where Airbnb says, in two or three sentences, what changes because the person takes the role: scope, stakes, cadence. From an Account Executive posting: "converting leads into net-new supply to support new-market launches", said with the quarterly cadence and full-funnel ownership baked in. Most postings spend a paragraph saying less.
5. Candid compensation context
"How We'll Take Care of You" doesn't bury the range. It explains how the range is set (training, transferable skills, experience, market), then publishes the actual range. Candidates respect the candor and self-select on real numbers.
6. Inclusion at the bottom, not the top
The final non-logistics section is "Our Commitment to Inclusion & Belonging." It lands where the candidate is deciding whether to apply, not at the top where it would feel performative. By the time someone reads it, they have already decided the role is interesting, and the inclusion statement removes the final hesitation.
Mistakes that scare off quality candidates
- Ninja, rockstar, guru. Filters in candidates who think these words are normal.
- "5+ years experience" with no context. Years is the laziest possible proxy. Specify what kind of experience, in what kind of environment.
- "Competitive salary." Means "below market and we know it" about 70 percent of the time.
- The same About Us at the bottom of every posting. If it's reusable across roles, it's not actually about this role.
- Application forms with 18 fields and a cover letter. Each field beyond name, email, resume, and one short answer cuts your applicant pool.
The 60-second pre-publish checklist
- Could a stranger explain what your company does after the first sentence?
- Have you said why this specific role exists, not just that the team is growing?
- Are responsibilities concrete tasks, not generic verbs?
- Are requirements split into must-have and nice-to-have, five or fewer in each?
- Is there a salary range?
- Is the location, schedule, and work model specific?
- Is the application one link, one form, minimum fields?
Yes to all seven puts your posting in the top 5 percent of what candidates see this week.
Where to publish
A well-structured posting on the wrong platform still underperforms. For hiring in Thailand, see our companion guide: 9 Best Websites for Posting Free Jobs in Thailand.
WorkVenture supports the structured, detailed format this guide describes, with no character limits and no fees for up to 15 active roles. Start posting your job free and put the framework into practice.