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Casual Articles - Job Interview 101
Why People Don't Make A Living Doing What They Love my day, it told whether or not a person had character.You've seen it before: people who make a hullabaloo about following their dreams and then end up broke, busted and disgusted. If this has made you put your own dreams on hold, here are 5 reasons why most people fail and how to avoid making those same mistakes as you strive to make a living doing what you love.1.They don't carve out their own niche- Many aspiring singers fail for instance, because they're too busy trying to become the next Kelly Clarkson, James Brown or Michael Jackson. Same thing goes for wannabe models, write The word is “yes,” not “yeah.” It is “going to,” not “gonna.” It is “no,” not “huh-uh.” Slang may be okay for the schoolyard… but you are not there, anymore. The words “sir” or “ma’am” are good, too. A good way to leave an interview (after the interviewer makes it obvious it is over) is to ask for a business card (if one has not already been given to you). A comfortable way to do that is to offer one of your own. No, it does not have a company name on it. Not yet. But if you reach into your wallet and present a business card with your name, address and telephone number on it and ask the interviewer if he or she has a card, your preparedness and self-assur South African Mining Companies and Mining Houses are Being Reevaluated It’s a tough job market out there. It is sufficiently tough that when you are lucky enough to get a job interview, make the most of the opportunity.South Africa holds the world’s largest reserves of gold (35%), platinum group metals (55.7%), manganese ore (80%) chrome ore (68.3%) titanium metals (21%). It also produces a large share of the world’s diamonds and mineral deposits.Lucrative opportunities exist for downstream processing and value adding of iron, carbon steel, stainless steel, aluminium, platinum group metals and gold.Beneficiation of minerals before export is a major growth area. The Department of Minerals and Energy has embarked on a small-scale mining Dress properly for the job you are being interviewed for and the company giving it. If you interview for a job as a mail clerk with a bank, for example, you might think “mail room equals casual clothes.” If the employer is local, it is a good idea to stroll through the lobby before the interview and absorb the ambiance. Ask “How do the people here dress?” Follow their lead. Employers spend a lot of money training new hires. Yes, even mail room clerks need to know more than how much postage costs. Companies like to spend money on those with the potential to move up the ladder. As they interview you, they ask themselves “can this person become part of the total organization?” The person whose interview says, “I can I make it in the mail room, and if you train me, I can be upwardly mobile,” is the person who gets the job. Companies like to promote from within. If you interview for a job where you go home dirty at the end of the day, casual clothes for the interview are fine. Dirt, however, is not. People associate cleanliness with honesty and ethics. You may go home from work dirty, but most companies do not want you to show up at work looking that way. They want you to look fresh… and clean. When you fill out an application -- or, submit a resume -- be truthful, be brief, and be neat. If an interviewer is unable read your writing on an application, how will they read it on company documents or correspondence or invoices if they hire you? Watch your grammar and your spelling. It may have been more fun in school doing things other than learning to write proper sentences and spell the words in it, but you are in the real world, now. People with jobs don’t put your enjoyment of life ahead of their profits. Regardless of who interviews you, your very first communiqu? with that person is a silent one. Within the first few seconds of meeting the interviewer, you will shake hands and you will (or will not) establish eye contact. A lack of eye contact places you below other, less-qualified candidates on the interviewer’s score sheet. So, too, do weak handshakes. Parents often do not teach their children proper handshakes. A wet noodle handshake tells interviewers you lack the confidence to deal effectively with the public. A proper handshake is accomplished by putting the empty space between your thumb and index finger against the other party’s empty space between their thumb and index finger. Both hands close, and a satisfactory level of pressure is applied by each of the two hands. “Satisfactory” does not mean squeezing so hard you would be better off at an arm wrestling match. The purpose of a good handshake is to make the other person to think, “Yes, this is a solid, stable person.” In my day, it told whether or not a person had character. The word is “yes,” not “yeah.” It is “going to,” not “gonna.” It is “no,” not “huh-uh.” Slang may be okay for the schoolyard… but you are not there, anymore. The words “sir” or “ma’am” are good, too. A good way to leave an interview (after the interviewer makes it obvious it is over) is to ask for a business card (if one has not already been given to you). A comfortable way to do that is to offer one of your own. No, it does not have a company name on it. Not yet. But if you reach into your wallet and present a business card with your name, address and telephone number on it and ask the interviewer if he or she has a card, your preparedness and self-assura People Who Love What They Do the ladder. As they interview you, they ask themselves “can this person become part of the total organization?”We all know them. Perhaps you are one (I am!). What makes people love what they do and others hate it? Why are some seemingly lucky enough to get up and do what they love each and every day; while others struggle to get out of bed and count the seconds until they can go home?Have you ever had a job that you hated, while a coworker loved the same job? Come on, be honest. Maybe you are in that situation now. I’ve been there. Did they look at you like you were crazy when you admitted that you didn’t, in fact, share their p The person whose interview says, “I can I make it in the mail room, and if you train me, I can be upwardly mobile,” is the person who gets the job. Companies like to promote from within. If you interview for a job where you go home dirty at the end of the day, casual clothes for the interview are fine. Dirt, however, is not. People associate cleanliness with honesty and ethics. You may go home from work dirty, but most companies do not want you to show up at work looking that way. They want you to look fresh… and clean. When you fill out an application -- or, submit a resume -- be truthful, be brief, and be neat. If an interviewer is unable read your writing on an application, how will they read it on company documents or correspondence or invoices if they hire you? Watch your grammar and your spelling. It may have been more fun in school doing things other than learning to write proper sentences and spell the words in it, but you are in the real world, now. People with jobs don’t put your enjoyment of life ahead of their profits. Regardless of who interviews you, your very first communiqu? with that person is a silent one. Within the first few seconds of meeting the interviewer, you will shake hands and you will (or will not) establish eye contact. A lack of eye contact places you below other, less-qualified candidates on the interviewer’s score sheet. So, too, do weak handshakes. Parents often do not teach their children proper handshakes. A wet noodle handshake tells interviewers you lack the confidence to deal effectively with the public. A proper handshake is accomplished by putting the empty space between your thumb and index finger against the other party’s empty space between their thumb and index finger. Both hands close, and a satisfactory level of pressure is applied by each of the two hands. “Satisfactory” does not mean squeezing so hard you would be better off at an arm wrestling match. The purpose of a good handshake is to make the other person to think, “Yes, this is a solid, stable person.” In my day, it told whether or not a person had character. The word is “yes,” not “yeah.” It is “going to,” not “gonna.” It is “no,” not “huh-uh.” Slang may be okay for the schoolyard… but you are not there, anymore. The words “sir” or “ma’am” are good, too. A good way to leave an interview (after the interviewer makes it obvious it is over) is to ask for a business card (if one has not already been given to you). A comfortable way to do that is to offer one of your own. No, it does not have a company name on it. Not yet. But if you reach into your wallet and present a business card with your name, address and telephone number on it and ask the interviewer if he or she has a card, your preparedness and self-assur Only in a Town for a Short Stay? Consider the Established Look of Executive Suites , and be neat. If an interviewer is unable read your writing on an application, how will they read it on company documents or correspondence or invoices if they hire you?Here is a creative tip for giving temporary office space a look of permanence. Discover 'executive suites'.No...we are not talking about expensive ivory tower offices. The term 'executive suites' is a concept ...not a brick and mortar location. It is ideal for anyone needing temporary office space in almost any city of the world.Consider just a few of the many advantages for using executive suites: You can move into this type of temporary office space in a day...and move out in a day.Be Watch your grammar and your spelling. It may have been more fun in school doing things other than learning to write proper sentences and spell the words in it, but you are in the real world, now. People with jobs don’t put your enjoyment of life ahead of their profits. Regardless of who interviews you, your very first communiqu? with that person is a silent one. Within the first few seconds of meeting the interviewer, you will shake hands and you will (or will not) establish eye contact. A lack of eye contact places you below other, less-qualified candidates on the interviewer’s score sheet. So, too, do weak handshakes. Parents often do not teach their children proper handshakes. A wet noodle handshake tells interviewers you lack the confidence to deal effectively with the public. A proper handshake is accomplished by putting the empty space between your thumb and index finger against the other party’s empty space between their thumb and index finger. Both hands close, and a satisfactory level of pressure is applied by each of the two hands. “Satisfactory” does not mean squeezing so hard you would be better off at an arm wrestling match. The purpose of a good handshake is to make the other person to think, “Yes, this is a solid, stable person.” In my day, it told whether or not a person had character. The word is “yes,” not “yeah.” It is “going to,” not “gonna.” It is “no,” not “huh-uh.” Slang may be okay for the schoolyard… but you are not there, anymore. The words “sir” or “ma’am” are good, too. A good way to leave an interview (after the interviewer makes it obvious it is over) is to ask for a business card (if one has not already been given to you). A comfortable way to do that is to offer one of your own. No, it does not have a company name on it. Not yet. But if you reach into your wallet and present a business card with your name, address and telephone number on it and ask the interviewer if he or she has a card, your preparedness and self-assur The How to of Paid Surveys ified candidates on the interviewer’s score sheet.This article is about using online paid surveys to make money. There are several ways to get paid for your opinion online. Although each one is different, they help you achieve the same goal. Some of these surveys include:1.) Paid Surveys Several major, big name companies will pay for your opinion on their products. This may seem to good to be true, I mean why would these companies pay for your opinion? It’s really very simple, these companies used to pay for big convention-like meetings that got a lot of people toge So, too, do weak handshakes. Parents often do not teach their children proper handshakes. A wet noodle handshake tells interviewers you lack the confidence to deal effectively with the public. A proper handshake is accomplished by putting the empty space between your thumb and index finger against the other party’s empty space between their thumb and index finger. Both hands close, and a satisfactory level of pressure is applied by each of the two hands. “Satisfactory” does not mean squeezing so hard you would be better off at an arm wrestling match. The purpose of a good handshake is to make the other person to think, “Yes, this is a solid, stable person.” In my day, it told whether or not a person had character. The word is “yes,” not “yeah.” It is “going to,” not “gonna.” It is “no,” not “huh-uh.” Slang may be okay for the schoolyard… but you are not there, anymore. The words “sir” or “ma’am” are good, too. A good way to leave an interview (after the interviewer makes it obvious it is over) is to ask for a business card (if one has not already been given to you). A comfortable way to do that is to offer one of your own. No, it does not have a company name on it. Not yet. But if you reach into your wallet and present a business card with your name, address and telephone number on it and ask the interviewer if he or she has a card, your preparedness and self-assur Finding Sources For Your Business And Products my day, it told whether or not a person had character.Finding the right source for your business can mean the difference between success and failure. When you are able to find a supplier that can give you what you need at low costs and a fast turnaround time, you should consider yourself lucky, because you have found what it takes to keep your business afloat. But if you have yet to find that source, you should look for certain traits.The main source you will have to deal with is the one that provides you with the product that your business sells. Finding this one is the hardest The word is “yes,” not “yeah.” It is “going to,” not “gonna.” It is “no,” not “huh-uh.” Slang may be okay for the schoolyard… but you are not there, anymore. The words “sir” or “ma’am” are good, too. A good way to leave an interview (after the interviewer makes it obvious it is over) is to ask for a business card (if one has not already been given to you). A comfortable way to do that is to offer one of your own. No, it does not have a company name on it. Not yet. But if you reach into your wallet and present a business card with your name, address and telephone number on it and ask the interviewer if he or she has a card, your preparedness and self-assurance is a plus. It is a simple and inexpensive matter to create professional-looking business cards on computers, these days. After an interview, it is good to write a follow-up letter. It should be brief, but warm… not friendly. They are hiring an employee, not a friend. Include relevant information about the position for which you interviewed and explain briefly why you find the position of particular interest. Remember, it is not where you start out in life that is important. What is important is the company you start out with and the potential you both bring to the table to progress further down a career path.
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