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Add You - Prolonged Unemployment: Reconnecting With The Labor Market
Telecom Bill Management Audits tream and are anxious to be back in your old role of primary breadwinner for your family's needs.A careful management of your telecom bills and their audits in respect of the use of the voice, data and wireless devices is essential to check the loss of a big chunk of your revenue. Proper management can help you track your assets and invoices and reduce your costs, which would otherwise add reduce your overall profits. For this you need to streamline your audit management and audit your telephone bills to find overcharges, wrong charges, and oversight errors that may total up to heavy costs on your company. You can achieve this by either hiring the services of a Telecom Audit and Bill Management company, or just by going in for software designed specifically to audit and manage your telecom expenses.In case you opt for software to perform this job for you, you will You may have tried different jobs since your layoff. We are often so desperate to find something that we take anything -cashiering, waiting tables, fast food, or mundane clerical work. After a short time, we can't take it anymore and quit, telling ourselves that there has to be something better. Your quandary is whether to mention such work. You want to emphasize that you prefer work to unemployment but you are wary of planting a seed in the interviewer's mind that you may only stay for a short period of time. A solution is to mention that you have worked one or more jobs on a temporary basis, just to keep working, but that you are really interested in a permanent position where you can grow with the company and really dig in to learn new skills and become a valuable member of the team. Will this approach work with all employers? Probably not. If the interviewer's mind is already made up, even your frankness may not jar it loose. However, there are many employers out there who are willing to take a chance if they like you. They may have experienced similar situations themselves or t Small Business Payroll Services: Are They Right For You? We are reminded almost daily of improvements in the labor market and that jobs are now available, even if not plentiful. More workers than ever are quitting their jobs, worn out by the efforts that have been required over the past 5 to 8 years to be as productive as before with half the staffing of the past.Even the most meticulous and experienced human resources professionals find that handling payroll can be a headache. For many small businesses, payroll services offer an attractive and valuable alternative to in-house processing. They can provide a less expensive, simpler means of paying employees, filing taxes, and performing other essential but mundane tasks.Is a payroll service right for your small business?Extremely small firms with a stable, salaried staff and minimal changes in tax obligations may well be better off processing internally; it can be more convenient and cost-effective if your needs are straightforward.However, even for small businesses, processing paychecks internally is not always as cost-effective as it appears. At minimum, i If you have been unemployed for an extended period of time, you may find that when you apply for one of the positions now appearing, that you are competing with individuals who are either still working but looking to make a change, or with others who have been working until very recently. From experience, you know that potential employers are going to look at your long period of unemployment with a jaundiced eye. What approach can you take that will best allow you to compete and disarm that prejudice that interviewers seem to display against anyone who has not been in the competitive work force for an extended period? Confront the issue head on! It is a common expression in business that there's an elephant in the room but everyone walks around it, pretending that it's not there. When a major issue exists, we so often skirt around it, alluding to it here and there but never really confronting it. An interviewer may ask what your recent activities have been, have you applied for other positions, what salary or shift demands you have. These innocuous questions really represent a negative train of thought concerning you. The unspoken questions revolve around: Is there something wrong with you that other interviewers identified? Are you really more comfortable NOT working? Have you lost the ability to adapt to structure, learn new skills, or respond appropriately to authority? Do you have so many restrictions on where and when you'll work, and what salary you will accept, that you have made yourself virtually unemployable? Interviewers will never actually verbalize such misgivings. Questions that can be asked in an employment interview are too circumscribed by law. However, there is no way to legislate what people think and a legal justification for not hiring you can easily be fabricated. Make the interviewer's job easier by bringing everything out into the open and making it genuine grist for discussion. Often an early statement may be something like "Tell me a little bit about yourself." Before you launch into a recitation of your skills and achievements, take the time to give a little description of what has been happening since you last worked. Just a few sentences should suffice as the interviewer can always ask for more detail or further clarification. Prepare what you are going to say beforehand and try to accomplish two goals with your brief presentation. First, couch everything in as positive terms as possible. Complaints about not being given a fair chance by other employers will lead the interviewer to infer that you will be a complaining employee, something no employer ever wants to be burdened with. Second, try to address the earlier outlined doubts in the interviewer's mind. A sample statement might be: I was a skilled _______ before my layoff last year. Since then, I have been actively seeking work but local openings for my skills have been, as you probably know, few and far between. I want to work because I feel better about myself when I'm productive. I miss the structure of regular work and I miss being part of a team and reaching goals. I'm very flexible when it comes to hours, shifts, overtime, working conditions, and salary. Frankly, I'm sick and tired of being at home and feeling as though I'm no longer a valuable human being. I want to prove myself to someone who will give me a chance to show what I can do. This is the time to bring up any kind of temporary, self-employment, volunteer, or school work you might have accomplished over the past few months. The more you can show how active you've been, the more you appear to be still comfortably connected to the world of competitive work. If you have, be honest now, been sitting around at home because you felt that every opening had been exhausted and it didn't seem worth the effort to keep searching, figure out a way to put a positive spin on it - think like a politician! Explain that you had exhausted every job lead you could find and that systematic rechecking of all job leads had failed to identify any opportunities for your particular skill set. If you spend a lot of time on your computer, explain that you have been honing your computer skills or trying to acquire new skills through Internet study. If you spend your time on household tasks, or with the kids, explain that it was initially a fun break that allowed you to deepen your relationships with your family but enough is enough. You want to step back into the mainstream and are anxious to be back in your old role of primary breadwinner for your family's needs. You may have tried different jobs since your layoff. We are often so desperate to find something that we take anything -cashiering, waiting tables, fast food, or mundane clerical work. After a short time, we can't take it anymore and quit, telling ourselves that there has to be something better. Your quandary is whether to mention such work. You want to emphasize that you prefer work to unemployment but you are wary of planting a seed in the interviewer's mind that you may only stay for a short period of time. A solution is to mention that you have worked one or more jobs on a temporary basis, just to keep working, but that you are really interested in a permanent position where you can grow with the company and really dig in to learn new skills and become a valuable member of the team. Will this approach work with all employers? Probably not. If the interviewer's mind is already made up, even your frankness may not jar it loose. However, there are many employers out there who are willing to take a chance if they like you. They may have experienced similar situations themselves or th Business Analytics never really confronting it.SoftwareCurrent Business analytics software incorporates tools and applications for tracking, modelling, analysing and delivering data in support of decision-making processes. Simplify storage management Business Analytics software enables you to know where all your storage assets are, how they are performing and their utilization. Introducing Business Analytics software, you can see your entire storage infrastructure through a single integrated tool. Lower storage costs Business Analytics software helps reduce capital and operating expenditures by improving storage utilization and identifying misallocated or underused storage capacity. In 2005, more companies are requiring their executives to make decisions based on savvy use of business analytics software. Older An interviewer may ask what your recent activities have been, have you applied for other positions, what salary or shift demands you have. These innocuous questions really represent a negative train of thought concerning you. The unspoken questions revolve around: Is there something wrong with you that other interviewers identified? Are you really more comfortable NOT working? Have you lost the ability to adapt to structure, learn new skills, or respond appropriately to authority? Do you have so many restrictions on where and when you'll work, and what salary you will accept, that you have made yourself virtually unemployable? Interviewers will never actually verbalize such misgivings. Questions that can be asked in an employment interview are too circumscribed by law. However, there is no way to legislate what people think and a legal justification for not hiring you can easily be fabricated. Make the interviewer's job easier by bringing everything out into the open and making it genuine grist for discussion. Often an early statement may be something like "Tell me a little bit about yourself." Before you launch into a recitation of your skills and achievements, take the time to give a little description of what has been happening since you last worked. Just a few sentences should suffice as the interviewer can always ask for more detail or further clarification. Prepare what you are going to say beforehand and try to accomplish two goals with your brief presentation. First, couch everything in as positive terms as possible. Complaints about not being given a fair chance by other employers will lead the interviewer to infer that you will be a complaining employee, something no employer ever wants to be burdened with. Second, try to address the earlier outlined doubts in the interviewer's mind. A sample statement might be: I was a skilled _______ before my layoff last year. Since then, I have been actively seeking work but local openings for my skills have been, as you probably know, few and far between. I want to work because I feel better about myself when I'm productive. I miss the structure of regular work and I miss being part of a team and reaching goals. I'm very flexible when it comes to hours, shifts, overtime, working conditions, and salary. Frankly, I'm sick and tired of being at home and feeling as though I'm no longer a valuable human being. I want to prove myself to someone who will give me a chance to show what I can do. This is the time to bring up any kind of temporary, self-employment, volunteer, or school work you might have accomplished over the past few months. The more you can show how active you've been, the more you appear to be still comfortably connected to the world of competitive work. If you have, be honest now, been sitting around at home because you felt that every opening had been exhausted and it didn't seem worth the effort to keep searching, figure out a way to put a positive spin on it - think like a politician! Explain that you had exhausted every job lead you could find and that systematic rechecking of all job leads had failed to identify any opportunities for your particular skill set. If you spend a lot of time on your computer, explain that you have been honing your computer skills or trying to acquire new skills through Internet study. If you spend your time on household tasks, or with the kids, explain that it was initially a fun break that allowed you to deepen your relationships with your family but enough is enough. You want to step back into the mainstream and are anxious to be back in your old role of primary breadwinner for your family's needs. You may have tried different jobs since your layoff. We are often so desperate to find something that we take anything -cashiering, waiting tables, fast food, or mundane clerical work. After a short time, we can't take it anymore and quit, telling ourselves that there has to be something better. Your quandary is whether to mention such work. You want to emphasize that you prefer work to unemployment but you are wary of planting a seed in the interviewer's mind that you may only stay for a short period of time. A solution is to mention that you have worked one or more jobs on a temporary basis, just to keep working, but that you are really interested in a permanent position where you can grow with the company and really dig in to learn new skills and become a valuable member of the team. Will this approach work with all employers? Probably not. If the interviewer's mind is already made up, even your frankness may not jar it loose. However, there are many employers out there who are willing to take a chance if they like you. They may have experienced similar situations themselves or t There Is No Job Security and achievements, take the time to give a little description of what has been happening since you last worked. Just a few sentences should suffice as the interviewer can always ask for more detail or further clarification.When I was going to school in the early eighties we were told of a job market that was drastically different than what exists today. We were told not to worry about the future too much. All we had to do was go to school, get a job and do good work. As long as we did these things we would be taken care of. We were also told the best place to put your money was in a savings accountIn today's world these instructions are not only inadequate they are for the most part completely false.Getting an education is always a good foundation no matter what a person decides to do.It does not seem to matter what you study all that much. The important part is that you have shown the resolve and will to get a degree. Listen to your gut and study what you enjoy. The Prepare what you are going to say beforehand and try to accomplish two goals with your brief presentation. First, couch everything in as positive terms as possible. Complaints about not being given a fair chance by other employers will lead the interviewer to infer that you will be a complaining employee, something no employer ever wants to be burdened with. Second, try to address the earlier outlined doubts in the interviewer's mind. A sample statement might be: I was a skilled _______ before my layoff last year. Since then, I have been actively seeking work but local openings for my skills have been, as you probably know, few and far between. I want to work because I feel better about myself when I'm productive. I miss the structure of regular work and I miss being part of a team and reaching goals. I'm very flexible when it comes to hours, shifts, overtime, working conditions, and salary. Frankly, I'm sick and tired of being at home and feeling as though I'm no longer a valuable human being. I want to prove myself to someone who will give me a chance to show what I can do. This is the time to bring up any kind of temporary, self-employment, volunteer, or school work you might have accomplished over the past few months. The more you can show how active you've been, the more you appear to be still comfortably connected to the world of competitive work. If you have, be honest now, been sitting around at home because you felt that every opening had been exhausted and it didn't seem worth the effort to keep searching, figure out a way to put a positive spin on it - think like a politician! Explain that you had exhausted every job lead you could find and that systematic rechecking of all job leads had failed to identify any opportunities for your particular skill set. If you spend a lot of time on your computer, explain that you have been honing your computer skills or trying to acquire new skills through Internet study. If you spend your time on household tasks, or with the kids, explain that it was initially a fun break that allowed you to deepen your relationships with your family but enough is enough. You want to step back into the mainstream and are anxious to be back in your old role of primary breadwinner for your family's needs. You may have tried different jobs since your layoff. We are often so desperate to find something that we take anything -cashiering, waiting tables, fast food, or mundane clerical work. After a short time, we can't take it anymore and quit, telling ourselves that there has to be something better. Your quandary is whether to mention such work. You want to emphasize that you prefer work to unemployment but you are wary of planting a seed in the interviewer's mind that you may only stay for a short period of time. A solution is to mention that you have worked one or more jobs on a temporary basis, just to keep working, but that you are really interested in a permanent position where you can grow with the company and really dig in to learn new skills and become a valuable member of the team. Will this approach work with all employers? Probably not. If the interviewer's mind is already made up, even your frankness may not jar it loose. However, there are many employers out there who are willing to take a chance if they like you. They may have experienced similar situations themselves or t Management of Non Profits; Are all Non-Profits Inefficient? longer a valuable human being. I want to prove myself to someone who will give me a chance to show what I can do.Most business people feel that Non Profits are highly inefficient like government agencies. Few would deny that government agencies are inefficient, yet many hold short when criticizing non-profits; why is this? Well we know from watching disaster response that many non-profit groups operating on a shoestring get the job done. They are often much more efficient than government throwing huge amounts of money at each problem.Are all non-profits inefficient or just the large organizations? Are non-profit groups inefficient in all nations? One business management consultant recently spoke of the situation in Canada; Rather, I have seen governmental and non-profit agencies around us here in Canada that are wasteful and inefficient.That happens everywhere bureaucracy This is the time to bring up any kind of temporary, self-employment, volunteer, or school work you might have accomplished over the past few months. The more you can show how active you've been, the more you appear to be still comfortably connected to the world of competitive work. If you have, be honest now, been sitting around at home because you felt that every opening had been exhausted and it didn't seem worth the effort to keep searching, figure out a way to put a positive spin on it - think like a politician! Explain that you had exhausted every job lead you could find and that systematic rechecking of all job leads had failed to identify any opportunities for your particular skill set. If you spend a lot of time on your computer, explain that you have been honing your computer skills or trying to acquire new skills through Internet study. If you spend your time on household tasks, or with the kids, explain that it was initially a fun break that allowed you to deepen your relationships with your family but enough is enough. You want to step back into the mainstream and are anxious to be back in your old role of primary breadwinner for your family's needs. You may have tried different jobs since your layoff. We are often so desperate to find something that we take anything -cashiering, waiting tables, fast food, or mundane clerical work. After a short time, we can't take it anymore and quit, telling ourselves that there has to be something better. Your quandary is whether to mention such work. You want to emphasize that you prefer work to unemployment but you are wary of planting a seed in the interviewer's mind that you may only stay for a short period of time. A solution is to mention that you have worked one or more jobs on a temporary basis, just to keep working, but that you are really interested in a permanent position where you can grow with the company and really dig in to learn new skills and become a valuable member of the team. Will this approach work with all employers? Probably not. If the interviewer's mind is already made up, even your frankness may not jar it loose. However, there are many employers out there who are willing to take a chance if they like you. They may have experienced similar situations themselves or t Private Carrier Exxon-Mobil On The Up and Up tream and are anxious to be back in your old role of primary breadwinner for your family's needs.Exxon Mobil is an industry leader in each of its central business divisions and as a company owns a vast array of propriety technologies. But did you know Exxon-Mobil was a strong Private Carrier? Exxon Mobil leads the industry on research and development spending at around $600 million a year. Exxon Mobil has been granted over 10,000 patents over the past ten years. With these patented advancements, Exxon Mobil is constantly aiming to increase productivity of its assets and employees as well as advance the industry and comfort of human society. One example is Exxon Mobil’s chemical division, which is constantly creating new catalysts so that fuel burns cleaner and more efficiently.As a private carrier, Exxon Mobil conducts business in nearly 200 countries and territor You may have tried different jobs since your layoff. We are often so desperate to find something that we take anything -cashiering, waiting tables, fast food, or mundane clerical work. After a short time, we can't take it anymore and quit, telling ourselves that there has to be something better. Your quandary is whether to mention such work. You want to emphasize that you prefer work to unemployment but you are wary of planting a seed in the interviewer's mind that you may only stay for a short period of time. A solution is to mention that you have worked one or more jobs on a temporary basis, just to keep working, but that you are really interested in a permanent position where you can grow with the company and really dig in to learn new skills and become a valuable member of the team. Will this approach work with all employers? Probably not. If the interviewer's mind is already made up, even your frankness may not jar it loose. However, there are many employers out there who are willing to take a chance if they like you. They may have experienced similar situations themselves or they may just appreciate your honest and forthright approach. Remind yourself that there was enough interest in you to schedule a face to face interview so exploit that interest to transform it into an offer.
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