Archive for March, 2010

Use Your Head to Get Your Foot In The Door - Harvey MacKayHarvey Mackay, #1 New York Times Best Selling Author of “Swim With The Sharks Without Being Eaten Alive” has just released his new book “Use Your Head To Get Your Feet In The Door”, and has recently spent some time with Top Marketing Expert, Mike Koenigs, Co-Founder of Traffic Geyser, to put together a total of 16 video segments to show you how to take your game to the next level, divulging job search secrets no one else will tell you.

This content is absolutely FREE! 

What does it cover?

  • The most powerful strategy anyone can use to get a job, pay raise, or keep their existing job.
  • The ‘Midas Touch’ that turns goals into gold – 24 Karat advise on how to make a goal attainable.
  • Be a Know It All and You’ll get the Job – the most valuable tool for humanizing your selling strategy.
  • 10 Biggest Networking Mistakes
  • The ‘Mackay Sweet 16′ job finder
  • Kurt Einstein’s 20 Interview Questions to fine-tune your brain to help you with questions an employer might ask.

If you are planning on being in the job market in the next few years, this is the most valuable investment of your time that you can make.  Click here to go to the first video!

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    With the gruesome job loss statistics that have piled up since mid 2008; you may be among the many U.S. citizens recently ‘unemployed’. By now, you could be looking seriously at career change ideas.

    A lot of career people polled, have revealed their job search has been ongoing for upwards of a year and more. Congress has made it easier by extending unemployment benefits for the eligible, but where does that leave you in the long term outlook?

    Career change ideas usually mean tooling up for some retraining and upgrading of specific skills that enhance your marketability and hire-ability. Unless you’re prepared to go further in debt or find some career advancement programs that are State-funded; this could imply further out-of-pocket expenses for a budget already impacted by job loss and/or reduced household income.

    If you’ve been job hunting long, you have already been frustrated by the reality that our economy has definitely imploded in certain sectors. Your old position may never come back in quite the way you imagine. It may be time to “re-purpose” your skill set. This implies leveraging and repackaging your career experience in transferable, alternative and creative career avenues that you might not have considered before.

    One thing is for sure. The Internet is offering unprecedented ways to gain exposure to prospective employers and listing your career resume′ online. Using the web to job prospect and list your bonafides is vital and universal – virtually a necessity if you want to get noticed. Social networking sites, job forums and online information clearing-house web sites can be a boon to the career change seeker.

    My career change ideas have taken me from simple job replacement to exploring the concepts of three alternative career areas that you might also add to your list of possibilities.

    Outsourcing and Freelancing

    The fact is that many companies in today’s global economy have been forced to cut back on their labor pool in hopes of staying competitive and profitable. This has also meant that they outsource job placement and use temporary and part time positions to streamline their workforce.

    It’s more tolerable holding a part time or unstable temp-job if you can make-the-most of your time spent. Learning “value-added” skills that will hold their own in any career portfolio while (temporarily) stuck in a less-than-ideal job position can either leverage or enhance a situation that would otherwise stall your career progress.

    If you’re essentially marketing yourself already in basic job search mode, what about re-positioning yourself as an independent contractor rather than simply a job hunter?

    You “re-frame” yourself as someone that employers can outsource-to, instead of having to hire you as an “employee”. They might find it easier to award you a specific task within a project if they know they’re not committing to a permanent position. When you deliver positively on the contract, who knows what it will lead to?

    What I’m really talking about here is transitioning to your own business. Check out the freelancing possibilities. The web has introduced unimaginable opportunities inaccessible until now. You can take on various outsourced projects and not even live in the same city as the employer.

    Once you change your mind-set from the “employee mentality’ to being a business owner or independent contractor/freelancer, you might discover all sorts of ways of financing your new-found freelance status.

    The two other areas I’ve found to be effective income multipliers that can help finance your alternative career path as an independent freelancer are; (internet-based) affiliate marketing and network marketing, or any combination of both that is appropriate to your particular career niche.

    For instructive online examples of how to creatively add multiplexed revenue streams to your own career change ideas, view the web pages of some contemporaries who are actively pursuing the freelancer lifestyle. Maybe their online efforts will get your creative juices flowing. See how you can adapt their model to help bolster your own career transition.

    Ken Mueller is a freelance web publisher and author. He lives in Montana and spends time networking with affiliate wizards bent on liberating the world from job drudgery overlords. For more career change ideas, and a chance to share your comments on your own alternative career change options and experience, visit http://www.altcareerchange.com


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    To anyone who knows how to search the Internet or can gain access to a job search network or library, finding help is easy for those who are facing career change. For those people who need assistance in their career change, there are persons and locations that can provide help with searching a new occupation.

    Aid can come in various forms such as help in writing cover letters, creating a resume, and assisting a worker where to find his new career. The help given will depend on each worker’s needs.

    For those who are probing whether they need career change help or not, it will be less troublesome if one knows where he should start from. The worker will need to consider just what he is capable of doing when the needed career change is due to some illness or due to the need of finding a less demanding place of work. At this stage, social workers and disability assessors could be of some help. Once interests and abilities have been acknowledged, the kind of career the person is suitable at can be targeted. For example, those people who are less mobile but are able to hold down a job

    can consider IT-related jobs. Career change help involves showing the person what courses can help him build a foundation around this trade. The moment courses have been recognized, a class schedule worked out, and training

    began, then the person may need help in looking for stations in the workplace.

    Giving information about the kind of industry that would best suit the applicant is one of the things that career change help can provide. Searching for jobs that cater to the applicant’s interests aid in the smooth and trouble-free transition from one career to another. When the training ends, the ability to discern which jobs will fit the client and the capacity to recognize the skills needed for the job in relation to a particular client are matters where career change help can work its magic. Recognizing how certain skills can work from one occupation to another is necessary to providing valuable help to a potential worker.

    When the decision to take on career change is caused by the employee’s yearning for a change in workplace and lifestyle, they may gain a lot from career change help in discerning just what it is they are searching for in life. When other factors aside from the worker are involved (for example, the spouse or family has to come along or needs to be left behind when moving, transporting and travelling) then the worker may need more specific aid when looking for the right career.

    When you know what specific aspects needing help are, then this may contribute to the ease and success of obtaining the career that matches you perfectly. There is available career change help. To gain the most favourable outcome, the worker should support their helps’ search by providing as much relevant information as possible so they can fit their needs to specific job appointments.

    Abhishek is a Career Counselor and he has got some great Career Planning Secrets up his sleeves! Download his FREE 71 Pages Ebook, “Career Planning Made Easy!” from his website http://www.Career-Guru.com/769/index.htm . Only limited Free Copies available.


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