Lets Enjoy This Life
11 Jul
A career development centre can be a service, or a group of programs that provides people with any level of education, whether they are undergraduate, a graduate, or an alumni, to plan for or deal with career transitions that inevitably arise in the life of any person. Each career development centre will have a career counsellor even though the centres may operate differently. All career counsellors provide guidance through personal interaction.
We spend nearly 100,000 hours in our lifetime working. Wouldn’t life be different if you loved your work, rather than dreading Monday mornings? How could life be different if you felt energized in your current job or your next career move, so energized that work did not feel like work anymore?
Whether you are currently working or in transition looking for your next job opportunity you do not want to miss this special briefing – a briefing that will change the way you approach work forever.
If today’s turbulent job market is creating roadblocks for you that you cannot seem to overcome no matter how hard you try, you’ve done everything and still can’t find the job or career you want, or you are concerned that the next job you take you will just result in another layoff before you know it, then you MUST plan to attend next week’s invitation-only event!
In this exclusive briefing on Tuesday, June 28th, 2009 at 7pm, we will share with you some critical insights into:
* How you can identify your true work passion
* How and why you must consider yourself self employed and manage your career that way even if you work for someone else
* How you can overcome the challenges created by the recent economy and still capture top dollar for your talents
* How living your passion will significantly increase your sense of financial freedom
* Why you cannot afford to wait and must start taking action now due to the changing landscape of the workforce
* The art of the job search has changed – how you can uncover the majority of the new opportunities that are never advertised anywhere
* The power of your personal brand and its impact on your career success
* How to not let fear stop you, replacing it with a mentality of limitless possibilities.
* And More…..
The fact that you are reading this, means you are ready for a change. 90% of Americans are trapped in unfulfilling careers, find out how the other 10% are living the art of bringing work to life. Visit http://www.integritycareertransitions.com/featured/seminar/careertransformation.htm to know more about Integrity Career Transitions and to join the career transformation teleseminar.
Integrity Career Transitions -
About the Author:
Todd Bavol
Integrity Career Transitions
info@integritycareertransitions.com
www.integritycareertransitions.com
750 South Shipyard Drive, Suite 300, Wilmington, Delaware 19801
Toll Free: 1-302-442-4100
Tel. No.: (302) 504-9960
15 Responses for "How To Transform Your Career, Claim your Power and Get Unstuck in Today’s Turbulent Market Place"
Hello,
The best one could do is to change a hobby or passion you like and make a business or career out of it. In that way you are not going to work; just enjoying your hobby and being payed for it. Just remember that in life you may dream of certain careers from being a great actor to an astronaut or doctor. When you start working or getting some introduction to the requrements of entrance or the reality of the work, you may find it is not your cup of tea. This sort of quest is normal and sometimes it is a while with some trial and error before you find your niche. LOL, at 20 years old I had no idea that I would be where I am today.
Meanwhile here is a site that should be quite helpful as a guide:
http://www.ehow.com/how_18314_decide-certain-career.html
Regards,
Michael Kelly
I often wonder this myself.
While it is true that some people work hard in a career and make their own living, I find for the most part rich people with big houses come from rich families. It is old money passed down from generation to generation, or their rich family and friends hook them up with their careers. It is difficult to start out with no money and no connections and end up living the high life.
If you figure out how though, come back and let me know!
Hope this helps!
So have u settled with what you want to do yet? Or what are you doing right now-in work i mean
Thanks! Canfield’s the man.
easiest would be ones you see and know a lot about even if you are not associated with that job in any way..such as doctors, working at a supermarket, teachers, camp counselors, and other jobs that you are familiar with. even a hair dresser or a nail salon stylest. do you know what you want to be when your older? if so, why don't you use this one because it would be more interesting and its stuff you actually need to know eventually. it would be a lot easier to write about this career. if not maybe take the test on nycareerzone.org because then with your results, you can learn a lot about what it tells you that you should become.
Thank you. Very inspirational.
a B.S. in Bus Admin is a useless degree
Finance is more banking/credit/loans/mortgages related
accounting is number crunching, financial statement prep, auditing
accounting is generally boring repetitive, often stressful
haven't worked in Finance field
FP/FA – mostly commission or salary with sales quotas – cold calling
High Quality information, in only a few words!
Thank You!
THANKYOU!! THANK YOU! NO decision is forever!!!!
Journalists often make good tech writers because they try to write with the user in mind and are less prone to use tech jargon. A good technical writer knows how to research thoroughly, how to interview people to tease out the information needed, and how to put this all together in a document or other materials for users.
Wikipedia has a nice description of technical writing, so you can understand the difference with journalism
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Technical_writing
If you work at a small company, is there any technical writing there you can do now? For instance, you say you are very web savvy — are your fellow reporters and other staff members? If not, could you write a set of troubleshooting guides or a short tutorial that would help?
Also, consider volunteering in order to get practical experience and build up your technical writing portfolio. Lots of nonprofits need help with writing up procedures (they often have procedures, but they aren't documented), annual reports, getting-started guides for new volunteers, film or video scripts, tailored reference documents, tutorials and user guides for clients, etc.
Royal Caribbean Cruises Ltd. has exciting career opportunities with an ocean view in our land-based offices and onboard our world-class luxury ships.
With a dynamic fleet of premium cruise ships, each offering unique and adventurous ways to explore the world, there are many outstanding job opportunities with the Royal Caribbean International team at sea. You can receive a wide range of benefits and learning opportunities while working with a worldwide enterprise that is a leader in the cruise industry. If you are looking for an opportunity to expand your career and really make a difference, apply now to join our great shipboard staff.
all your answers are at this site:
http://www.royalcaribbean.com/ourCompany/career.do
you might be able to get a job with an american company that does business in parts of the world where your language skills would be useful. anywhere that french is the main language would be a possibility but you will need strong language skills and a high overall grade point would be beneficial as well.
Ive been an Electrician a Fitness Instructor an Office Worker a Delivery Driver and a Police Officer, I hope my heart sings a little louder and my next choice is my last… im getting close, I feel it. Thanks
Travel and Tourism industry is another option that you can look at.
Hello, Your question is a bit general and there are lots of potential choices, I'm not sure what interests you. There are many 2 year programs available possibly EMT training, Respiratory technician or X-ray/sonogram technician. The best bang for your buck in the long-term would be to shoot for a BSN (4 year nursing degree). There are always well-paying nursing jobs available regardless of where you live. Good luck!
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