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Casual Articles - Age Bias in the Employment Office – One Sure Way To Deal With The Glass Wall
An Ultimate Lifestyle Secret - Tips to Make Your Advertising More Effective troom and courtroom expense. Time is valuable. Use it wisely. Do something on your own.If you have a home based business or a family business, you probably cannot afford to hire a professional copywriter to create your advertising. However, you still need to advertise your business, so how can you make it as effective as possible? One thing you must never do is try to create a fancy advertisement. The instructor of a class of students learning to be copywriters said, "Creativity is not a positive virtue for an advertising copywriter. Whether it is a print, on-line or broadcast ad, when you ask a potential customer what he thought of the advertisement, you do not want him to say it was exceptionally creative. Instead, you want him to say it made me want to buy the product right now."Here are five advertising tips that you may use to help make your advertisements much more effectiv Here’s a thought. You have a value. Everyone does. You have accumulated skills and a reservoir of knowledge on many subjects. When you list those skills and that knowledge on a sheet of paper you call it a resume and use it to sell yourself to someone for the purpose of receiving a salary. You then become an employee subject to the whims of the employer. You know, cutbacks, layoffs and all the rest. Use those same assets and skills, format them into information packages, and sell them on the worldwide Internet and become an entrepreneur subject to no one but yourself. This is the information age. People pay for information that will make their lives easier, safer and/or more prosperous There are 1.2 billion people on the Internet today and it is becoming easier and easier to reach them. You could be in business easier than you might imagine. The world is changing and with every change there is a new opportunity. The word retirement originally meant going to bed , it came into current usage during the Great Depression when older workers Career Enhancement Tips For First Jobbers: 3 Key Tips to Grow Your Career Much has been written and said about the glass ceiling, the inherent prejudice in the corporate world against the ascension of the female employee to high executive status. Less has been written and discussed about the glass wall, the bias practiced by corporations in the hiring of older workers.You found your first job and you feel a little anxious. You think to yourself – “How am I going to survive through all these?” With the right attitude and guidance, you will soon look forward to doing your best.Like any other career enhancement tips, there are no guarantees for success. However, if you bring the right attitude and decide to take action then you are half way there. Nothing will stop a first jobber like you from shining at your workplace.1. Self-discipline The value of self-discipline in a first jobber is often underestimated. Now that you are in the working world you think to yourself, “Is self-discipline overrated?” I will tell you, no. It is not overrated. I have often found new staff with good self-discipline doing better than those who are poor in it. But the focus is shifting, if not the practice. The transition of the baby boomers into the world of maturity and their increasing difficulty in dealing with the bias is drawing attention because of the frequency of courtroom action on the subject. AARP lists several courtroom actions underway in its publications but those actions pertain to the mistreatment of the elderly in the workplace. There still has been very little written about the hiring of the elderly --whatever the term elderly means these days– and the subject is certainly open to conjecture. Much has been written and adjudicated about gray haired folks and their treatment in the workplace. The Age Discrimination in Employment Act of 1967 which prohibits age discrimination in the workplace is the basis for much of it. It’s purpose is clearly stated in Item 4(b) “It is therefore the purpose of this chapter to promote employment of older persons based on their ability rather than age; to prohibit arbitrary age discrimination in employment; to help employers and workers find ways of meeting problems arising from the impact of age on employment.” The legislation may prove helpful when it comes to compensation, job advertisements, the use of company facilities, fringe benefits and a few other such niceties, but one thing it has been unable to do is prohibit the big one: age bias in employment. And why? one might wonder. Perhaps because every one, or most everyone, is inherently prejudiced against the elderly. The probability is you are too. Yes, dear reader, you too. No don’t get your back up, you probably are and you don’t even know it. At Harvard University where people are supposed to know about such things, a professor in the Social Ethics Department had no idea she was so disposed. Professor Mazharin Banaji, a self-professed woman of liberal thought was stunned when she took a brain wave test and discovered that she scored extremely high in bias against the elderly. But she was not alone. Administering the test to 40,000 other people, Professor Banaji saw that the largest bias in the United States is not based on ethnicity, sex or religion but against the elderly. "It's the largest bias we see," Banaji said when interviewed by the Harvard University Gazette. "I was very surprised. People don't openly discuss ageism much, like they do racism or sexism, yet its strong presence makes it much more insidious." Reflecting on the findings Dr. Banaji added, "Age has come to be associated with negative qualities, such as decreases in stature, power, physical agility, and cognitive ability," she says. "Of course that's not true for everyone. I know a 78-year-old colleague who runs up stairs faster than his students." There is an irony to all. If one is of a particular race, religion or ethnicity you are clearly established as a target for discrimination. But age is different. There the target keeps moving. The common perception of elderly is usually someone who is older. If you are fifty, the thirty year old has you in his or her sights as someone who is well... old. The fifty year old doesn’t quite see it that way but sees the seventy year old as elderly. The seventy year old sees things differently, of course, and focuses on the ninety year old. It is a different form of discrimination than the common perception of bigotry because sooner or later it proves to be democratic. Everyone becomes a target. So how, then, does one, who is over fifty, deal with this if it is so insidious? How does one get a job or at least earn a living in the “elderly” stage if one needs income?. It is not easy but certainly possible. First of all, don’t think employment. The odds are you won’t get a position for which you are qualified. The likelihood of your finding a job and being paid what you are worth is a remote possibility. A possibility yes certainly, but the operative word is remote. Employers could probably hire two young people for what they would pay you. Besides when it comes to hiring young versus older, there are psychological factors that your clinical psychologist can delve into with you when you both have the time. The best way to deal with the glass wall is to walk away from it. To attempt to break it down means the expenditure of time in the courtroom and courtroom expense. Time is valuable. Use it wisely. Do something on your own. Here’s a thought. You have a value. Everyone does. You have accumulated skills and a reservoir of knowledge on many subjects. When you list those skills and that knowledge on a sheet of paper you call it a resume and use it to sell yourself to someone for the purpose of receiving a salary. You then become an employee subject to the whims of the employer. You know, cutbacks, layoffs and all the rest. Use those same assets and skills, format them into information packages, and sell them on the worldwide Internet and become an entrepreneur subject to no one but yourself. This is the information age. People pay for information that will make their lives easier, safer and/or more prosperous There are 1.2 billion people on the Internet today and it is becoming easier and easier to reach them. You could be in business easier than you might imagine. The world is changing and with every change there is a new opportunity. The word retirement originally meant going to bed , it came into current usage during the Great Depression when older workers Online Job Finder Services- Should You Use Them? efore the purpose of this chapter to promote employment of older persons based on their ability rather than age; to prohibit arbitrary age discrimination in employment; to help employers and workers find ways of meeting problems arising from the impact of age on employment.”Thanks to the internet, people are now able to shop, communicate and even find jobs right at the comforts of their own home. You have to face the fact that with hundreds or even thousands of people looking for a decent job, you too will find it hard to find a job. You have to wait in a long line of equally qualified people competing to get the job and you have to work hard in order to impress the employer in order to get the position you want.However, if you want an easier way to find the best job for you, then you have to use the internet to find it. With numerous online job finder services, you will be able to find the right job, set up an interview and get employed in no time at all.Even large companies are using the services of online job finders to advertise their needs for personne The legislation may prove helpful when it comes to compensation, job advertisements, the use of company facilities, fringe benefits and a few other such niceties, but one thing it has been unable to do is prohibit the big one: age bias in employment. And why? one might wonder. Perhaps because every one, or most everyone, is inherently prejudiced against the elderly. The probability is you are too. Yes, dear reader, you too. No don’t get your back up, you probably are and you don’t even know it. At Harvard University where people are supposed to know about such things, a professor in the Social Ethics Department had no idea she was so disposed. Professor Mazharin Banaji, a self-professed woman of liberal thought was stunned when she took a brain wave test and discovered that she scored extremely high in bias against the elderly. But she was not alone. Administering the test to 40,000 other people, Professor Banaji saw that the largest bias in the United States is not based on ethnicity, sex or religion but against the elderly. "It's the largest bias we see," Banaji said when interviewed by the Harvard University Gazette. "I was very surprised. People don't openly discuss ageism much, like they do racism or sexism, yet its strong presence makes it much more insidious." Reflecting on the findings Dr. Banaji added, "Age has come to be associated with negative qualities, such as decreases in stature, power, physical agility, and cognitive ability," she says. "Of course that's not true for everyone. I know a 78-year-old colleague who runs up stairs faster than his students." There is an irony to all. If one is of a particular race, religion or ethnicity you are clearly established as a target for discrimination. But age is different. There the target keeps moving. The common perception of elderly is usually someone who is older. If you are fifty, the thirty year old has you in his or her sights as someone who is well... old. The fifty year old doesn’t quite see it that way but sees the seventy year old as elderly. The seventy year old sees things differently, of course, and focuses on the ninety year old. It is a different form of discrimination than the common perception of bigotry because sooner or later it proves to be democratic. Everyone becomes a target. So how, then, does one, who is over fifty, deal with this if it is so insidious? How does one get a job or at least earn a living in the “elderly” stage if one needs income?. It is not easy but certainly possible. First of all, don’t think employment. The odds are you won’t get a position for which you are qualified. The likelihood of your finding a job and being paid what you are worth is a remote possibility. A possibility yes certainly, but the operative word is remote. Employers could probably hire two young people for what they would pay you. Besides when it comes to hiring young versus older, there are psychological factors that your clinical psychologist can delve into with you when you both have the time. The best way to deal with the glass wall is to walk away from it. To attempt to break it down means the expenditure of time in the courtroom and courtroom expense. Time is valuable. Use it wisely. Do something on your own. Here’s a thought. You have a value. Everyone does. You have accumulated skills and a reservoir of knowledge on many subjects. When you list those skills and that knowledge on a sheet of paper you call it a resume and use it to sell yourself to someone for the purpose of receiving a salary. You then become an employee subject to the whims of the employer. You know, cutbacks, layoffs and all the rest. Use those same assets and skills, format them into information packages, and sell them on the worldwide Internet and become an entrepreneur subject to no one but yourself. This is the information age. People pay for information that will make their lives easier, safer and/or more prosperous There are 1.2 billion people on the Internet today and it is becoming easier and easier to reach them. You could be in business easier than you might imagine. The world is changing and with every change there is a new opportunity. The word retirement originally meant going to bed , it came into current usage during the Great Depression when older workers Remove Your Risk When Marketing Administering the test to 40,000 other people, Professor Banaji saw that the largest bias in the United States is not based on ethnicity, sex or religion but against the elderly.Avoiding Risk When You Steal ShareWhat do you know? What don’t’ you know? What is knowable?Until you fully understand the REAL issues facing your brand, you cannot solve your marketing problem. Your ultimate success is therefore much more dependent upon the questions you ask then the answers you find. The price of success is the risk of unsettling the boat — rocking the very foundation upon which your business currently floats.Committing your brand to grow its market share is a courageous effort, it is not the bailiwick of the feint of heart because it requires as its co-requisite an intent to challenge everything — even slaying all the sacred cows. Art and Science Increasing your market share requires both a mixture of art and s "It's the largest bias we see," Banaji said when interviewed by the Harvard University Gazette. "I was very surprised. People don't openly discuss ageism much, like they do racism or sexism, yet its strong presence makes it much more insidious." Reflecting on the findings Dr. Banaji added, "Age has come to be associated with negative qualities, such as decreases in stature, power, physical agility, and cognitive ability," she says. "Of course that's not true for everyone. I know a 78-year-old colleague who runs up stairs faster than his students." There is an irony to all. If one is of a particular race, religion or ethnicity you are clearly established as a target for discrimination. But age is different. There the target keeps moving. The common perception of elderly is usually someone who is older. If you are fifty, the thirty year old has you in his or her sights as someone who is well... old. The fifty year old doesn’t quite see it that way but sees the seventy year old as elderly. The seventy year old sees things differently, of course, and focuses on the ninety year old. It is a different form of discrimination than the common perception of bigotry because sooner or later it proves to be democratic. Everyone becomes a target. So how, then, does one, who is over fifty, deal with this if it is so insidious? How does one get a job or at least earn a living in the “elderly” stage if one needs income?. It is not easy but certainly possible. First of all, don’t think employment. The odds are you won’t get a position for which you are qualified. The likelihood of your finding a job and being paid what you are worth is a remote possibility. A possibility yes certainly, but the operative word is remote. Employers could probably hire two young people for what they would pay you. Besides when it comes to hiring young versus older, there are psychological factors that your clinical psychologist can delve into with you when you both have the time. The best way to deal with the glass wall is to walk away from it. To attempt to break it down means the expenditure of time in the courtroom and courtroom expense. Time is valuable. Use it wisely. Do something on your own. Here’s a thought. You have a value. Everyone does. You have accumulated skills and a reservoir of knowledge on many subjects. When you list those skills and that knowledge on a sheet of paper you call it a resume and use it to sell yourself to someone for the purpose of receiving a salary. You then become an employee subject to the whims of the employer. You know, cutbacks, layoffs and all the rest. Use those same assets and skills, format them into information packages, and sell them on the worldwide Internet and become an entrepreneur subject to no one but yourself. This is the information age. People pay for information that will make their lives easier, safer and/or more prosperous There are 1.2 billion people on the Internet today and it is becoming easier and easier to reach them. You could be in business easier than you might imagine. The world is changing and with every change there is a new opportunity. The word retirement originally meant going to bed , it came into current usage during the Great Depression when older workers To Communicate with Impact , Talk to an Ignoramus ees the seventy year old as elderly. The seventy year old sees things differently, of course, and focuses on the ninety year old. It is a different form of discrimination than the common perception of bigotry because sooner or later it proves to be democratic. Everyone becomes a target.Does it sometimes take way longer than you expect to get fundamental ideas across to your audience?When you're promoting new products, processes, services, or best practices, does it take forever to "turn everyone around"? Do customers have trouble getting the most out of your products and services? Do employees have trouble helping your prospects and customers reap the benefits of what you offer?Maybe you -- or the experts who are helping you, whether internal or external -- are too smart!Sometimes we know too much about what we want to say to remember what questions we had when the subject was new.A fluent speaker of another language may be a poor teacher, because s/he can't understand why beginners don't "get" a language that So how, then, does one, who is over fifty, deal with this if it is so insidious? How does one get a job or at least earn a living in the “elderly” stage if one needs income?. It is not easy but certainly possible. First of all, don’t think employment. The odds are you won’t get a position for which you are qualified. The likelihood of your finding a job and being paid what you are worth is a remote possibility. A possibility yes certainly, but the operative word is remote. Employers could probably hire two young people for what they would pay you. Besides when it comes to hiring young versus older, there are psychological factors that your clinical psychologist can delve into with you when you both have the time. The best way to deal with the glass wall is to walk away from it. To attempt to break it down means the expenditure of time in the courtroom and courtroom expense. Time is valuable. Use it wisely. Do something on your own. Here’s a thought. You have a value. Everyone does. You have accumulated skills and a reservoir of knowledge on many subjects. When you list those skills and that knowledge on a sheet of paper you call it a resume and use it to sell yourself to someone for the purpose of receiving a salary. You then become an employee subject to the whims of the employer. You know, cutbacks, layoffs and all the rest. Use those same assets and skills, format them into information packages, and sell them on the worldwide Internet and become an entrepreneur subject to no one but yourself. This is the information age. People pay for information that will make their lives easier, safer and/or more prosperous There are 1.2 billion people on the Internet today and it is becoming easier and easier to reach them. You could be in business easier than you might imagine. The world is changing and with every change there is a new opportunity. The word retirement originally meant going to bed , it came into current usage during the Great Depression when older workers How to Organize a Job Search troom and courtroom expense. Time is valuable. Use it wisely. Do something on your own.When you are looking for a job, it is very important to be organized. You want to present a professional attitude, and be prepared and knowledgeable. Following these easy steps will make sure that you get you a job quickly and easily.Find openings in companies that interest you. Research the position available, as well as the company itself.Write your resume. Tailor your objective statement, summary, and experience points to meet the job that you need.Print off your resumes, being sure to have multiple copies. Try using sticky notes to keep track of what resume you want to go where.Write your cover letters. Use keywords from the job descriptions (just like in the resume). Demonstrate your familiarity with the companies.Attach the appropriate resume to the appr Here’s a thought. You have a value. Everyone does. You have accumulated skills and a reservoir of knowledge on many subjects. When you list those skills and that knowledge on a sheet of paper you call it a resume and use it to sell yourself to someone for the purpose of receiving a salary. You then become an employee subject to the whims of the employer. You know, cutbacks, layoffs and all the rest. Use those same assets and skills, format them into information packages, and sell them on the worldwide Internet and become an entrepreneur subject to no one but yourself. This is the information age. People pay for information that will make their lives easier, safer and/or more prosperous There are 1.2 billion people on the Internet today and it is becoming easier and easier to reach them. You could be in business easier than you might imagine. The world is changing and with every change there is a new opportunity. The word retirement originally meant going to bed , it came into current usage during the Great Depression when older workers were being pensioned off to bring in younger, cheaper workers and to reduce unemployment. With the changes taking place today, it simply means being relegated to the sidelines as an observer and because of the tremendous dilution of the dollar, it means those observers are very much concerned about their future.. And that concern is bringing about another change.. The term retirement is being redefined as re-careering as those concerned observers are getting back on the playing field. And as they do, re-careering is fast becoming a very popular thing to do. So if the glass wall is of concern to you, walk away from it. Re-career. Life can still be good. Enjoy it.
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