Try Me

Quotations to Live By

"No amount of advertising will make up for a bad product"

Rishad Tobaccowala, Chief Innovation Officer, Publicis Groupe Media

Wednesday, October 31, 2007

OOBEY Guest Article: Tips For Attending a College Career Fair

This guest article is brought to you by:


Introduction
A college career fair is an ideal way for soon-to-be college grads and students with an eye towards their post-college career to network with employers looking for the skills and education they're completing. Most colleges sponsor at least one major career fair each academic year, and proper preparation will be your best friend if you plan to attend one.

- Visit, call or email your school's career services department to ask about career fairs planned for your campus. Make a note of the dates and learn as much information as you can about the employers who are expected to take part.

- Make an appointment with a career counselor to learn more about the career opportunities available to graduates in your field of study. Figure out what employers you want to target when you attend the career fair. Ask your career counselor to offer further advice on how you can best represent yourself when meeting with prospective employers at the career fair.

- Attend a resume-building workshop, which are frequently available through your school's career services department. Use the tips you learn to create a resume that best represents the education and skills you've been mastering in college.

- Rehearse questions to ask each of the employers you're planning to meet. It's a mistake to think that employers should ask all the questions in an interview. Having questions of your own shows commitment to your career path and attention to detail.

- Dress professionally on the day of the career fair, and make sure your resume is error-free. Bring at least 20 copies with you to give to the company representatives you meet with.

- Make sure you have a polished, informative and professional self-introduction planned. The first thing you'll be asked by prospective employers is to tell them about yourself. Have your answer ready, and make it a good one that demonstrates your knowledge of their company and sets you apart from the rest of the field.

- Collect a business card from every prospective employer you speak with, and always follow up a day or two after your meeting. Thank them for meeting with you and tell them you are looking forward to discussing their company's career opportunities further.

Visit www.oobey.com for more articles.

Archive
Basic Resume Writing Tips

10 Tips For Bagging That Raise

Mastering the Interview

3 Types of Bosses

True Job Search Blunders

Hate Your Job? 10 Ways to Cope

Be a Better Boss

Sunday, October 28, 2007

Top 4 Biggest Career Mistakes You'll Ever Make

A while ago, I was asked to speak to a group of young, eager, and aggresive post-studies executives who have just landed their first jobs but still unsure about their future. I was asked to talk on someting about Career Planning and stuff like that.

During the session, I was asked a substantial amount of questions concerning what would be the 'wrong' steps to avoid while climbing the career ladder. As a summary, I noted these 4 biggest career mistakes they'll ever make:

1.Keeping a career in line with your education
This is the first that came to my mind. I have seen and counseled many people whom were in despair halfway through their career lives, saddened by the fact that they are stuck where there are because of a wrong decision made concerning their education many years back.

My simple advice is this - look at the successful career professionals around you. You will notice that the common thing about them is that they are mostly doing something which is not directly tied to their paper qualifications (except for thos in professional jobs e.g. lawyers, accountants).

Do not ever let your education (or lack of) tie you down. Work on the career you want.

2.Getting career advice from your parents (or relatives)
This, to me, is mistake NUMERO UNO. Most parents have no clue to what a good career is and many parents (though out of good intentions) still insist on advising their children what to do.

Question: If you want to be a successful Engineer, who do you ask - your parents or a successful Engineer? The answer is obvious. Take advice from professionals. Parents should only give general advice - study hard, work hard, be honest etc.

3.Changing jobs without long-term strategy in mind
This is simple. The 500 dollar increment from another company may look interesting but may also kill your career in the long run. Change jobs only when you are very very very very sure that it is a strategic step to your overall career plans.


4.Letting your Boss (or company) manage your career
Never forget this one. You are your own boss and your own master. Manage your own career. Invest in yourself. Don't cry if your company does not send you for training. Save some money and go for your own training.


If you can take care to avoid these "Top 4 Biggest Career Mistakes You'll Ever Make", then you are on your way to a satisfying career.

-TURD-

Guest Article: Make your PC search-friendly

From Monsters and Critics.com
Tech Features
By DPAOct 20, 2007, 11:53 GMT

Washington - With computers these days, it's all about search.
And there's a good reason: with mounds upon mounds of data on our hard drives, the primary obstacle we face is finding what we need when we need it.

The irony is that it's almost easier to find information online than it is to find it on our own PCs.
Thankfully, that's changing. New tools are going some way toward making our own hard drives as accessible as what we see online.

But to make your PC truly search friendly, you have to know how to optimise it for faster searching - and which tools can get you to the information you need the fastest.

--- The Vista approach
Comprehensive and ubiquitous hard drive searching may be the single best reason to upgrade to Vista if you're considering the move. Vista puts a search field almost everywhere - on the Start menu, in the Windows Explorer task bar, and even in many applications, including Media Player and Internet Explorer.

Microsoft calls this feature Instant Search. What makes it different from previous implementation of search in Windows is that Instant Search gives you results almost in real time.

Open the Start menu, for instance, type in the first few letters of a program or file you're looking for, and as you type a list of search results will present you will names of programs and files that Vista thinks you're seeking.

The secret behind Instant Search is a Vista's comprehensive indexing service that runs in the background almost from the time that you first install the operating system. Instant Search indexes not just the names of programs and files but the contents of files, e-mail messages, and visited Web pages on your hard drive.

It is, in essence, similar to an Internet search engine - and just about as effective. If you're looking, for instance, for an e-mail message you wrote in which you discussed zebras, you can go to any search prompt in Vista and type 'zebras,' and you should be presented with a link to that e-mail message.

--- Better searching in XP
Windows XP and earlier versions do not have the Instant Search feature found in Vista. Instead, XP users must initiate a search by using the Search option in the Start menu or by pressing the Windows key and tapping the latter F (for 'Find'). Searches take much longer this way than they do in Vista, and you must specify whether you're searching for file names or for contents within one or more files.

But Microsoft has made available its Windows Desktop Search (WDS) (http://www.microsoft.com/windows/products/winfamily/desktopsearch) application to users of Windows XP, and with it, you can improve substantially the speed and accuracy with which you can find what you need. The latest version of WDS, 3.0.1, is designed to run under Windows XP SP2. Windows Server 2003, and Windows XP 64 bit.

Windows Desktop Search indexes the contents of your My Documents folder, any e-mail messages that you have in Outlook or Outlook Express, contacts, calendar entries, and tasks. You can change the default search locations to ensure that the tool catalogues the files and folders you need it to. WDS can search the contents of mapped network drives as well as your local hard drive.

--- Other search tools
Although thanks to Instant Search and Windows Desktop Search, Microsoft has an edge in search for Windows users, Google and Yahoo were in the desktop search game early - and they won over lots of fans. Google's Desktop Search (http://desktop.google.com) and Yahoo! Desktop Search (http://desktop.yahoo.com) are still top-notch tools, and they're available for more platforms, including Linux and the Mac. Both tools are free.

Google's Desktop Search tool, in fact, gives users what some feel are the best attributes of Vista - integrated search and a sidebar with gadgets - without the overhead imposed by Vista's Aero interface. What's more, Google Desktop Search has that familiar Googlish look and feel that has endeared millions of Internet users.

But it's the Yahoo! Desktop Search tool that arguably has made the greatest strides in usability. The latest iteration of Yahoo's Desktop Search tool shows you search results as you type, much as Vista's Instant Search does. Once indexed, searches generally occur instantaneously - or so quickly that results appear to be instantaneous.

The search tool goes farther than others to show you the contents of files as they were created. Yahoo! Desktop Search includes viewers for more than 400 file types, so that you can see documents that might be stored on your PC even if you no longer have the applications that created those documents installed.

Copernic, Inc., though, has been putting out products that do desktop search longer than just about anyone else. And the company's latest free product, Copernic Desktop Search 2, may have the best interface of them all. Copernic Desktop Search differs from the browser-based products of Yahoo and Google in that it comes as a standalone application. But its search capabilities are widely seen as some of the best around.

Gone are the days when an effective desktop search tool can be seen as an option. The good news is that there are plenty of free tools available to you, no matter which operating system you use. Find the one that's best for you, and get back the time you would have spent searching for information you know you've stored somewhere.

© 2007 dpa - Deutsche Presse-Agentur © Copyright 2007 by monstersandcritics.com. This notice cannot be removed without permission.