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Casual Articles - The Road of Work: Keys to a Successful Navigation
Reverse Merger: A Vision Without A Strategy Is A Prescription For Failure we re-evaluate our position. For me, the speed bumps on my road where my children. On the inside I struggled, I had a 2 year old and 5 year old at home and I wondered what it would be like to give up the mahogany board room meetings for a day in the sandbox. One November day I was on a ride at Disney and made the plans for my exit. I gave my notice, leaving in February of the next year. My change was successful and using the tools in my navigational Guide, I was able to master staying home and then later return to work effortlessly, choosing a different career that better supported my new work/life balance needs.Many business owner with a dream to take their company public often neglect to prepare and plan for the future, very few small and mid-size companies have a business plan.A business plan is like a road map, and can be liken to when you go on a journey sometimes you need to change direction, it doesn’t mean your destination changes, you are just getting there via a different route.A vision is some thing that is birth in the mind and soul of the individual, some people act on it and others procrastinate for a period of time only to see someone else take their dream and bring it to fruition.The dream giver will only allow you to sit on your dream for so long before giving it to someone else. You often hear people saying “ I had that idea two or three years ago”, what good is an idea without taking action, but with the action there must be a strategy.Businesses don’t plan to fail, they fail because they fail to plan. Entrepreneurs usually are visionaries who get an idea and run with it but, if you look at the successful ones they always had a plan, and a team to help them bring their dream to the market plece.The team can sometimes get you to the top, but it’s the strategy that takes you over the top, so don’t settle for second best, be the best.If you look at a twenty year chart of Microsoft Corporation, or Yahoo Inc. You will find that at one time their stock traded under a dollar but through brilliant strategies they were able to accomplished great things.Just like Bill Gates had a plan so must you develop one. Bill Gates also had Paul Allen so must you find someone who can complement your weak point. If you are not a good strategist go out and find yourself one who is not a yes man.The phrase “no man is an island” is most applicable in the corporate environment, where team work is essential for success.In small companies the dreamer is required at times to do everything and become efficient in every task, which i 4. Create your own roadmap: design your ideal job or career: If you’ve decided to make some changes you will need your own roadmap to guide you. What do you really want out of your life and what role does your work play in that goal? Most of our waking hours are spent working, why not do what you enjoy? Visualize your ideal day, what are you doing? Where are you? Who is around you? What talents are you using? Are you in a corporation, a desk at home or at a small non profit group? You have a meeting at 10:00, who is there and what are they discussing? You get a phone call, what is it about? It is lunchtime, what are you doing? Now, 3:00 and a call comes in, who is it and what do they want from you? How do you feel when you leave at 5:00? What do you plan to do with your evening? Get a sense of the road that is the best ride for you. What types of jobs offer these attractions? Identify the work possibilities that you might want to explore. Make a list of your job targets. A software engineer reported he was bored after doing the same type of job for many years. He wanted to start a part time business, one that he could take into his retirement. We discovered he enjoyed cooking. His ideal job would be to bring healthy cooking and a fun entertaining experience to others. Within six weeks he established a business identity as a professional chef and is contracted to cook at a corporate gathering in one month. He looks forward to enjoying his new career. 5. Your Journey: Charting your course For Success: Without goals you are like a traveler without a destination, you don’t know what direction to go in and will not know when you have arrived. Like any journey there is a time of departure, a period of time spent in “transit” which can be disorientating and a point of arrival. Having a clear sense of your journey will remind you of why Hot Air Balloon Advertising Works Your Guide to Navigating the Road of WorkTraditional advertising consists of tri-media meaning the television, radio and print. These mediums are still very powerful and effective but more and more marketing people are entertaining the idea of using non traditional advertising. This is mainly because traditional media is becoming so saturated and also becoming very expensive.In order for your brand or message to get across, a marketer should make sure that the medium used is unique from the rest. Small brands on the other hand have no budget as big as established brands so there is the challenge to find not only unique mediums but mediums that will not cost so much money. This challenge has opened many new entrepreneurs to think of all sorts of non traditional advertising.One of the hit non traditional advertising options is hot air balloon advertising. Hot air balloons used to be just decorations in air much like fireworks. Ingenious people of the olden times came up with ideas on how to use it as a recreational tool by making it possible for people to ride on it.Now hot air balloon fairs are famous all over the world. Young and old people flock to these fairs to ride in these balloons or simply to marvel at the beautiful colors as they are launched into the air.Entrepreneurs then noticed that hot air balloon has a potential to be a medium of advertising. A very keen observer will see the potential of hot air balloons when placed in any event. Hot air balloons can be designed. It has enough space for a logo and tagline. The most important thing is that it is visible to the naked eye even from afar.It is especially nice to see a hot air balloon when it is the centerpiece of an event or is the centerpiece of any area for that matter. Hot air balloon advertising has to consider all these things to make sure that it will shine as a non traditional advertising medium.Hot air balloon advertising maybe expensive but the mileage you get is exceptional. The traditional tri-media might even pick up your ho Do you feel that your life is an express lane and you are driving blindly? Ever feel that way about your career? You spend most of your waking hours on the thruway of work. Are you one of many people who are working in a job they are not satisfied with? Some wonder how they got where they are in the first place; did they somehow miss a turn along the way? Many have lost their passion for work altogether, they arrive each day on cruise control and return, gas tank emptied at the end of the day. Wish you had a AAA road map to guide you through your journey? Ever want to make a U-turn or take a more scenic route? Life is full of transition, beginning a job, pursuing a career, making a commitment to a relationship, having children, trying to balance work and family life and caring for aging parents. Our work affects our life and our life affects our work, both are intertwined. As a result your career often has its fast lanes; it’s off ramps, mergers and speed bumps along the way. Sometimes you might feel out of control, ready to spin out at any time, other times you are in cruise control. Learning how to design your own road map and how to take control of the wheel can help you to navigate your lifetime of career transitions. Learning the keys to a successful navigation can help you to navigate sharp turns, detour around accidents, and to enjoy a smooth, safe ride. Chart your own course. Get to know yourself very well. The self discovery process will prevent you from making decisions that do not support your values, interests and passions. Without self knowledge you might find yourself “off roading” or worse yet, stuck. Use the tips below; they are the keys to a successful ride to help you to identify your ideal work and to make it your own. Being familiar with what you really want in your life is like having the best road map in your glove compartment. I’ve learned, as a career coach, that many of my clients simply lack the map: “I’ve been working for years at this job but find I have less and less energy at the end of the day. I hate it. But what else could I possibly do?” “I chose this job because it was a good fit for me at the time. I wonder if it is possible to make a change. I’d like to work in the community or for a non profit group but don’t have any experience in this area, can you help? Can I make a change or is it too late?” “I’ve been at home raising my family and now I’ve like to return to the workforce, I am not sure what to say about my absence? What transferable skills do I have? “I feel like I’ve missed my calling. I want to work at a job I feel passionate about.” “How can I make sure I get the next promotion?” You have choices about your career destination; you get to pick your journey. You deserve to have work that is fulfilling, has meaning and uses your gifts. You also deserve to have a life outside of work. Since 9/11 many professionals have made career changes to reflect their interests and to increase their work/life balance. We realized that our lives are too precious to spend it doing something we don’t enjoy. My current clients include men who are turning from software engineering and project management to science, teaching, consulting and small business ownership. Many women are making decisions to leave the corporate world to raise their families or to start their own businesses or to find something in between that allow them to balance a life of childcare and elder care at the same time, all while finding some time for themselves. A 2004 study conducted by the Center for Work-Life Policy indicated that 37% of highly qualified women leave their careers for a period of time, 58% resort to flexible or part time hours. To summarize, what are you doing to meet your career needs? What decisions are you putting off? What improvements can you make in your own career? Your Guide: Before I hand over the keys to career navigation, let me explain why I feel I am qualified to serve as your guide. In addition to having extensive training in Coaching with specialty training in Career and Business Coaching, I too have navigated several career changes. It is this personal experience that has helped me to help others to take control of the drive and to have a clear vision of the road. I have over 25 years of working experience, having worked a number of years in Corporate America in sales, marketing and management consulting in the information technology industry. I also took time to raise a family and became a community volunteer. I pursued a second master’s degree at age 40, worked as a psychotherapist and small business owner and then became CEO of my own coaching company and a partner Career Coach and Vice President of Marketing for a global coaching firm. What I learned most from my own experiences and professional career coaching training is that you do have choices. You get to chart your course and most importantly, you have to keep moving forward to take action on your personal and professional goals. So gas up your tank and get ready to go. The Keys to a Successful Ride: 1. Give your Map a Name: Write your Mission Statement: Who are you really? What are your passions? What are your values, what motivates you and what gifts do you have that you want to share with others? What is your personal brand, those unique qualities that make up who you really are? What do you want out of your life? What do you dream of? Write your own mission statement for your life and work by knowing yourself well. If you feel stuck, try to think of what you enjoyed doing as a child, what did you want to be when you grew up? Ask your friends what they enjoy about you the most. Find your life purpose. When you do, write your mission statement for your work and your life. You will find that knowing your life purpose will help you to make the career decision that reflects your values and uses your talents. At age 62 she took the time to evaluate her life and to reflect on what she really wanted. She remembered that she really loved her bohemian style life when she was younger and carefree. She compared that to her task oriented life and her long list of accomplishments. Upon making this discovery she limited her proficient “to do” list to only 8 items and replaced that time by doing the things she loved, she started yoga, walking daily and singing in her choir. Ironically once she did this she was also to get the job that she was seeking, switching from high tech to healthcare. 2. Label your Main Attractions: A successful ad campaign for Tide revealed its special “blue crystals”, its unique selling point. What are you main attractions? What do you have to offer in talent, skills, education, gifts that make you unique? What are your successes? Write down your CAR stories, tell the story of a Challenge you experienced, the Action you took to solve the challenge and the Result that you gained. Learn the art of self promotion. Do it in a way that you are comfortable with, but do it. Making your attraction visible will keep it on the map; make it a showcase that everyone wants to visit. If you practice this tool it will be easy for you to use it in an interview or to gain the promotion you want. Take a moment to write down your “blue crystals.” I am working with a woman in Boston who has a passion for politics and environmental issues. While she was able to express her environmental interests in her research at work, we both sensed that her voice needed to be heard in a bigger way. Once she was able to turn down the volume of self doubt and turn up her personal volume she became a free lance writer and public speaker. She is getting paid for publishing her opinion and expertise and has established a writing desk in her home, a rest stop where she can freely write and let her voice be heard. 3. Take a look around: “Should I stay or should I go?” Are you working at a job where you don’t enjoy the scenery anymore? Are you feeling like your gifts are not being used and your work is not appreciated? Do you have a tug in the pit of your stomach when you leave for work in the morning, wishing you were at home instead? Are you concerned that your position may be eliminated but are not being proactive? How do you know when you really should be taking a more scenic route? It is not unusual for adults to have experienced multiple careers in their lifetime and many jobs. The days of staying in one place and receiving an award at the end are long gone. It is okay change lanes. First decide if you should improve where you are or if it is time to move on. Look around and observe your current work. Put on another pair of sunglasses and see the view with a different lens. Could positive changes be made where you are? Are your perceptions true or tinted by your self perceptions? Step back to get the bigger picture. If you find the need for change, communicate what it is that you need. Want to be challenged, to be able to put your own creativity into your projects? See if you can find better fulfillment right where you are, if not, make a career change to something that is more supportive of where you want to be. The key to knowing if you should make a change is determining if you are happy where you are. Like a sight seeing tour, look around, take some notes. What is working for you, what is not? What changes do you need to make? Write them down and make a commitment to make the changes you need personally and professionally. As a successful sales person in a high tech company others thought I was happy, I was making a lucrative income, was well recognized in the company and was on my way to being offered a headquarters management position. By then the speed bumps had come along. What do we do with speed bumps? We slow down, we use caution, we look to the left and the right, and we re-evaluate our position. For me, the speed bumps on my road where my children. On the inside I struggled, I had a 2 year old and 5 year old at home and I wondered what it would be like to give up the mahogany board room meetings for a day in the sandbox. One November day I was on a ride at Disney and made the plans for my exit. I gave my notice, leaving in February of the next year. My change was successful and using the tools in my navigational Guide, I was able to master staying home and then later return to work effortlessly, choosing a different career that better supported my new work/life balance needs. 4. Create your own roadmap: design your ideal job or career: If you’ve decided to make some changes you will need your own roadmap to guide you. What do you really want out of your life and what role does your work play in that goal? Most of our waking hours are spent working, why not do what you enjoy? Visualize your ideal day, what are you doing? Where are you? Who is around you? What talents are you using? Are you in a corporation, a desk at home or at a small non profit group? You have a meeting at 10:00, who is there and what are they discussing? You get a phone call, what is it about? It is lunchtime, what are you doing? Now, 3:00 and a call comes in, who is it and what do they want from you? How do you feel when you leave at 5:00? What do you plan to do with your evening? Get a sense of the road that is the best ride for you. What types of jobs offer these attractions? Identify the work possibilities that you might want to explore. Make a list of your job targets. A software engineer reported he was bored after doing the same type of job for many years. He wanted to start a part time business, one that he could take into his retirement. We discovered he enjoyed cooking. His ideal job would be to bring healthy cooking and a fun entertaining experience to others. Within six weeks he established a business identity as a professional chef and is contracted to cook at a corporate gathering in one month. He looks forward to enjoying his new career. 5. Your Journey: Charting your course For Success: Without goals you are like a traveler without a destination, you don’t know what direction to go in and will not know when you have arrived. Like any journey there is a time of departure, a period of time spent in “transit” which can be disorientating and a point of arrival. Having a clear sense of your journey will remind you of why Adding Radio Advertising to Your Direct Marketing Mix now I’ve like to return to the workforce, I am not sure what to say about my absence? What transferable skills do I have?Radio may be old, but it's certainly not feeble.According to the Radio Advertising Bureau, the average American listens to radio more than 19 hours a week. So why don't more direct response advertisers use this medium? After all, many direct marketers find that their radio response converts up to 25-50% better than their television response.Although radio has some limitations, it has terrific potential for many types of offers. If you want to make the most of your direct response radio advertising, consider the following strategies for success:Lead generation offers are best for responseIt's challenging to get people to order and pay for a product or service right after they hear a radio ad, unless you offer them something for free or at no risk in the commercial. Structure your radio offer so that listeners call for a free information kit, free trial offer, free appointment, free sample, etc. Your product must have a reasonable advertising margin built in for a two-step conversion process. If a two-step is uneconomical and you need to close the sale in the initial call, you will still need a free trial offer or a no-risk offer. Get the conversion you need by making sure you use an inbound telemarketing provider that knows how to sell, upsell and close the sale!Think twice about visually dependent productsThe "one-step close" selling model will not work on radio if a visual orientation or demonstration is critical to your success. The only exception might be if you already have significant brand awareness from TV, print or online advertising. If you have a visually-oriented product, you'll have a better chance of converting inquiries into customers if you structure your radio offer around a free video, brochure, website demo or other visual support.Make the most of listeners' relationships with their stationsRadio is a personal, one-on-one medium. Every “I feel like I’ve missed my calling. I want to work at a job I feel passionate about.” “How can I make sure I get the next promotion?” You have choices about your career destination; you get to pick your journey. You deserve to have work that is fulfilling, has meaning and uses your gifts. You also deserve to have a life outside of work. Since 9/11 many professionals have made career changes to reflect their interests and to increase their work/life balance. We realized that our lives are too precious to spend it doing something we don’t enjoy. My current clients include men who are turning from software engineering and project management to science, teaching, consulting and small business ownership. Many women are making decisions to leave the corporate world to raise their families or to start their own businesses or to find something in between that allow them to balance a life of childcare and elder care at the same time, all while finding some time for themselves. A 2004 study conducted by the Center for Work-Life Policy indicated that 37% of highly qualified women leave their careers for a period of time, 58% resort to flexible or part time hours. To summarize, what are you doing to meet your career needs? What decisions are you putting off? What improvements can you make in your own career? Your Guide: Before I hand over the keys to career navigation, let me explain why I feel I am qualified to serve as your guide. In addition to having extensive training in Coaching with specialty training in Career and Business Coaching, I too have navigated several career changes. It is this personal experience that has helped me to help others to take control of the drive and to have a clear vision of the road. I have over 25 years of working experience, having worked a number of years in Corporate America in sales, marketing and management consulting in the information technology industry. I also took time to raise a family and became a community volunteer. I pursued a second master’s degree at age 40, worked as a psychotherapist and small business owner and then became CEO of my own coaching company and a partner Career Coach and Vice President of Marketing for a global coaching firm. What I learned most from my own experiences and professional career coaching training is that you do have choices. You get to chart your course and most importantly, you have to keep moving forward to take action on your personal and professional goals. So gas up your tank and get ready to go. The Keys to a Successful Ride: 1. Give your Map a Name: Write your Mission Statement: Who are you really? What are your passions? What are your values, what motivates you and what gifts do you have that you want to share with others? What is your personal brand, those unique qualities that make up who you really are? What do you want out of your life? What do you dream of? Write your own mission statement for your life and work by knowing yourself well. If you feel stuck, try to think of what you enjoyed doing as a child, what did you want to be when you grew up? Ask your friends what they enjoy about you the most. Find your life purpose. When you do, write your mission statement for your work and your life. You will find that knowing your life purpose will help you to make the career decision that reflects your values and uses your talents. At age 62 she took the time to evaluate her life and to reflect on what she really wanted. She remembered that she really loved her bohemian style life when she was younger and carefree. She compared that to her task oriented life and her long list of accomplishments. Upon making this discovery she limited her proficient “to do” list to only 8 items and replaced that time by doing the things she loved, she started yoga, walking daily and singing in her choir. Ironically once she did this she was also to get the job that she was seeking, switching from high tech to healthcare. 2. Label your Main Attractions: A successful ad campaign for Tide revealed its special “blue crystals”, its unique selling point. What are you main attractions? What do you have to offer in talent, skills, education, gifts that make you unique? What are your successes? Write down your CAR stories, tell the story of a Challenge you experienced, the Action you took to solve the challenge and the Result that you gained. Learn the art of self promotion. Do it in a way that you are comfortable with, but do it. Making your attraction visible will keep it on the map; make it a showcase that everyone wants to visit. If you practice this tool it will be easy for you to use it in an interview or to gain the promotion you want. Take a moment to write down your “blue crystals.” I am working with a woman in Boston who has a passion for politics and environmental issues. While she was able to express her environmental interests in her research at work, we both sensed that her voice needed to be heard in a bigger way. Once she was able to turn down the volume of self doubt and turn up her personal volume she became a free lance writer and public speaker. She is getting paid for publishing her opinion and expertise and has established a writing desk in her home, a rest stop where she can freely write and let her voice be heard. 3. Take a look around: “Should I stay or should I go?” Are you working at a job where you don’t enjoy the scenery anymore? Are you feeling like your gifts are not being used and your work is not appreciated? Do you have a tug in the pit of your stomach when you leave for work in the morning, wishing you were at home instead? Are you concerned that your position may be eliminated but are not being proactive? How do you know when you really should be taking a more scenic route? It is not unusual for adults to have experienced multiple careers in their lifetime and many jobs. The days of staying in one place and receiving an award at the end are long gone. It is okay change lanes. First decide if you should improve where you are or if it is time to move on. Look around and observe your current work. Put on another pair of sunglasses and see the view with a different lens. Could positive changes be made where you are? Are your perceptions true or tinted by your self perceptions? Step back to get the bigger picture. If you find the need for change, communicate what it is that you need. Want to be challenged, to be able to put your own creativity into your projects? See if you can find better fulfillment right where you are, if not, make a career change to something that is more supportive of where you want to be. The key to knowing if you should make a change is determining if you are happy where you are. Like a sight seeing tour, look around, take some notes. What is working for you, what is not? What changes do you need to make? Write them down and make a commitment to make the changes you need personally and professionally. As a successful sales person in a high tech company others thought I was happy, I was making a lucrative income, was well recognized in the company and was on my way to being offered a headquarters management position. By then the speed bumps had come along. What do we do with speed bumps? We slow down, we use caution, we look to the left and the right, and we re-evaluate our position. For me, the speed bumps on my road where my children. On the inside I struggled, I had a 2 year old and 5 year old at home and I wondered what it would be like to give up the mahogany board room meetings for a day in the sandbox. One November day I was on a ride at Disney and made the plans for my exit. I gave my notice, leaving in February of the next year. My change was successful and using the tools in my navigational Guide, I was able to master staying home and then later return to work effortlessly, choosing a different career that better supported my new work/life balance needs. 4. Create your own roadmap: design your ideal job or career: If you’ve decided to make some changes you will need your own roadmap to guide you. What do you really want out of your life and what role does your work play in that goal? Most of our waking hours are spent working, why not do what you enjoy? Visualize your ideal day, what are you doing? Where are you? Who is around you? What talents are you using? Are you in a corporation, a desk at home or at a small non profit group? You have a meeting at 10:00, who is there and what are they discussing? You get a phone call, what is it about? It is lunchtime, what are you doing? Now, 3:00 and a call comes in, who is it and what do they want from you? How do you feel when you leave at 5:00? What do you plan to do with your evening? Get a sense of the road that is the best ride for you. What types of jobs offer these attractions? Identify the work possibilities that you might want to explore. Make a list of your job targets. A software engineer reported he was bored after doing the same type of job for many years. He wanted to start a part time business, one that he could take into his retirement. We discovered he enjoyed cooking. His ideal job would be to bring healthy cooking and a fun entertaining experience to others. Within six weeks he established a business identity as a professional chef and is contracted to cook at a corporate gathering in one month. He looks forward to enjoying his new career. 5. Your Journey: Charting your course For Success: Without goals you are like a traveler without a destination, you don’t know what direction to go in and will not know when you have arrived. Like any journey there is a time of departure, a period of time spent in “transit” which can be disorientating and a point of arrival. Having a clear sense of your journey will remind you of why Warning - Don't Get Scammed - Find Honest Work-at-Home Jobs your course and most importantly, you have to keep moving forward to take action on your personal and professional goals. So gas up your tank and get ready to go.If you have tried to search for an honest work at home job and you still don't know where to look or what job to choose you are not alone, thousands of people are coming online with the hope to find work at home jobs online and business opportunities. Many of those people fall for a scam or a ground breaking impossible opportunity.The first thing you have to understand if you want to find honest work at home jobs is, making money online takes work, many people have come to believe that on the internet apply different rules, but that's nonsense and if you follow that path you will get frustrated. Set your Goals and take action.If you see any type of website telling you, make thousands working just 2 hours day and make money while you sleep, this are the types of sites you have to be away, to find honest work at home jobs you need to go with trusted sites and people that have been in business for a long time.If i were starting to look for a job online, i would go first to trusted online classified ad sites like craigslist.org, monster.com and careerbuilder.com, but if i want a job just online and want to offer my skills the freelance work exchange sites would be perfect. You will find international work at home jobs that can be done from anywhere in the world and be paid to your paypal account or you bank account.One of the advantages of craigslist is that you can select to find jobs from your country and your city, for example i can search for a work at home job in canada and find dozens of jobs that were posted today.Bottom line, if you want international work at home jobs, work at home telephone jobs, transcription jobs, data entry jobs, etc. or you are just searching for a work at home job listing you can find hundreds of honest work at home jobs on the classified ad sites and freelance networks without any problem, you just have to follow some basic guidelines and choose a job you are passionate about. The Keys to a Successful Ride: 1. Give your Map a Name: Write your Mission Statement: Who are you really? What are your passions? What are your values, what motivates you and what gifts do you have that you want to share with others? What is your personal brand, those unique qualities that make up who you really are? What do you want out of your life? What do you dream of? Write your own mission statement for your life and work by knowing yourself well. If you feel stuck, try to think of what you enjoyed doing as a child, what did you want to be when you grew up? Ask your friends what they enjoy about you the most. Find your life purpose. When you do, write your mission statement for your work and your life. You will find that knowing your life purpose will help you to make the career decision that reflects your values and uses your talents. At age 62 she took the time to evaluate her life and to reflect on what she really wanted. She remembered that she really loved her bohemian style life when she was younger and carefree. She compared that to her task oriented life and her long list of accomplishments. Upon making this discovery she limited her proficient “to do” list to only 8 items and replaced that time by doing the things she loved, she started yoga, walking daily and singing in her choir. Ironically once she did this she was also to get the job that she was seeking, switching from high tech to healthcare. 2. Label your Main Attractions: A successful ad campaign for Tide revealed its special “blue crystals”, its unique selling point. What are you main attractions? What do you have to offer in talent, skills, education, gifts that make you unique? What are your successes? Write down your CAR stories, tell the story of a Challenge you experienced, the Action you took to solve the challenge and the Result that you gained. Learn the art of self promotion. Do it in a way that you are comfortable with, but do it. Making your attraction visible will keep it on the map; make it a showcase that everyone wants to visit. If you practice this tool it will be easy for you to use it in an interview or to gain the promotion you want. Take a moment to write down your “blue crystals.” I am working with a woman in Boston who has a passion for politics and environmental issues. While she was able to express her environmental interests in her research at work, we both sensed that her voice needed to be heard in a bigger way. Once she was able to turn down the volume of self doubt and turn up her personal volume she became a free lance writer and public speaker. She is getting paid for publishing her opinion and expertise and has established a writing desk in her home, a rest stop where she can freely write and let her voice be heard. 3. Take a look around: “Should I stay or should I go?” Are you working at a job where you don’t enjoy the scenery anymore? Are you feeling like your gifts are not being used and your work is not appreciated? Do you have a tug in the pit of your stomach when you leave for work in the morning, wishing you were at home instead? Are you concerned that your position may be eliminated but are not being proactive? How do you know when you really should be taking a more scenic route? It is not unusual for adults to have experienced multiple careers in their lifetime and many jobs. The days of staying in one place and receiving an award at the end are long gone. It is okay change lanes. First decide if you should improve where you are or if it is time to move on. Look around and observe your current work. Put on another pair of sunglasses and see the view with a different lens. Could positive changes be made where you are? Are your perceptions true or tinted by your self perceptions? Step back to get the bigger picture. If you find the need for change, communicate what it is that you need. Want to be challenged, to be able to put your own creativity into your projects? See if you can find better fulfillment right where you are, if not, make a career change to something that is more supportive of where you want to be. The key to knowing if you should make a change is determining if you are happy where you are. Like a sight seeing tour, look around, take some notes. What is working for you, what is not? What changes do you need to make? Write them down and make a commitment to make the changes you need personally and professionally. As a successful sales person in a high tech company others thought I was happy, I was making a lucrative income, was well recognized in the company and was on my way to being offered a headquarters management position. By then the speed bumps had come along. What do we do with speed bumps? We slow down, we use caution, we look to the left and the right, and we re-evaluate our position. For me, the speed bumps on my road where my children. On the inside I struggled, I had a 2 year old and 5 year old at home and I wondered what it would be like to give up the mahogany board room meetings for a day in the sandbox. One November day I was on a ride at Disney and made the plans for my exit. I gave my notice, leaving in February of the next year. My change was successful and using the tools in my navigational Guide, I was able to master staying home and then later return to work effortlessly, choosing a different career that better supported my new work/life balance needs. 4. Create your own roadmap: design your ideal job or career: If you’ve decided to make some changes you will need your own roadmap to guide you. What do you really want out of your life and what role does your work play in that goal? Most of our waking hours are spent working, why not do what you enjoy? Visualize your ideal day, what are you doing? Where are you? Who is around you? What talents are you using? Are you in a corporation, a desk at home or at a small non profit group? You have a meeting at 10:00, who is there and what are they discussing? You get a phone call, what is it about? It is lunchtime, what are you doing? Now, 3:00 and a call comes in, who is it and what do they want from you? How do you feel when you leave at 5:00? What do you plan to do with your evening? Get a sense of the road that is the best ride for you. What types of jobs offer these attractions? Identify the work possibilities that you might want to explore. Make a list of your job targets. A software engineer reported he was bored after doing the same type of job for many years. He wanted to start a part time business, one that he could take into his retirement. We discovered he enjoyed cooking. His ideal job would be to bring healthy cooking and a fun entertaining experience to others. Within six weeks he established a business identity as a professional chef and is contracted to cook at a corporate gathering in one month. He looks forward to enjoying his new career. 5. Your Journey: Charting your course For Success: Without goals you are like a traveler without a destination, you don’t know what direction to go in and will not know when you have arrived. Like any journey there is a time of departure, a period of time spent in “transit” which can be disorientating and a point of arrival. Having a clear sense of your journey will remind you of why What to Do when Your Employer Asks for a Police Check While she was able to express her environmental interests in her research at work, we both sensed that her voice needed to be heard in a bigger way. Once she was able to turn down the volume of self doubt and turn up her personal volume she became a free lance writer and public speaker. She is getting paid for publishing her opinion and expertise and has established a writing desk in her home, a rest stop where she can freely write and let her voice be heard.You have been asked to provide a police check for your new job. How do you go about doing this?Firstly, it is a matter of procedure to be asked for a police check if you are going to be holding certain jobs. You can expect to be asked for a police check if you are working with children in any capacity (from one week at summer camp to teacher’s college to daycare supervisor). You will also be asked for a police check if you are working in a sensitive environment: certain churches require police checks of people who wish to be ordained. Some high security jobs, such as investment banker or lawyer, will also require police checks.Depending on the position to which you are applying, you might need to pay for your own police check. Often, if you are doing volunteer work, the police will waive the fee. If you are volunteering, be sure to bring a letter from the institution at which you are volunteering that states that you need a police check and that you are volunteering. This letter should be on letterhead if possible.When you go for your police check, bring certain things with you to facilitate the process. You will need current photo ID, such as a license, some health care cards, or a passport. You will also need a secondary piece of ID, such as a social insurance number or social security number card. Bring a list of your past addresses for the last five year, including postal or zip codes.If you live in a city, go to the city police department to get your police check. If you live in the country, you will probably need to go to the local provincial or state police department to have your police check done. If you are unsure what jurisdiction you fall under, call the police department to ask. Finding out this information might save you an unnecessary trip.You will have to fill out some forms for your police check, and sign that you want your police check completed. In some areas, you will have to sign a special waiver for your police check: this waiver 3. Take a look around: “Should I stay or should I go?” Are you working at a job where you don’t enjoy the scenery anymore? Are you feeling like your gifts are not being used and your work is not appreciated? Do you have a tug in the pit of your stomach when you leave for work in the morning, wishing you were at home instead? Are you concerned that your position may be eliminated but are not being proactive? How do you know when you really should be taking a more scenic route? It is not unusual for adults to have experienced multiple careers in their lifetime and many jobs. The days of staying in one place and receiving an award at the end are long gone. It is okay change lanes. First decide if you should improve where you are or if it is time to move on. Look around and observe your current work. Put on another pair of sunglasses and see the view with a different lens. Could positive changes be made where you are? Are your perceptions true or tinted by your self perceptions? Step back to get the bigger picture. If you find the need for change, communicate what it is that you need. Want to be challenged, to be able to put your own creativity into your projects? See if you can find better fulfillment right where you are, if not, make a career change to something that is more supportive of where you want to be. The key to knowing if you should make a change is determining if you are happy where you are. Like a sight seeing tour, look around, take some notes. What is working for you, what is not? What changes do you need to make? Write them down and make a commitment to make the changes you need personally and professionally. As a successful sales person in a high tech company others thought I was happy, I was making a lucrative income, was well recognized in the company and was on my way to being offered a headquarters management position. By then the speed bumps had come along. What do we do with speed bumps? We slow down, we use caution, we look to the left and the right, and we re-evaluate our position. For me, the speed bumps on my road where my children. On the inside I struggled, I had a 2 year old and 5 year old at home and I wondered what it would be like to give up the mahogany board room meetings for a day in the sandbox. One November day I was on a ride at Disney and made the plans for my exit. I gave my notice, leaving in February of the next year. My change was successful and using the tools in my navigational Guide, I was able to master staying home and then later return to work effortlessly, choosing a different career that better supported my new work/life balance needs. 4. Create your own roadmap: design your ideal job or career: If you’ve decided to make some changes you will need your own roadmap to guide you. What do you really want out of your life and what role does your work play in that goal? Most of our waking hours are spent working, why not do what you enjoy? Visualize your ideal day, what are you doing? Where are you? Who is around you? What talents are you using? Are you in a corporation, a desk at home or at a small non profit group? You have a meeting at 10:00, who is there and what are they discussing? You get a phone call, what is it about? It is lunchtime, what are you doing? Now, 3:00 and a call comes in, who is it and what do they want from you? How do you feel when you leave at 5:00? What do you plan to do with your evening? Get a sense of the road that is the best ride for you. What types of jobs offer these attractions? Identify the work possibilities that you might want to explore. Make a list of your job targets. A software engineer reported he was bored after doing the same type of job for many years. He wanted to start a part time business, one that he could take into his retirement. We discovered he enjoyed cooking. His ideal job would be to bring healthy cooking and a fun entertaining experience to others. Within six weeks he established a business identity as a professional chef and is contracted to cook at a corporate gathering in one month. He looks forward to enjoying his new career. 5. Your Journey: Charting your course For Success: Without goals you are like a traveler without a destination, you don’t know what direction to go in and will not know when you have arrived. Like any journey there is a time of departure, a period of time spent in “transit” which can be disorientating and a point of arrival. Having a clear sense of your journey will remind you of why Business Cards-Advert For Your Business we re-evaluate our position. For me, the speed bumps on my road where my children. On the inside I struggled, I had a 2 year old and 5 year old at home and I wondered what it would be like to give up the mahogany board room meetings for a day in the sandbox. One November day I was on a ride at Disney and made the plans for my exit. I gave my notice, leaving in February of the next year. My change was successful and using the tools in my navigational Guide, I was able to master staying home and then later return to work effortlessly, choosing a different career that better supported my new work/life balance needs.Business cards are so handy to give to strangers who probably do not know that you have started a new business in town. This little card will tell them all the important things they need to know about your new venture. They will know what the name of your business is, what product or service you provide, your physical address and all your contact numbers.It is crucial to distribute your cards in the area where your premises are situated so that you can get the locals to start paying your store a visit.It is a good idea to use the back of the card to print your special offers and discounts and maybe a small map of the area where your business is situated for people who may not know how to find it. You could make use of recipes or handy hints or any little snippets of information to print on the cards. It is just a way of adding a bit of extra value to your cards.Try networking with your cards when you next attend a big function. Try handing out your cards and asking for one in return. You could build up your own directory of names and telephone numbers of business people who could possibly be of assistance to you and you to them. This creates bonds with people and it helps you in your quest to influence members of the public to visit your store.Business cards can be made to look like post cards. On one side you will have the details of your business with the name and logo and on the other side you can write the name and address of the company you would like to mail it to. When someone receives such a card in the post, they will automatically read it and take note that such and such a business is in town.Add even more value to your little advertisements by magnetizing them with small magnets pasted on the backs of the cards. Theses little magnets can be purchased from any craft store in town. This will ensure that many people will save them on their fridges and not throw them away. 4. Create your own roadmap: design your ideal job or career: If you’ve decided to make some changes you will need your own roadmap to guide you. What do you really want out of your life and what role does your work play in that goal? Most of our waking hours are spent working, why not do what you enjoy? Visualize your ideal day, what are you doing? Where are you? Who is around you? What talents are you using? Are you in a corporation, a desk at home or at a small non profit group? You have a meeting at 10:00, who is there and what are they discussing? You get a phone call, what is it about? It is lunchtime, what are you doing? Now, 3:00 and a call comes in, who is it and what do they want from you? How do you feel when you leave at 5:00? What do you plan to do with your evening? Get a sense of the road that is the best ride for you. What types of jobs offer these attractions? Identify the work possibilities that you might want to explore. Make a list of your job targets. A software engineer reported he was bored after doing the same type of job for many years. He wanted to start a part time business, one that he could take into his retirement. We discovered he enjoyed cooking. His ideal job would be to bring healthy cooking and a fun entertaining experience to others. Within six weeks he established a business identity as a professional chef and is contracted to cook at a corporate gathering in one month. He looks forward to enjoying his new career. 5. Your Journey: Charting your course For Success: Without goals you are like a traveler without a destination, you don’t know what direction to go in and will not know when you have arrived. Like any journey there is a time of departure, a period of time spent in “transit” which can be disorientating and a point of arrival. Having a clear sense of your journey will remind you of why you are traveling and will get you through the uncomfortable time of passage. Spend the time to research your options in the same way you would visit a travel guide. Read the book “Working Identity” and realize that there may be many different types of careers for you, like unvisited cities, you don’t know if you’d like it there unless you learned more about it. Take some professional career assessments to help guide your options. Need to have additional education or certification for the work you want to do? Take a detour, figure out how to take the coursework you need. Ask for directions, network with others who have the job you might be interested in. Ask to stop in for a visit, take a look around. Try on the idea of a new job like a new spring coat. Get a sense of how it fits. Keep in the lane, write down your goals and take single daily actions towards making them happen. Achievable goals are specific and measurable and include what you will do and when you will do it. Journal your goals and your progress. She was unhappy in her work at the television station. Everyone was so busy and focused she lacked the human connection she needed in her work. She also wanted to feel that her work meant something that it helped others in some way. She read Working Identity and decided to try out other types of work. Her assessments confirmed that she was a helper and an educator, creative and caring about others. She “tried on” the job of a early childhood educator by taking a course. She tried out the career of a speech therapist by talking to one, she tried out working with special needs children through a part time job, she researched, talked to people, observed and then decided what she wanted to do. She will be soon enrolling in a Masters program for Occupational Therapy. 6. Arriving at your destination: So, you’ve chosen your destination, you have a map and are ready to begin your journey. Before you put your foot to the pedal you will need a full tank of gas, some beverages and tasteful snacks to keep you energized on your journey. Know that there will be bumps in the road and you might feel lost at times. Trust that your instincts will set you back on course. Keep on the road and the mile markers will quickly fly by. Arm yourself with a solid compass, the resume that provides a glowing review of your unique qualities and contributions. Set your goal to simply enjoy the scenery, know you might have a number of interviewing visits before narrowing your choices. Communicate your “blue crystals” and become the ideal job candidate. Visit many places, meet many people. Become an interesting tourist. Let others learn from you. Then they will want you to stay. Choose your destination, seeking the best “hotel”; make sure you are getting the value in return to the value that you provide. You deserve only the finest of linens. Choose the nameplate that fits you best, define your working hours to allow flexibility for your many journeys and park your car in the work you desire. Congratulations, you have arrived. Celebrate yourself! Feel you might need help in figuring out your destination or need a passenger to help guide you on your journey? Need to simply stop for directions? I’d like to learn more about your travel plans. Maybe you simply need a professional career assessment to help you to guide your course, or maybe you want a partner to keep you motivated and on the road. Let’s figure it out. Contact me to talk about where you are at and where you would like to be. Don’t forget to sign up for the complimentary newsletter which is filled with tips and snack items to help you on your journey, www.OpenDoorCoaching.com.
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