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Monday, December 20, 2010

2010 Booming Jobs

2010 Booming Jobs (www.cnnmoney.com)

Biomedical Engineer

10-year growth: 72% Median pay: $76,000

Telecommunications Network Engineer

10-year growth: 53% Median pay: $87,000

Environmental Engineer

10-year growth: 31% Median pay: $81,000

Software Architect

10-year growth: 34% Median pay: $119,000

Physician Assistant

10-year growth: 39% Median pay: $92,000

Environmental Health & Safety Specialist

10-year growth: 28% Median pay: $71,000

Physical Therapist

10-year growth: 30% Median pay: $75,000

Construction Estimator

10-year growth: 25% Median pay: $68,000

Occupational Therapist

10-year growth: 26% Median pay: $72,000

Employment Recruiter

10-year growth: 28% Median pay: $60,000


Wednesday, December 15, 2010

Thursday, December 9, 2010

How YOU can succeed in your job search by NOT following the crowd!

How YOU can succeed in your job search by NOT following the crowd!

Written on November 26, 2010 by Julie Walraven

http://bx.businessweek.com/work-life-balance/view?url=http://designresumes.com/2010/11/i-woke-up-no-internet-access/

The economy has been challenging for more than three years and I feel for the retailers who really need to make those sales. But I am still not drawn in by Black Friday type of sales. Mass crowds and craziness just don’t appeal to me. Some people thrive in those environments but I am definitely not one of them!

As a job seeker or individual who is seeking to make a career transition, you should not be one of those who follows the crowd if you want to be successful in the job search. Following the crowd will slow down your chances of connecting with the right people to move you forward in your search.

If you are following the crowd in your job or career search, you will:

Blast out resumes in volume because you think the more out there the better. (NO!)

Keep all your cover letters the same because it is only a cover sheet anyway. (NO!)

Concentrate ONLY on looking for jobs via job boards because you think all the jobs are posted there. (NO!)

If you choose to differentiate yourself from the crowd, you will:

Clarify specifically what you are looking for in a new position so that you have specific companies and targets in your search before you send out an accomplishment-filled, value-rich resume.

Look for innovative ways to connect with the decision makers and hiring managers using your network and LinkedIn, Facebook, or Twitter to find connections.

Write strategic cover letters that explain how your experience and talents meet the needs of the company and can help the company succeed. Think deeply about your differences when you write any of the critical documents in a job search: resume, cover letter, LinkedIn profile, or thank you or follow-up letter.

A career search, transition, or job search needs as much strategy and planning as any other important event in your life, doing things with a herd-like mentality will not make you the chosen one in the hiring manager’s eyes.

Friday, December 3, 2010

8 solid steps to restore and reinvigorate your routine after job loss

8 solid steps to restore and reinvigorate your routine after job loss

Written on November 9, 2010 by Julie Walraven

http://bx.businessweek.com/work-life-balance/view?url=http://designresumes.com/2010/11/i-woke-up-no-internet-access/

I woke up this morning at 4:10am thinking I would get an early start on my day. After collecting my coffee, Daytimer, and my colored pens, I turned on the computer in my office only to find I had NO Internet access. Panic set in!

We grow reliant on the things that we expect to be there. For me, that now includes wifi access in my home when I turn on the computer. Loss of connectivity means the inability to do the things I do daily. No way to check my e-mail or worse, no way to connect on Twitter or Facebook. Without wifi, I can’t write posts or Google anything.

We do become dependent on the things we count on and it is easy to want to throw in the towel, call it quits, and not look for other options. I was already thinking about how I could pack up the laptop and go find access elsewhere for the day. Starbucks is just down the street, hmmm, I could have more coffee and wifi —definitely a winning combination!

As a job seeker, waking up to find that the routine you are used to — getting ready and going to work everyday — isn’t there any more can also cause a panic. You are now a statistic — you experienced job loss. You need to figure out the steps to get a sense of normalcy back. Put a routine in place to find your next position. Without a plan, you will continue to get the panic feeling.

Let’s build a check list:

Start each day by getting ready for work just like you did before. If you stick to your old schedule, you will feel more organized. Get up, shower, get dressed. If you are female, do your hair and if you usually wear make-up, put it on. No staying in jammies all day long.

Eat your breakfast. Your mind needs fuel so give it some. I know there are some people who are opposed to having breakfast but it really does get you on the right track.

Get that resume written and ready to go. Make sure it contains all the Tell me WHY reasons to hire you.

Start organizing your network. Don’t disconnect from the people you talked to before. Go to lunch, have coffee, continue your enjoyable pastimes. If you cut yourself off from your whole world, opportunities to network will dissolve.

Research other options to connect. Twitter, Facebook, and LinkedIn have grown astronomically in the last two years as ways to connect with people to gain information and access to people who do have the power to hire you.

Besides all of the job search activities, take some time to replenish yourself. If you like home improvement projects, prioritize them and starting working to complete the top of your list. If you like gardening, go out and work on the yard. If you like crafts, put some of your energy into working on them. If you like to read, spend some time reading up on your favorite subject. In other words, don’t just wallow in your frustration.

Get regular exercise. Everyone says that but it is proven that our mental attitude is improved when we exercise regularly.

In other words, replace the panic feeling of a job loss with a plan and you can move forward with confidence!


Wednesday, November 17, 2010

Networking

Networking can serve as a valuable strategy at each and every stage of your career development.

What is it?

In short, it’s simply connecting with people, your most valuable resources at every phase of your pursuits.People can help you to assess your skills and interests; to explore industries and work functions and theirintersection with academic disciplines; to learn about challenges and opportunities, the skills required, thejargon, and the trends in specific fields; and they can help you to focus your career or job options. By talking topeople, you get information, advice, and referrals. And, since nearly 80 percent of all jobs are neveradvertised, you learn about opportunities that otherwise would go unnoticed. The more contacts you make,the more likely you are to uncover the hidden job market.

Types of Networking

When you’re networking for information, advice, or referrals and possible job leads, it’s most likely you’ll beconducting that activity in one of three ways: (1) through purposeful personal contact done by phone, email,business letter, online networking sites, or in person; (2) at a function or an event designed for “schmoozing” ormingling with other professionals; or (3) by happenstance. In all cases, you’ll want to be ready. You may besurprised, for example, at the number of internships secured on flights back to school after holiday breakthrough conversations with the stranger in the next seat. So, whether you are working a room at a social event,initiating a purposeful personal contact with someone, or seizing an opportunity that presents itself, you shouldfind the tips below useful.

Making Personal Contact

Before you actually start making personal contacts, do some homework. Begin with yourself. What is yourpurpose? Do you have a career or industry focus, or are you seeking contacts who might serve as resources tohelp you discover your interests and desires? Follow your hunches about the industries and work functions thatyou think would most interest you, and do some background research that might enrich any conversation orexchange you will have with the people who are actually in that line of work. Continue your homework afterdefining your purpose and researching industries or work functions by beginning to build your network ofcontacts, which includes learning as much as you can about the people you will be contacting.

Reed’s office ofcareer services has a variety of resources that can help you get focused in all of these areas.

Start to build your network by listing your natural acquaintances and contacts:·Family and their friends· Friends and their families· Reed Alumni Career Network· Volunteer affiliations (e.g., clubs, organizations, church, etc…)· Professors, advisers, coaches· Former or present work colleagues· ProfessionalsAsk yourself, “Who do I know?” and add anyone who comes to mind to your list.

Your goal at this stage is toconnect with your natural network to discover not only if they have direct advice but also if they know of othersmore closely affiliated with your interests.Let them know your interests and aspirations. The more people who know of your interests, the greater thechance that doors will open for you. Your chances of being in the right place at the right time are increasedwhen you are attentive to this fact. It’s sometimes called “managing your luck.”Before you make contact (with either your natural network or new people discovered through them), prepareyour introduction or “elevator speech.” This step will also be useful for those unpredictable moments whenyou are presented the opportunity to connect with someone new (e.g., on the flight home or at a social function).

Examples:

Dear Dr. Griffin,Professor D. Owl suggested that I contact you regarding your research. I will soon graduate from ReedCollege with a degree in political science and philosophy. After working this past summer as a legalresearcher for a law firm in Anchorage, Alaska, I’m back in Portland to finish my studies and hope to find a jobwith a local civil rights organization or public policy group. Would you have a few minutes to share any adviceor ideas with me?

*Elevator speech: who, what, why in 30 seconds.Hello (person’s name). My name is (your name). I was referred to you by (referral name). I am interested inlearning more about (material science, web development, whatever). I wonder if you would have a moment toshare with me any advice, ideas, leads, and referrals.*(Taken from The Foolproof Job-Search Workbook, by Donald Asher, a Reed alumnus, who has given us permission touse it).

Expand your networkAs you meet alumni and other people, focus on shared interests and common traits. Find parallels between yourexperiences and theirs. Do you share similar interests such as social justice, the environment, orentrepreneurship? Have you studied the same subjects or under the same professors? Identify and accentuatethe commonalities.As you develop a clearer picture of your work or career plans, you can begin to broaden your network ofcontacts beyond those closest to you. How? As before, people are your best sources. If you can get two to fournames from each of your natural contacts, your network will have expanded exponentially. When asking forreferrals to other contacts, be specific: “Do you know anyone whose work responsibilities include (duty A,duty B, or duty C)?” or “Can you suggest anyone in this industry or field whom I should contact?” followed by“May I use your name as my referral source?” In some cases, your original contact may even be willing tointroduce you.

Other sources for expanding your network include professional associations, many of which have studentmembership rates, BLOGS or other online networking sites, newspaper articles or other media features, andformal networking programs or events such as the Reed Alumni Career Network or special events or paneldiscussions on campus that feature alumni or other professionals. Most important: engage yourself; contributein your industry of interest. This means volunteering your time and skills to individuals or organizationsactively working in the industry of your choice. Establish working relationships with others in the industry andfind more contacts. Professional conferences are staffed by volunteers who can position themselves to meetyoung and senior professionals, for example.

At this point in your cultivation and nurturing of contacts you may be ready use the more formal tool called theinformational interview. You may have been employing it already, since you have been talking with others andgathering information to sharpen your focus and expand your network.

Thursday, October 21, 2010

Need a Job? Find Out Which Companies Are Hiring for the Holidays

Need a Job? Find Out Which Companies Are Hiring for the Holidays

By TORY JOHNSON
(http://abcnews.go.com/GMA/JobClub/job-companies-hire-holidays/story?id=11741056)

According to a new projection from Challenger, Gray & Christmas, retailers will hire between 500,000 and 600,000 workers for the holidays. (Last year, 501,400 were hired.) If you expect to nab one of those seasonal slots, now is the time to act.
Start now: Almost every employer I spoke with said they will begin interviewing in early to mid-October to make sure their seasonal staff is in place when they need them. Don't wait until Thanksgiving to pound the pavement. Now is your time.
Be flexible: You'll have more options on scheduling the earlier you apply, but flexibility on day, evening, overnight and weekend shifts will give you access to the most opportunity. Be clear on which days and times you're available.
Juggle Jobs, or Work from Home
Apply in person (where applicable): Apply in person where applicable. This may mean a paper application or a kiosk, depending on the company. Dress the part and chat up the manager, too, so you can put a face to your resume. If it's retail, visit the store and get to know the merchandise before applying. Ask if and when you can call on the status of your application so you're not in the dark.
Double up: Most seasonal jobs pay minimum wage to $12 an hour (again, just an average) and you'll likely have part-time, not fulltime, hours. This means if you're looking to work fulltime, you'll have to juggle more than one seasonal gig to make the most money.
For a comprehensive list of employers looking to fill more than 200,000 seasonal positions for the holidays.
Work at home: This category is one of the most popular among GMA viewers -- answering customer service calls from home. Calls to customer service explode during the holiday season, and five of the biggest home-based customer service providers will recruit more than 10,000 seasonal agents, many of whom will have the opportunity to stay on after the holidays based on individual performance. As a home-based agent, you'll handle customer questions, process online and catalog orders and other related duties.
So Who's Hiring?
Among the companies to explore: Alpine Access, Arise, Convergys, LiveOps, VIPDesk and Working Solutions.
Each company hires workers differently: employees, independent contractors and incorporated agents. Some offered paid training, while others do not. Ask questions and explore their websites in great detail before determining if there's an appropriate fit for you. (Also, if you've applied previously, but there was no suitable opening for you, you'll have to apply again to be considered for seasonal work.)
Retail: This is the most popular form of holiday work. I talked to a handful of the giants and this weekend I walked in to stores of all sizes to ask about holiday hiring plans. Every place told me they are planning to hire some kind of seasonal help -- sales, customer service and stock. And big box companies employ seasonal staffers 24 hours a day.
Shipping and Security Positions to Open Up
Some of the biggest national retailers are hiring big this season: JCPenney will add 30,000 jobs. Macy's says it will add 65,000 jobs. Toys R Us will hire 45,000 people, including 10,000 who'll work at their 600 new pop-up express locations. Walmart, the nation's largest retailer, doesn't release its specific numbers, but says its seasonal hiring is on par with last year.
Walk your neighborhood or mall. Even though you may not see a HELP WANTED sign in the window, walk in and ask. Security and Shipping: More customers mean more security is needed for stores. One national company, Allied Barton, provides guards for retailers and office buildings across the country. The company will add more than 1,000 seasonal hires this year.
Buying gifts often means sending gifts to family around the country. UPS says it expects to hire 50,000 people, the majority of whom will be drivers and package handlers who help drivers make deliveries and who sort, load and unload packages.
Those are just two of the biggest companies in their categories, but there are many companies hiring on the local level. SnagAJob.com lists hourly seasonal jobs in security, shipping and retail with local and national companies.
Sitters Wanted
Sitting Services: The two biggest spikes are pet sitters (while families travel) and babysitters. Care.com sees a spike starting in about a month for pet sitters and SeekingSitters.com sees a big jump in childcare requests from Thanksgiving through New Year's Eve, which is the only night of the year when families expect to pay a significant premium on services, typically as much as double the standard rates.

Tuesday, October 12, 2010

Unemployed find old jobs now require more skills

Unemployed find old jobs now require more skills
By CHRISTOPHER S. RUGABER (AP) – 1 day ago

WASHINGTON — The jobs crisis has brought an unwelcome discovery for many unemployed Americans: Job openings in their old fields exist. Yet they no longer qualify for them.
They're running into a trend that took root during the recession. Companies became more productive by doing more with fewer workers. Some asked staffers to take on a broader array of duties — duties that used to be spread among multiple jobs. Now, someone who hopes to get those jobs must meet the new requirements.

As a result, some database administrators now have to manage network security.
Accountants must do financial analysis to find ways to cut costs.
Factory assembly workers need to program computers to run machinery.
The broader responsibilities mean it's harder to fill many of the jobs that are open these days. It helps explain why many companies complain they can't find qualified people for certain jobs, even with 4.6 unemployed Americans, on average, competing for each opening. By contrast, only 1.8 people, on average, were vying for each job opening before the recession.
The total number of job openings does remain historically low: 3.2 million, down from 4.4 million before the recession. But the number of openings has surged 37 percent in the past year. And yet the unemployment rate has actually risen during that time. Companies still aren't finding it easy to fill job vacancies.

Take Bayer MaterialScience, a unit of Bayer. When the company sought earlier this year to hire a new health, safety and environment director for one of its plants, it wanted candidates with a wider range of abilities than before. In particular, it needed someone skilled not just in managing health and safety but also in guiding employees to adapt to workplace changes.
Joe Bozada, chief of staff for Bayer's CEO, said the company initially interviewed 30 candidates. Then it did final interviews with seven. But none had the additional experience the company now wanted. Ultimately, Bozada said, the company chose one of its own employees it had already trained.

That shift, across multiple industries, has caught the eye of David Altig, research director at the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta. Workers aren't just being asked to increase their output, Altig says. They're being asked to broaden it, too.

A company might have had three back-office jobs before the recession, Altig said. Only one of those jobs might have required computer skills. Now, he said, "one person is doing all three of those jobs — and every job you fill has to have computer skills."
The trend is magnifying the obstacles facing the unemployed. Economists have long worried that millions of people who have lost jobs in depressed areas like construction don't qualify for work in growing sectors like health care. But it turns out that some of the jobless no longer even qualify for their old positions.

Frustrated in their efforts to find qualified applicants among the jobless, employers are turning to those who are already employed.

"They're hiring a known quantity that already has this specific experience on their resume," said Cathy Farley, a managing director at Accenture. "It is slowing some of the re-hiring from the ranks of the unemployed."

Only 49 percent of people laid off from 2007 through 2009 were re-employed by January 2010, according to a Labor Department survey. It's the lowest such proportion since the survey began in 1984.
And more than 40 percent of the nearly 15 million unemployed Americans have been out of work for six months or longer. That's near the record high set during the recession.
Some of the unfortunate ones are information technology workers. One reason is that tech companies are increasingly combining business analyst and systems analyst positions.
Suppose a company wants a new software application. A business analyst would seek the least expensive approach and then propose the technical requirements. Separately, a systems analyst would build the technology.
But now, employers want "those two skill sets in one human being," said Harry Griendling, chief executive of DoubleStar Inc., a staffing firm outside Philadelphia.
The trend reflects the push that companies made during the recession to control costs, squeeze more output from their staffs and become more productive. Productivity measures output per hour worked. Economy-wide, it soared 3.5 percent last year. It was the best performance in six years.
And it means workers are bearing heavier burdens. In manufacturing, employees increasingly must be able to run the computerized machinery that dominates most assembly lines. They also have to carry out additional tasks, such as inspecting finished products, notes Mark Tomlinson, executive director of the Society of Manufacturing Engineers.
Manufacturers advertised nearly 200,000 jobs at the end of August, a jump of about 40 percent from a year ago, according to government data. Yet hiring by manufacturers has risen less than 6 percent over that time — evidence that they are having a hard time finding qualified workers.
"There are jobs available, but the worker just has to have more skills than before," Tomlinson said.
Bob Brown, 49, of Dayton, Ohio, has felt the demand for broader skills firsthand. After working for 30 years in manufacturing, including 20 as a plant supervisor, Brown was laid off in July 2009.
He spent a year looking for a new job. His efforts yielded only three calls from employers in the first four months.
But once things began to pick up, Brown noticed something else: The plant management jobs he used to have, and that he was aiming for again, all required certifications in productivity-boosting management practices.
So Brown paid for courses at a community college to learn a management strategy known as "six sigma." It's an approach to cutting waste and raising efficiency popularized by General Electric. The courses allowed him to obtain his certification. In August, he was hired by an electrical product assembly plant near Williamsport, Penn.
"That's the way the industry's going," Brown said. "Everybody wanted certifications."
Human resource specialists say employers who increasingly need multi-skilled employees aren't willing to settle for less. They'd rather wait and hold jobs vacant.
HR specialists even have a nickname for the highly sought but elusive job candidate whose skills and experiences precisely match an employer's needs: the "purple squirrel."



Posted by BestLogic Staffing – For more information, please go to our website
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