Job Hunting Tips #6 Assessing Your Personal Value



Get Advice from Take our Word.com on take-our-word.com. Job Hunting Tips #6 Assessing Your Personal Value topic will increase your understanding on Advice from Take our Word.com. We at take-our-word.com only provide news, articles, information in Advice from Take our Word.com. Advice from Take our Word.com at take-our-word.com provides the most up to date news and articles. If you have questions please do not hesitate to contact us.

A week out of work is a vacation. You can sleep late in the
morning, revel in your newly found free time, shop when the
stores are empty, and get around to those chores you have
been putting off for too long.

Three weeks out of work and you are still relaxed. There is
a new and better position waiting out there and you just
need to get around to finding it.

Six weeks out of work and you are getting anxious. Fifty
resumes have vanished into a black hole and the telephone
refuses to ring.

Twelve weeks out of work and panic starts to set in. You
review your recent efforts to find work and seem to be doing
all the right things. You start to doubt yourself: Am I too
old? Are my skills outdated? Are the industries I know all
dying? Are there any decent jobs out there? Is there
something wrong with me? Does nobody need me?

Take a deep breath and remind yourself that no matter what
optimistic spin the government trumpets, it is tough to find
a good job when new job seekers exceed the number of jobs
created. A 5 to 6 percent unemployment rate means that
every job which arises has potentially eight million
applicants! Then sit down and look at yourself from a new
perspective.

1. You have the personal qualities employers are seeking,
such as persistence, loyalty, energy, independence,
enthusiasm, responsibility, punctuality, maturity, empathy,
flexibility, sincerity, and tolerance.

2. You have general job skills which work in any industry:
negotiating, inventiveness, sensitivity, understanding,
creativity, the ability to write clearly, assemble things,
or operate machinery and experience in computing,
classifying, investigating, evaluating, or synthesizing
data.

3. You have specific job skills which have been acquired in
all of your previous work experience.

4. You have multiple layers of value as a significant other,
a parent, a brother or sister, a child, a friend, a
community worker.

List out each area as a reminder that not finding a job does
not mean that you are worthless. Reread the list several
times a week, keep adding to it as you remember skills, read
it before every interview or employer contact.

The world may not seem to need you right now but it is
important that you know your own worth and stop buying into
that sense of incompetency and despair that prolonged
unemployment (caused by economic and political forces, not
by you personally) can produce.



The Truth About Building Muscle. - 245-Page Bodybuilding E-Book, Full Exercise Database, Free Online Personal Training and More! High Conversions & Low Refunds!
Brand New *Hot* Easy Internet Email. - Get your own personalized email for you or your business, without the headaches! You pick the address, we do the rest!


Article Index: | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 | 18 | 19 | 20 | 21 | 22 | 23 | 24 | 25 | 26 | 27 | 28 | 29 | 30 | 31 | 32 | 33 | 34 | 35 | 36 | 37 | 38 | 39 | 40 | 41 | 42 | 43 | 44 | 45 | 46 | 47 | 48 | 49 | 50 | 51 | 52 | 53 | 54 | 55 | 56 | 57


Advice
Home Business
Technology
Online Advertising
Motivational
Internet Marketing
SEO Help
Online Games
Science Articles
Happiness

More Articles:


1. Buying the Perfect Suit
A suit is generally worn with the intention of making a statement about oneself, create a certain image or simply as an expression of respect. In the corporate world a business suit can convey the individual’s place within the organization’s hierarchy, establish power and position and express one’s proficiency and mastery in his profession. A suit is usually the garment of choice to show respect in special circumstances whether at a wedding, fune…

2. Success Factors for Your Resume
You know you're good...real good. The problem, though, is that you are struggling to demonstrate just how good you are on paper.Ah...the resume. If you've ever written one you know what a challenging task it can be.The Gregg Reference Manual tells us some fundamental facts about resumes:* The purpose of your resume is to get you an employment meeting. An interview. Your resume will not get you a job.* Your resume is not a medium for telling prosp…

3. Corporate Survival... How to manage yourself in the political playing field!
In my first corporate job, I had high expectations that promotions werebased on a solid work ethic and quality production. I wanted to aim for thetop and make it happen. Unfortunately, my ideas of corporate environmentwere inaccurate. As a grunt, an engineer, and a manager, the games, turfwars, and political thrashings taught me numerous incredible lessons. Inthe end, I made it to where I wanted to be, but not without bruises,scrapes, and experie…

4. Five Steps to Meeting New People
Whether you're moving to a new city, a new job, or just want to expand your social circle, these five tips can help you meet new people wherever you go. 1.Talk to Everyone - after years of watching a friend meet people easily everywhere he went, I realized his secret: he talks to everyone. I don't mean just the cute mail guy, or the girl walking her dog. I mean everyone. Whether it's the older lady crossing the street, your new apartm…