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    Start Spreading the News! Nursing Jobs in New York
    If someone would have told me ten years ago that I could get paid to move to New York City, have my rent paid for me, make almost double my hourly rate plus a several thousand dollar bonus for committing to live there for three months I would have said they were crazy. But that is exactly the situation I now find myself in as I consider my next assignment as a traveling nurse in New York City. Wow! New York City!Before I take any new assignment as a traveling nurse, I always write down the pros and cons of the new assignment. This one was easy. Yankee Stadium, The Empire State Building, Central Park (I hear A-Rod walks around with no shirt on), Lady Liberty, shopping, restaurants. The list is endless.So I'll ask you. Should I go to New York
    whatever else, contracting is a great way to figure out your calling. If you start out on contract doing design work and you hate it, then once the assignment is over, you can eliminate ‘design’ from your checklist and move on to the next discipline.

    The Joys of Contract Work

    There are so many perks to working contract it’s almost hard to address them all! Here is a small sample:
    •New companies/industries year after year
    •You set your pay raises (but you still have to be realistic!)
    •Seeing different parts of the world (if you choose to be a National Contractor)
    •Building a network of dozens of hiring managers and recruiters
    •Reference letters! Everyone loves people saying nice things about them, why not have a big collection of them!
    •If y

    Merchandise Tags to Create a Buying Environment
    Merchandising tags or price tags though small in size play a crucial role in imparting significant information regarding the price of the item to the consumer apart from other things. Good quality and well designed merchandise tags create a positive impression in the mind of the user about the product. Merchandise tags also help the manufacturers and retailers to track their inventory. The design of the merchandising tags must depend on the item it needs to be attached to. For example, merchandise tags for ladies product must use nice feminine colors while those for children item must use bright, vibrant colors. Also a merchandise tag for a product meant for old people must use a large text font so that it is easily readable by the buyer and those for men
    Why do you think you need a direct hire in order to make a living? It seems that 99% of ‘direct hire’ job seekers are looking for security above everything else. But the truth of the matter is that over the past 2-3 years the bulk of companies in America experienced a slowdown and were forced to layoff both contract employees as well as direct employees; but when things started coming back around in 2004, guess who those same companies hired back first….the contractors!

    Contract hire work is often times a different line item on a company’s budget than a direct hire employee. Companies can hire contractors without having to pay their benefits, unemployment insurance, holiday & vacation pay, (usually the recruiting firm pays for these items) or match their 401k plan. This makes hiring contractors a relatively easy and painless task for a company going through a slowdown. The projects/work might not be as plentiful, but they still need employees in order to do it!

    Have you ever been with a company as a direct hire and fantasize about NOT working for that company? The road ahead looks grim and job hunting is tough to do while you are trapped in a cube 8 hours a day. But you have security there, right? You get a raise once a year, as long as the economy is strong. As a contractor you only have to stay for your project/assignment and then you are free to go (or if another project comes up internally, they might ask you to stay), then on to the next gig for a more attractive price!

    Or, on the other hand, I can think of countless times where a company has hired on a contractor through me, and they were such a good match, at the end of the contract they hired the contractor on direct with a raise and all! You can’t win if you don’t play. In fact, there are some companies that ONLY hire certain disciplines on a contract basis before making any sort of long-term commitment. Am I talking about a ‘contract to direct’ or ‘temp to permanent’ placement? No, they are open-ended contract positions with no long-term commitment.

    “I don’t want my resume to look like I am a job hopper!” That’s exactly what it will look like if you try to play ‘Contractor’ with direct hire positions. A contractor’s resume may or may not even have dates on it. Companies usually don’t care how long a contractor was at his/her last position. But if you show a Hiring Manager your Direct Hire resume and it has 10 different companies on it in a 3 year period, what would make the Manager think you were going to stay put at their company?

    Experience

    Personally, I would rather take a 1-year contract position with a certain Minneapolis-based medical giant than a direct hire position with Bob’s Medical Device Company. This particular medical giant is a highly acclaimed company recognized throughout the world and the experience I would gain there is more than likely hand-over-fist more valuable than any direct position elsewhere.

    Contracting is especially good for Junior level candidates who don’t really know what their niche is yet. If you are a Jr. level Mechanical Engineer but you don’t know if you want to do design work, project management, engineering sales, or whatever else, contracting is a great way to figure out your calling. If you start out on contract doing design work and you hate it, then once the assignment is over, you can eliminate ‘design’ from your checklist and move on to the next discipline.

    The Joys of Contract Work

    There are so many perks to working contract it’s almost hard to address them all! Here is a small sample:
    •New companies/industries year after year
    •You set your pay raises (but you still have to be realistic!)
    •Seeing different parts of the world (if you choose to be a National Contractor)
    •Building a network of dozens of hiring managers and recruiters
    •Reference letters! Everyone loves people saying nice things about them, why not have a big collection of them!
    •If yo

    So You've Invented Something, Now What?
    So you’ve invented the next big thing (or at least something that may solve a problem for a select group of people)? Now what?Well, sorry to say, but there’s quite a bit you need to tackle. To give you just a taste, there’s patenting, licensing, marketing, and manufacturing. So goodness, where do you start?First of all, you need to figure out if you are going to be able to make a profit from your invention. Patenting and marketing your invention are not inexpensive, easy tasks. They are very costly and take time!Chances are you’d like to make some money out of all this, so you first need to do a little research. Find out if you can make enough money from your invention for it to be a worthwhile endeavor.So first things fi
    tractors a relatively easy and painless task for a company going through a slowdown. The projects/work might not be as plentiful, but they still need employees in order to do it!

    Have you ever been with a company as a direct hire and fantasize about NOT working for that company? The road ahead looks grim and job hunting is tough to do while you are trapped in a cube 8 hours a day. But you have security there, right? You get a raise once a year, as long as the economy is strong. As a contractor you only have to stay for your project/assignment and then you are free to go (or if another project comes up internally, they might ask you to stay), then on to the next gig for a more attractive price!

    Or, on the other hand, I can think of countless times where a company has hired on a contractor through me, and they were such a good match, at the end of the contract they hired the contractor on direct with a raise and all! You can’t win if you don’t play. In fact, there are some companies that ONLY hire certain disciplines on a contract basis before making any sort of long-term commitment. Am I talking about a ‘contract to direct’ or ‘temp to permanent’ placement? No, they are open-ended contract positions with no long-term commitment.

    “I don’t want my resume to look like I am a job hopper!” That’s exactly what it will look like if you try to play ‘Contractor’ with direct hire positions. A contractor’s resume may or may not even have dates on it. Companies usually don’t care how long a contractor was at his/her last position. But if you show a Hiring Manager your Direct Hire resume and it has 10 different companies on it in a 3 year period, what would make the Manager think you were going to stay put at their company?

    Experience

    Personally, I would rather take a 1-year contract position with a certain Minneapolis-based medical giant than a direct hire position with Bob’s Medical Device Company. This particular medical giant is a highly acclaimed company recognized throughout the world and the experience I would gain there is more than likely hand-over-fist more valuable than any direct position elsewhere.

    Contracting is especially good for Junior level candidates who don’t really know what their niche is yet. If you are a Jr. level Mechanical Engineer but you don’t know if you want to do design work, project management, engineering sales, or whatever else, contracting is a great way to figure out your calling. If you start out on contract doing design work and you hate it, then once the assignment is over, you can eliminate ‘design’ from your checklist and move on to the next discipline.

    The Joys of Contract Work

    There are so many perks to working contract it’s almost hard to address them all! Here is a small sample:
    •New companies/industries year after year
    •You set your pay raises (but you still have to be realistic!)
    •Seeing different parts of the world (if you choose to be a National Contractor)
    •Building a network of dozens of hiring managers and recruiters
    •Reference letters! Everyone loves people saying nice things about them, why not have a big collection of them!
    •If y

    Equipment Manufacturer Suppliers
    An original equipment manufacturer or OEM is a company that manufactures goods or gadgets, which are utilized in products sold by another company. These companies are usually termed as a Value Added Resellers or VARs. An OEM usually builds to order, on the basis of the designs provided by the VAR. There are various categories of equipment manufacturing suppliers, such as electrical and electronic test equipment, equipment rental and leasing services, separation equipment and filtration equipment, sprayers and spray coating equipment. The equipment also includes automated test equipment, powder compacting equipment, network test equipment, battery testers and fuel cell test equipment, powder coating equipment and de burring equipment.There are labor
    ractor through me, and they were such a good match, at the end of the contract they hired the contractor on direct with a raise and all! You can’t win if you don’t play. In fact, there are some companies that ONLY hire certain disciplines on a contract basis before making any sort of long-term commitment. Am I talking about a ‘contract to direct’ or ‘temp to permanent’ placement? No, they are open-ended contract positions with no long-term commitment.

    “I don’t want my resume to look like I am a job hopper!” That’s exactly what it will look like if you try to play ‘Contractor’ with direct hire positions. A contractor’s resume may or may not even have dates on it. Companies usually don’t care how long a contractor was at his/her last position. But if you show a Hiring Manager your Direct Hire resume and it has 10 different companies on it in a 3 year period, what would make the Manager think you were going to stay put at their company?

    Experience

    Personally, I would rather take a 1-year contract position with a certain Minneapolis-based medical giant than a direct hire position with Bob’s Medical Device Company. This particular medical giant is a highly acclaimed company recognized throughout the world and the experience I would gain there is more than likely hand-over-fist more valuable than any direct position elsewhere.

    Contracting is especially good for Junior level candidates who don’t really know what their niche is yet. If you are a Jr. level Mechanical Engineer but you don’t know if you want to do design work, project management, engineering sales, or whatever else, contracting is a great way to figure out your calling. If you start out on contract doing design work and you hate it, then once the assignment is over, you can eliminate ‘design’ from your checklist and move on to the next discipline.

    The Joys of Contract Work

    There are so many perks to working contract it’s almost hard to address them all! Here is a small sample:
    •New companies/industries year after year
    •You set your pay raises (but you still have to be realistic!)
    •Seeing different parts of the world (if you choose to be a National Contractor)
    •Building a network of dozens of hiring managers and recruiters
    •Reference letters! Everyone loves people saying nice things about them, why not have a big collection of them!
    •If y

    How to Become a Hypnotist: 5 Helpful Suggestions
    Public interest in natural healing methods is at an all time high. More people want to go beyond using them for their own health needs and desire to become practitioners themselves and hypnosis is one of the more popular arts. Have you ever wondered how to become a hypnotist?Hypnosis is a collection of talk therapy techniques that uses trance and suggestion in order to alter habitual patterns of unhealthy thought, feeling and behavior. Quite often the results are rapid, dramatic and lasting because hypnotism addresses many of life’s problems at their root cause-the subconscious mind.There are two basic categories of hypnosis practitioner, the individual who is licensed in some healthcare discipline like medicine or psychotherapy who integrat
    ire resume and it has 10 different companies on it in a 3 year period, what would make the Manager think you were going to stay put at their company?

    Experience

    Personally, I would rather take a 1-year contract position with a certain Minneapolis-based medical giant than a direct hire position with Bob’s Medical Device Company. This particular medical giant is a highly acclaimed company recognized throughout the world and the experience I would gain there is more than likely hand-over-fist more valuable than any direct position elsewhere.

    Contracting is especially good for Junior level candidates who don’t really know what their niche is yet. If you are a Jr. level Mechanical Engineer but you don’t know if you want to do design work, project management, engineering sales, or whatever else, contracting is a great way to figure out your calling. If you start out on contract doing design work and you hate it, then once the assignment is over, you can eliminate ‘design’ from your checklist and move on to the next discipline.

    The Joys of Contract Work

    There are so many perks to working contract it’s almost hard to address them all! Here is a small sample:
    •New companies/industries year after year
    •You set your pay raises (but you still have to be realistic!)
    •Seeing different parts of the world (if you choose to be a National Contractor)
    •Building a network of dozens of hiring managers and recruiters
    •Reference letters! Everyone loves people saying nice things about them, why not have a big collection of them!
    •If y

    How to Create a Name for Your Cleaning Business
    Before you open the doors of your cleaning business you not only need equipment and supplies, you need a name for your business. The name of your company will be the first thing prospective clients see - whether that is in the phone book, on your company car, in an ad, or on a website. The name symbolizes what your cleaning business represents. So it is important to spend some time on choosing a name that not only fits your cleaning business, but also presents a positive image to customers, suppliers and employees.The easiest way to name your business it to use your own name or initials, such as Joe Smith's Cleaning. This provides a personal touch, is easy to remember, and if you have a proven track record in the business, it can attract custom
    whatever else, contracting is a great way to figure out your calling. If you start out on contract doing design work and you hate it, then once the assignment is over, you can eliminate ‘design’ from your checklist and move on to the next discipline.

    The Joys of Contract Work

    There are so many perks to working contract it’s almost hard to address them all! Here is a small sample:
    •New companies/industries year after year
    •You set your pay raises (but you still have to be realistic!)
    •Seeing different parts of the world (if you choose to be a National Contractor)
    •Building a network of dozens of hiring managers and recruiters
    •Reference letters! Everyone loves people saying nice things about them, why not have a big collection of them!
    •If you travel to get to a company’s location: Per Diem! Ask virtually any direct employee what kind of living expense he/she gets for working at the same company!
    •Meeting new people and working in new teams!
    •Try before you buy! If your ideal situation is to become a direct hire at the company, now you can date the company before marrying it!
    •Overtime! Most contractors are hired on an hourly basis. You work 45 hours in a week; you get paid for 40 hours regular and 5 overtime. Ask most direct hires what they get paid when they work 45 hours a week!

    How Do I start?

    Some folks think that you have to be a big risk taker in order to be a contractor. What I actually see is people who aren’t necessarily risk takers at all, rather people who stay on top of a small database of recruiters and consistently contact them with updates. I have worked with plenty of contractors who aren’t even looking for a new gig, but stay in touch with me on a weekly or biweekly basis. They update me on the status of their current project, whether the company they are with is hiring or laying-off and any new updates they want to add to their resume (or my database). The whole call lasts 3 minutes, but one thing about contracting it is a contact sport-the more people you contact, the better you do.

    I would recommend working with 3-5 different recruiters; provide them with your resume, cover letter, and 2-3 professional references. Call or email them on a weekly or biweekly basis and let them know that you are in fact excited about short or long-term assignments.

    Summary

    I couldn’t even tell you the number of Contractors I know that wouldn’t trade their career for anything. Some of these people have traveled literally all across the globe on different assignments, while others choose to stay local. Contract work is a great way to expand your comfort zone, work in a variety of industries, and meet lots of new people. Not to mention it’s a great way to control your own career, set your own pay rates, and plan your own vacations! Who wouldn’t want this?

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