 鲜花( 0)  鸡蛋( 0)
|
本帖最后由 秀山之月 于 2010-7-18 13:21 编辑
6 T7 B0 P, M- I& P) `- ?) ^! M) z2 Y* G
1# Remotecontrol
( _; m5 H/ n" }7 k- F+ M3 S v M
2 K3 q; `; k6 b' t6 e
Just like to drop a couple of lines here:5 e' Z! z+ i9 n
3 m+ z" L" m$ ~Looking for a job is pretty much the same as selling yourself as a saleperson. You need find out where the potential sales might be and what the strategic approaches you may need to take.
0 F- h, `& h1 [" b( K: h+ T- T& N+ c/ z( [
You need also convince yourself that there must be jobs out there. 8 q& L! J6 @4 s" t, K, d; j6 K; a
* @6 n4 W1 |) y0 {& w6 b" Z! [
I found a job in construction management in October 2008 in Edmonton, when construction business was in recession. The job position was an estimator at a Fortune-500 company. And it started with a very unique way - I took a few of my resumes and, with my my safety boots/hat on, went to some job sites on a saturday morning, after some cold calls to some potential employers. By chance, at one site trailer of this companry, I met a few managers from the head office while they were having a meeting because I just walked in. Two weeks after, I started working on an important role at the head office with a six digits compensation. Please note that, by experience I know executive managers sometimes do meetings on site on saturdays in construction business and their words count, and that once you show your values/expertise and readiness for the job, you will have a chance.0 P. h) M6 E5 |( w o, M
; V2 ~7 `5 [: e4 W. r% f; dSorry for talking so much about myself but the only purpose of this is just to encourage the ones who are looking for a job here. |
|