You have probably noticed some big changes at our website, http://www.naturejobs.com. It's undergone a major redesign. With the help of a hard-working web-development crew, we hope we've created a strong, navigable, user-friendly, aesthetically pleasing online presence. We expect the site not only to provide useful content and job-search resources, but also to act as a portal to the careers and workforce news found elsewhere in Nature.

First, we reorganized content and added some new sections. Our online careers editorial content is in a section called News & comment. Latest stories are easier to find and the archive is easier to navigate, using keywords and categories such as sector (academia, government, industry, nonprofit or private). Towards the bottom of News & comment, we list career-related articles appearing elsewhere in Nature.

Career toolkit is a new page with sections on mentoring, networking, salaries, presentation, interview skills and 'ask the expert'. The content, some still in development, will include both past and new Naturejobs articles. It will also include practical tips, such as how to deliver an outstanding science presentation.

Our World map has improved significantly; we've made it easier to zoom in on and explore career content by region of choice.

Care to share your thoughts on science careers? Our new homepage poll asks readers to weigh in on timely career-related issues, and instantly displays the results. Although, of course, it's non-scientific, we hope this feature may provide some insight — or at least a bit of fun. Please feel free to suggest questions, whether serious or light-hearted. And we've made our interactive careers-advice forum more accessible. Postings appear simultaneously in a box on the Naturejobs homepage as well as on Nature Network, where the forum first started. Join in and offer your own perspectives at http://tinyurl.com/4slo5n.

We hope you can more easily find the job, the advice and the analysis you're looking for. But as with any large web project, there are, no doubt, tweaks and improvements to be made. As always, we welcome your feedback.