Bluecrew has been connected to Offshore Hub with a clear lesson for the wider scraping strategy: the listing page is not always enough. Some sources only show summary information in the first overview. The richer vacancy data may sit inside the individual detail page. For a job platform that wants useful cards, this matters. A title alone is not always enough for a candidate to understand whether a role is relevant.
The Bluecrew workflow therefore uses the overview page for discovery and the detail page for additional context. This gives Offshore Hub a better chance of presenting role information, descriptions, dates and metadata in a cleaner way. It also reduces the risk of mobile and desktop showing different quality because both views can rely on the same structured data once it has been collected.

A better job card starts with better extraction
A good job card should help the user make a quick decision. Is this my trade? Is it offshore, wind, vessel, fishing or another category? Is there a deadline? Which company or source owns the vacancy? Is there enough information to open the listing? When source pages hide key details one click deeper, Offshore Hub needs to account for that.
This is why Bluecrew is more than just another source in the list. It has helped shape how Offshore Hub thinks about data quality. Scraping can discover vacancies, but presentation requires interpretation. The same discipline can be applied to other sources over time where detail pages offer better descriptions than overview cards.
The next step is to keep improving consistency between the desktop and mobile views. Candidates should not see raw text on one device and polished data on another. Once a listing has been processed, the same structured fields should support every view of the site.



