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Added for You - Portrait of a Portfolio Career: An Answer to the Perfect Job?
Job Interviews: What Makes a Great Interview Candidate? or instance, or creative projects. Most importantly, the term “portfolio
career” gives legitimacy to those enterprising folks who have diverse interests and
talents and insist on expressing them, in spite of having to buck reputations as
“jack of all trades, master of none”. People have embraced the “portfolio career”
label with emotional relief, finding in it a term for the unifying and meaningful
guiding force behind all their activities.While regarded by many as an imperfect way to choose a new employee, interviews are used by almost all organisations irrespective of size or sector. You may not like the process and indeed some fear interviews intensely however to get that crucial first job and to move up the career ladder you must become not only comfortable in the interview room but also learn how to become an excellent interviewee.Many candidates believe that having a great resume/CV is enough to see them through the interview and win the job offer. This is a common mistake that results in disappointment. The reality is that all candidates have a great resume/CV and in my experience it is often not the applicant with the best experience or skills who will win the job rather the one who performs best at the interview. So just what do you have to do to stand out of the crowd and impress on the interviewer that you are the right person for the j So how do you go about creating a portfolio career? Here are some guidelines. • look at your work history: What is the common thread (or threads) connecting the work you’ve enjoyed most and done well at? Perhaps it’s money: making it, managing it, building healthy attitudes about it. • deconstruct the work you’ve done into tasks and list all the skills involved in those tasks. Don’t overlook the “people skills” like listening, motivating, team building, etc. Think of new settings where those skills are of value and/or get compensated. • What are the hobbies or side interests that are or could become income generators? • Plan a brainstorming session with a friend to come u 6 Ways To Advertise A Website Do you cringe when you look at your resume through the eyes of a prospective employer, afraid the wide range of jobs listed will disqualify you? Or have you put together a single-track career record but secretly long for more variety, more outlets for your varied interests and abilities?If you own a website, advertising it should be your main priority. Website advertising is the only way you’ll make money from your website: without any visitors, you won’t make money from your website. In the following text, I’ll explain six ways of advertising your website that are bound to make you some money.The first way to advertise a website is by the means of a paid-per-click campaign on Adwords or on Overture. This provides targeted traffic and is a good way to advertise a website, however it may get costly, especially if you have a lot of competition in your market or if your conversion ratio is low. Advertising a website like this might not be the best way, but it’s a fast and easy way.The second way to advertise a website is with e-mail marketing. You should find someone in your niche that owns an e-mail list, and then offer him or her 50% of the profits generated when you send an advertisement If so, perhaps you’re the perfect candidate to welcome a new identity: a portfolio careerist. While describing her new business over lunch the other day, Christine included some details of the career journey that brought her to it. Starting out doing debt consolidation for friends while tending her young children, she was catapulted into full-time work in Human Resources following a divorce. Moving from one corporate HR division to another, she specialized in employee benefits and severance packages. In recent years, tired of long hours and wanting more independence, she has moved into financial planning as an affiliate of a large financial network. While she is thriving in this new challenge, she did admit, with a smile somewhere between embarrassed and shy, that she had a “side business” as a personal color consultant. “I have too many interests to expect one job to make me happy. I’ve always had something going on the side!” Her allusion to non-monogamy was telling, probably accounting for the moment of slight embarrassment. Many of us are still laboring under the outmoded belief that we should make a career choice early in life and follow it faithfully in a more or less straight line. In fact, there are many persuasive arguments for portfolio careers becoming a wave of the future. The realities of the current employment environment, suggest that identifying yourself as the CEO of your career gives you a head start for pro-actively designing it. The entrepreneurial mindset is valued among companies looking to shift responsibility for career management onto you, and prepares you to make foresighted adjustments to changes in in-house and market conditions. Research studies indicate there’s a high level of satisfaction among people who voluntarily leave employment and become independent. As high as 65% of executives surveyed in a British study are “very satisfied” with the increased freedom, control and variety they’re able to create in their composite careers. Portfolio careers may be a model particularly well-suited to women’s lives. Women have always been good at doing more than one thing at a time. As companies’ family-friendly policies are diminishing, putting together a multi-strand career may provide the needed flexibility to tend to a family’s changing needs or a spouse’s job requirements. Designing a personal career portfolio gives women a way of working that fits our lives, rather than requiring our lives to adapt to our work. An initial reaction to the idea of abandoning the search for a “single strand” career and focusing instead on creating multiple strands may be to worry about the lack of security: no single paycheck to rely on, no predictable schedule or set of expectations, no one to report to for direction. The tough truth is that this security is becoming more and more of a myth in the contemporary workplace, as hiring is done project by project rather than for the long haul. Here are several options for addressing the issue of security: *Develop a skill set that’s in demand or suited to a growing industry. An example might be technical writing in biotech. *Actively nurture your network: keeping in touch with your contacts about new developments in your skills or interests, as well as finding opportunities to be of assistance to them. (Remember that being of service is very likely to activate a desire to reciprocate!) *Add to the numbers of people who know about you and your expertise by developing some speaking or writing topics. What does a portfolio career actually look like? It has several parts, bound together by a common thread (you), that’s adaptable to many different circumstances. It can be a combination of traditional employment, contract work, and self employment (e.g. a home-based business). The format can be to work simultaneously on various projects or simultaneously with several clients or with single clients in succession. Sometimes the strands of your portfolio even rotate seasonally: a garden design business in the summer, and technical writing in the winter. The possibilities are infinite, open to you to craft for yourself. In addition to offering variety and flexibility, the portfolio career model can place value on those endeavors that don’t (or don’t yet) generate income - service or pro bono work, for instance, or creative projects. Most importantly, the term “portfolio career” gives legitimacy to those enterprising folks who have diverse interests and talents and insist on expressing them, in spite of having to buck reputations as “jack of all trades, master of none”. People have embraced the “portfolio career” label with emotional relief, finding in it a term for the unifying and meaningful guiding force behind all their activities. So how do you go about creating a portfolio career? Here are some guidelines. • look at your work history: What is the common thread (or threads) connecting the work you’ve enjoyed most and done well at? Perhaps it’s money: making it, managing it, building healthy attitudes about it. • deconstruct the work you’ve done into tasks and list all the skills involved in those tasks. Don’t overlook the “people skills” like listening, motivating, team building, etc. Think of new settings where those skills are of value and/or get compensated. • What are the hobbies or side interests that are or could become income generators? • Plan a brainstorming session with a friend to come up Ball Valve History & Mystery ne job to make me happy. I’ve
always had something going on the side!”Here is a light hearted history and trivia on the ball valve. Read it and you will never take your natural gas or electricity for granted again, ok so maybe you will…Ball Valve mystery? The humble ball valve has a checkered history and somewhat murky origins. It may not be cloak and dagger stuff, but it’s not without mystery… Take a look around to see where the ball valve is indispensable. For example, the ball valve is crucial to the petroleum industry, water, electric power, chemical, paper, pharmaceuticals, food, steel and other fields. If it seems we could not get a long without the ball valve, it's probably true! Given the importance of the ball valve today, it's a mystery why it took so long to invent.Ball Valve history does not go back to ancient Greece or the American revolution or does it? The modern ball vale was invented in 1967 or about 1957 according to different sources. Who cares when the Her allusion to non-monogamy was telling, probably accounting for the moment of slight embarrassment. Many of us are still laboring under the outmoded belief that we should make a career choice early in life and follow it faithfully in a more or less straight line. In fact, there are many persuasive arguments for portfolio careers becoming a wave of the future. The realities of the current employment environment, suggest that identifying yourself as the CEO of your career gives you a head start for pro-actively designing it. The entrepreneurial mindset is valued among companies looking to shift responsibility for career management onto you, and prepares you to make foresighted adjustments to changes in in-house and market conditions. Research studies indicate there’s a high level of satisfaction among people who voluntarily leave employment and become independent. As high as 65% of executives surveyed in a British study are “very satisfied” with the increased freedom, control and variety they’re able to create in their composite careers. Portfolio careers may be a model particularly well-suited to women’s lives. Women have always been good at doing more than one thing at a time. As companies’ family-friendly policies are diminishing, putting together a multi-strand career may provide the needed flexibility to tend to a family’s changing needs or a spouse’s job requirements. Designing a personal career portfolio gives women a way of working that fits our lives, rather than requiring our lives to adapt to our work. An initial reaction to the idea of abandoning the search for a “single strand” career and focusing instead on creating multiple strands may be to worry about the lack of security: no single paycheck to rely on, no predictable schedule or set of expectations, no one to report to for direction. The tough truth is that this security is becoming more and more of a myth in the contemporary workplace, as hiring is done project by project rather than for the long haul. Here are several options for addressing the issue of security: *Develop a skill set that’s in demand or suited to a growing industry. An example might be technical writing in biotech. *Actively nurture your network: keeping in touch with your contacts about new developments in your skills or interests, as well as finding opportunities to be of assistance to them. (Remember that being of service is very likely to activate a desire to reciprocate!) *Add to the numbers of people who know about you and your expertise by developing some speaking or writing topics. What does a portfolio career actually look like? It has several parts, bound together by a common thread (you), that’s adaptable to many different circumstances. It can be a combination of traditional employment, contract work, and self employment (e.g. a home-based business). The format can be to work simultaneously on various projects or simultaneously with several clients or with single clients in succession. Sometimes the strands of your portfolio even rotate seasonally: a garden design business in the summer, and technical writing in the winter. The possibilities are infinite, open to you to craft for yourself. In addition to offering variety and flexibility, the portfolio career model can place value on those endeavors that don’t (or don’t yet) generate income - service or pro bono work, for instance, or creative projects. Most importantly, the term “portfolio career” gives legitimacy to those enterprising folks who have diverse interests and talents and insist on expressing them, in spite of having to buck reputations as “jack of all trades, master of none”. People have embraced the “portfolio career” label with emotional relief, finding in it a term for the unifying and meaningful guiding force behind all their activities. So how do you go about creating a portfolio career? Here are some guidelines. • look at your work history: What is the common thread (or threads) connecting the work you’ve enjoyed most and done well at? Perhaps it’s money: making it, managing it, building healthy attitudes about it. • deconstruct the work you’ve done into tasks and list all the skills involved in those tasks. Don’t overlook the “people skills” like listening, motivating, team building, etc. Think of new settings where those skills are of value and/or get compensated. • What are the hobbies or side interests that are or could become income generators? • Plan a brainstorming session with a friend to come u Your Business Logo and Color Scheme e a model particularly well-suited to women’s lives. Women
have always been good at doing more than one thing at a time. As companies’
family-friendly policies are diminishing, putting together a multi-strand career may
provide the needed flexibility to tend to a family’s changing needs or a spouse’s job
requirements. Designing a personal career portfolio gives women a way of working
that fits our lives, rather than requiring our lives to adapt to our work.My business logo and color scheme started one lovely spring day in my office, after two years of working with words and images. I purchased some rubber stamps and played with them. A logo emerged: simple, elegant, with the right feeling for my business. I took the ideas from the stamps and played with Photoshop on the computer until I had created an original business logo that felt totally right.Luckily for me, in my day job I worked among some of the top designers in the world at the Department of Architecture at MIT. An elegant Italian Ph.D. student named Maria was doing me the favor of giving me feedback on my business logo. She loved it! That was reassuring, but what really helped was what she said next.“And this can be your color scheme, too! You can get green boxes, or white bags or boxes with green ribbons, and make all your packaging match up with this. Oh, it will be so pretty!”Th An initial reaction to the idea of abandoning the search for a “single strand” career and focusing instead on creating multiple strands may be to worry about the lack of security: no single paycheck to rely on, no predictable schedule or set of expectations, no one to report to for direction. The tough truth is that this security is becoming more and more of a myth in the contemporary workplace, as hiring is done project by project rather than for the long haul. Here are several options for addressing the issue of security: *Develop a skill set that’s in demand or suited to a growing industry. An example might be technical writing in biotech. *Actively nurture your network: keeping in touch with your contacts about new developments in your skills or interests, as well as finding opportunities to be of assistance to them. (Remember that being of service is very likely to activate a desire to reciprocate!) *Add to the numbers of people who know about you and your expertise by developing some speaking or writing topics. What does a portfolio career actually look like? It has several parts, bound together by a common thread (you), that’s adaptable to many different circumstances. It can be a combination of traditional employment, contract work, and self employment (e.g. a home-based business). The format can be to work simultaneously on various projects or simultaneously with several clients or with single clients in succession. Sometimes the strands of your portfolio even rotate seasonally: a garden design business in the summer, and technical writing in the winter. The possibilities are infinite, open to you to craft for yourself. In addition to offering variety and flexibility, the portfolio career model can place value on those endeavors that don’t (or don’t yet) generate income - service or pro bono work, for instance, or creative projects. Most importantly, the term “portfolio career” gives legitimacy to those enterprising folks who have diverse interests and talents and insist on expressing them, in spite of having to buck reputations as “jack of all trades, master of none”. People have embraced the “portfolio career” label with emotional relief, finding in it a term for the unifying and meaningful guiding force behind all their activities. So how do you go about creating a portfolio career? Here are some guidelines. • look at your work history: What is the common thread (or threads) connecting the work you’ve enjoyed most and done well at? Perhaps it’s money: making it, managing it, building healthy attitudes about it. • deconstruct the work you’ve done into tasks and list all the skills involved in those tasks. Don’t overlook the “people skills” like listening, motivating, team building, etc. Think of new settings where those skills are of value and/or get compensated. • What are the hobbies or side interests that are or could become income generators? • Plan a brainstorming session with a friend to come u Reducing the Cost of Your Yellow Pages in touch with your contacts about new
developments in your skills or interests, as well as finding opportunities to be of
assistance to them. (Remember that being of service is very likely to activate a
desire to reciprocate!)If you are a typical YP advertiser, you read this headline and now this article, hoping to find a way to lower your YP investment. After all, who likes writing that huge check to the publisher every month, not even knowing if the ad is worth it or not? I’m on your side. I’ve even been in your shoes. I ran a YP ad for five years. But now I’m coming from a different direction. And, yes, I feel your pain and I’m here to help. But I’m not a cutter that slashes your ad size and takes a percentage of the savings, nor am I a middle-man with the power to negotiate a lower price with the local directory publisher. So who am I?To begin with, I’ve been designing effective Yellow Page ads for the past 25 years. During that time, I was a YP rep and consultant and, prior to that, had my own advertising agency. I also have a degree in marketing. So I have expertise in YP creation and have advised almost 7000 companies on how t *Add to the numbers of people who know about you and your expertise by developing some speaking or writing topics. What does a portfolio career actually look like? It has several parts, bound together by a common thread (you), that’s adaptable to many different circumstances. It can be a combination of traditional employment, contract work, and self employment (e.g. a home-based business). The format can be to work simultaneously on various projects or simultaneously with several clients or with single clients in succession. Sometimes the strands of your portfolio even rotate seasonally: a garden design business in the summer, and technical writing in the winter. The possibilities are infinite, open to you to craft for yourself. In addition to offering variety and flexibility, the portfolio career model can place value on those endeavors that don’t (or don’t yet) generate income - service or pro bono work, for instance, or creative projects. Most importantly, the term “portfolio career” gives legitimacy to those enterprising folks who have diverse interests and talents and insist on expressing them, in spite of having to buck reputations as “jack of all trades, master of none”. People have embraced the “portfolio career” label with emotional relief, finding in it a term for the unifying and meaningful guiding force behind all their activities. So how do you go about creating a portfolio career? Here are some guidelines. • look at your work history: What is the common thread (or threads) connecting the work you’ve enjoyed most and done well at? Perhaps it’s money: making it, managing it, building healthy attitudes about it. • deconstruct the work you’ve done into tasks and list all the skills involved in those tasks. Don’t overlook the “people skills” like listening, motivating, team building, etc. Think of new settings where those skills are of value and/or get compensated. • What are the hobbies or side interests that are or could become income generators? • Plan a brainstorming session with a friend to come u Shipping Company - How To Get Your Goods To Any Place In The World! or instance, or creative projects. Most importantly, the term “portfolio
career” gives legitimacy to those enterprising folks who have diverse interests and
talents and insist on expressing them, in spite of having to buck reputations as
“jack of all trades, master of none”. People have embraced the “portfolio career”
label with emotional relief, finding in it a term for the unifying and meaningful
guiding force behind all their activities.Shipping Company delivers almost anywhere in the world. Masters of logistics the shipping co will take care of your needs whether it is just to the next state or thousands of miles over land and sea. No matter what size or shape there will be a shipping co that will be able to take care of it for you Today's shipping companies can be responsible for moving thousands of container loads per year all around the globe. The movement of goods so vital for economies is all handled by computers and experts who never have to leave their offices.Shipping companies are not all about big business. Every time we send overseas we are using some shipping co or other. How convenient it has become for us, there will usually be a shipping co just down the road that will be able to get things delivered for us. Not just parcels either. Moving overseas, then a shipping company will be required to transport your furniture and belo So how do you go about creating a portfolio career? Here are some guidelines. • look at your work history: What is the common thread (or threads) connecting the work you’ve enjoyed most and done well at? Perhaps it’s money: making it, managing it, building healthy attitudes about it. • deconstruct the work you’ve done into tasks and list all the skills involved in those tasks. Don’t overlook the “people skills” like listening, motivating, team building, etc. Think of new settings where those skills are of value and/or get compensated. • What are the hobbies or side interests that are or could become income generators? • Plan a brainstorming session with a friend to come up with a number of revenue streams, and then mindmap them. (For mindmapping guidance: www.thinksmart.com/mission/workout/mindmapping_intro.html) • What are the natural rhythms of your life that might suggest some directions? (E.g. a client of mine got an ESL teaching certificate so she could spend cold mid- Western winters in a tropical Latin climate.) • If you’re considering multiple concurrent projects, make at least one of them a “no brainer”, something easy or very familiar. And, like any good idea, there are some cautions. Portfolio careers probably aren’t for everyone. How do you know if it might work for you? Here are some questions to think about. • Do I have a personality suited to a portfolio career (adaptable, risk tolerant, self- starting, enjoy variety/complexity)? • Am I good at improvising when I’m not fully prepared? • How do I handle financial insecurity? • Am I willing to adjust my standard of living if necessary? • How will I provide for health coverage and vacations? • How well do I structure and manage my time? Like the man who looks under the lamppost for his keys, rather than looking where he dropped them, maybe the perfect job has eluded you because you haven’t known where to look. Try on the idea of a portfolio career and see if it frees you to consider new possibilities, a new approach to creating work that fits you and fits your life.
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