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  • Casual Articles - Take the First Step Toward Finding Your Ideal Job

    Share a Vision for Your Business with God
    I have a friend who is caught up in some serious 'paralysis of analysis' where her business life is concerned. I advised her to simply follow God's peace and just get moving! She looked at me like I had suggested that she jump off a cliff. I could tell that she was literally frozen by her own fear of missing God.Missing God is just not something that I've ever worried about. What do people mean when they say 'I'm afraid of missing God?" anyways? It is as though they believe that God has set up a maze for them to figure out and if they go the wrong way - they've blown it and will be stuck in some dead end.I don't believe for a minute that God is like th
    egotiables), and what you bring to the table. You must also get clear of your self-limiting beliefs, thoughts, and actions. Let’s start with 20 questions to get you clear on what your ideal job looks like.

    WORK CONTENT: Describe work that excites, engages, and inspires you
    1. What is the nature of your work?
    2. What kinds of people, products, or services are you involved with?
    3. What knowledge, skills, and experiences are you using regularly on the job?
    4. In what ways are you growing, learning new kno

    What a Washing Machine Can Teach You About Getting the Most Out of Your Advertising Investment
    If you could cram all of your dirty laundry in the washer at once, wouldn't it make more sense than putting in the recommended load? After all, if it saves time and money, why not? It's simple: not only might you blow up the washer, but you become painfully aware that most of the "clean" laundry is still dirty. It sounds bizarre, but you can compare the amount of space in a washer to how much space you have on your business card or advertisement in the yellow pages. When you try to get too much in, you end up not getting the result you want. Just like the washing machine, your web site, business card, brochures, advert
    If I asked you to describe your ideal car...assuming no limits...how would you describe it? Most people can describe their ideal car in great detail--from the make,model, features, and color, to any accessories to how it would feel to be behind the wheel. When I ask people to describe their ideal job, however, most people are far less clear. They may describe one or two attributes, like how much it pays, and/or the job title. That’s it. If you were shopping for your ideal car, it would be easy to find because you could eliminate the thousands of cars that weren’t a fit. You would focus exclusively on dealerships that offered the car that ‘fit’ you. It’s the same with finding your ideal job...if you can’t describe it, you won’t find it. It’s as simple as that.

    Finding your Ideal Job requires a unique job search strategy. Focus and clarity are the first, and MOST IMPORTANT, pieces of this job search strategy. And, in my 15 years of experience (as an HR Manager, Hiring Manager, and Career Coach), most people get stuck here. The fact is, a clearly focused job search is much more successful than a broad one. Having a clear plan for the job you are after will result in a job weeks to months sooner than casting a ‘broad net’.

    Yet, many people still fear that by being clear and focused they are excluding themselves from other possibilities. The “but” I hear on a regular basis is “I don’t want to limit myself”. However, by being general and ‘open’ you create a problem for hiring managers: They Don’t Know What You Want From Them and They Don’t Know How They Could Use You!

    And, as a result, you create a problem for yourself: you don’t get interviews and you don’t get hired! As a job seeker, your ‘job’ is not to ‘find work’. Your job is to make it easy for work to find you! The easier you make it for a hiring manager to hire you, the better things will go. It’s that simple. Hiring managers are busy. If you make their job easy in the interview process, they’ll want you—yesterday!

    As I’ve emphasized, the first step is to get clear. Get clear on what you want, what you won’t live with out (non-negotiables), and what you bring to the table. You must also get clear of your self-limiting beliefs, thoughts, and actions. Let’s start with 20 questions to get you clear on what your ideal job looks like.

    WORK CONTENT: Describe work that excites, engages, and inspires you
    1. What is the nature of your work?
    2. What kinds of people, products, or services are you involved with?
    3. What knowledge, skills, and experiences are you using regularly on the job?
    4. In what ways are you growing, learning new kno

    Motivational Posters - Are They All Bad?
    Is there really a place for motivational posters in your home office? The thought of putting these posters in your home workspace may sound cheesy to say the least. Even worse it could even remind you of those dreaded, awful days when you were tied to a desk and forced to enjoy the company "decoration" of mission statements, useless slogans and their idea of motivational posters (more like propaganda eh?).All these things were meant to make you more productive each day, to enhance your company "loyalty" and to increase staff morale. What effect did they really have? Yes they drove you a little bit more mad each day and actually made you resent where you worke
    he thousands of cars that weren’t a fit. You would focus exclusively on dealerships that offered the car that ‘fit’ you. It’s the same with finding your ideal job...if you can’t describe it, you won’t find it. It’s as simple as that.

    Finding your Ideal Job requires a unique job search strategy. Focus and clarity are the first, and MOST IMPORTANT, pieces of this job search strategy. And, in my 15 years of experience (as an HR Manager, Hiring Manager, and Career Coach), most people get stuck here. The fact is, a clearly focused job search is much more successful than a broad one. Having a clear plan for the job you are after will result in a job weeks to months sooner than casting a ‘broad net’.

    Yet, many people still fear that by being clear and focused they are excluding themselves from other possibilities. The “but” I hear on a regular basis is “I don’t want to limit myself”. However, by being general and ‘open’ you create a problem for hiring managers: They Don’t Know What You Want From Them and They Don’t Know How They Could Use You!

    And, as a result, you create a problem for yourself: you don’t get interviews and you don’t get hired! As a job seeker, your ‘job’ is not to ‘find work’. Your job is to make it easy for work to find you! The easier you make it for a hiring manager to hire you, the better things will go. It’s that simple. Hiring managers are busy. If you make their job easy in the interview process, they’ll want you—yesterday!

    As I’ve emphasized, the first step is to get clear. Get clear on what you want, what you won’t live with out (non-negotiables), and what you bring to the table. You must also get clear of your self-limiting beliefs, thoughts, and actions. Let’s start with 20 questions to get you clear on what your ideal job looks like.

    WORK CONTENT: Describe work that excites, engages, and inspires you
    1. What is the nature of your work?
    2. What kinds of people, products, or services are you involved with?
    3. What knowledge, skills, and experiences are you using regularly on the job?
    4. In what ways are you growing, learning new kno

    Costing At No Cost
    Cost estimation is always a crucial topic in many industries. For converters, it may be one of the keys to success… or to failure.The estimation comes into play for several reasons: to prepare production budgets, for cost management and to define the prices and to make offers to customers.Here we want to concentrate our attention on the problem of cost estimation in the cutting business.We must make distinct considerations according to the material type to be cut.Materials can be divided into two big categories, man-made and natural. It would be possible to make further classifications but these two are enough for our purposes.The
    d job search is much more successful than a broad one. Having a clear plan for the job you are after will result in a job weeks to months sooner than casting a ‘broad net’.

    Yet, many people still fear that by being clear and focused they are excluding themselves from other possibilities. The “but” I hear on a regular basis is “I don’t want to limit myself”. However, by being general and ‘open’ you create a problem for hiring managers: They Don’t Know What You Want From Them and They Don’t Know How They Could Use You!

    And, as a result, you create a problem for yourself: you don’t get interviews and you don’t get hired! As a job seeker, your ‘job’ is not to ‘find work’. Your job is to make it easy for work to find you! The easier you make it for a hiring manager to hire you, the better things will go. It’s that simple. Hiring managers are busy. If you make their job easy in the interview process, they’ll want you—yesterday!

    As I’ve emphasized, the first step is to get clear. Get clear on what you want, what you won’t live with out (non-negotiables), and what you bring to the table. You must also get clear of your self-limiting beliefs, thoughts, and actions. Let’s start with 20 questions to get you clear on what your ideal job looks like.

    WORK CONTENT: Describe work that excites, engages, and inspires you
    1. What is the nature of your work?
    2. What kinds of people, products, or services are you involved with?
    3. What knowledge, skills, and experiences are you using regularly on the job?
    4. In what ways are you growing, learning new kno

    Smart and Practical Advertising Ideas
    Advertising exists to inform, instruct, and to influence consumers. It is a complicated type of communication that must go along with other business essentials and marketing basics to be profitable.The most tedious part of advertising is the conceptualization of the idea. Even experienced writers on this field sometimes get stuck for an idea.Check out the checklist below which can help out when you’re wedged for an idea. This can help you to come up with different strategies and possibilities for the headline and other elements of an advertisement.Make your message simple and easy to remember. Some people find it hard remembering others’ name, s
    d, as a result, you create a problem for yourself: you don’t get interviews and you don’t get hired! As a job seeker, your ‘job’ is not to ‘find work’. Your job is to make it easy for work to find you! The easier you make it for a hiring manager to hire you, the better things will go. It’s that simple. Hiring managers are busy. If you make their job easy in the interview process, they’ll want you—yesterday!

    As I’ve emphasized, the first step is to get clear. Get clear on what you want, what you won’t live with out (non-negotiables), and what you bring to the table. You must also get clear of your self-limiting beliefs, thoughts, and actions. Let’s start with 20 questions to get you clear on what your ideal job looks like.

    WORK CONTENT: Describe work that excites, engages, and inspires you
    1. What is the nature of your work?
    2. What kinds of people, products, or services are you involved with?
    3. What knowledge, skills, and experiences are you using regularly on the job?
    4. In what ways are you growing, learning new kno

    FedEx Shipping
    True to its motto, “we live to deliver” FedEx shipping makes a great deal of business in reaching even the most difficult and farthest destinations. FedEx shipping might as well use the song “Get Here” as its theme song.No other company in the world finds all possible measures just to get that pouch, envelope or box to its destination on time all the time. No heavy downpour, typhoon, hurricane, and flood can stop FedEx shipping from doing the extra miles of delivering quality shipping service.Be it on a railway or trailwayFedEx shipping has an extensive and widest reach. No matter how far the destination, it takes your cargo right at your doorst
    egotiables), and what you bring to the table. You must also get clear of your self-limiting beliefs, thoughts, and actions. Let’s start with 20 questions to get you clear on what your ideal job looks like.

    WORK CONTENT: Describe work that excites, engages, and inspires you
    1. What is the nature of your work?
    2. What kinds of people, products, or services are you involved with?
    3. What knowledge, skills, and experiences are you using regularly on the job?
    4. In what ways are you growing, learning new knowledge, skills or abilities as a professional in your field?
    5. What percentage of your work is new, challenging, energizing versus routine, boring, or “old hat”?

    WORK RELATIONSHIPS: Describe the kinds of work relationships that motivate you, stretch you and bring out your best
    6. What kinds of customers or clients do you serve?
    7. What do you do in addition to serving customers or clients?
    8. What is the leadership style of your direct boss?
    9. What kinds of leadership or management activities are you involved in?
    10. What type of co-workers are you working with? A team? Are you autonomous? Interdependent? Job sharing?

    WORK ENVIRONMENT: Describe those work settings where you see yourself motivated, satisfied and performing at your best
    11. What are the working days and hours?
    12. Where are you working? Office, home, on the road, offsite, etc...
    13. How are you learning and training for your position?
    14. What is the career progression you see for yourself?
    15. What is the overall mood or tone of the workplace?

    REWARDS & RECOGNITION: Describe what makes you feel valued, keeps you contributing and confident
    16. What income are you earning?
    17. What kind of pay plan are you on? Salary? Hourly? Commission? Combination? Bonus?
    18. How will you know when you are successful? How will success be measured?
    19. What are you recognized for?
    20. What other benefits (financial and non-financial) are you receiving? i.e., Vacation, holidays, discounts, services, etc.

    Bottom line: take the time to be singularly focused and clear in your job search. You can run two (maybe three, but it’s a stretch) simultaneous job searches. You’ll need to do some of the exercises in "The Ultimate Guide to Landing Your Ideal Job" twice and prepare a job search campaign for each type of job. But if you really are equally interested in two different fields or types of positions, then create a clear and focused plan for both, rather than diluting both by trying to combine them into a general search.

    ~~~~~

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