"Life is continually evolving and when you
can accept that you are feeling uncertain, and not judge or fight it, a
clear direction and next step will surface."
-Susyn Reeve with Joan
Breiner, The Inspired Life
Red Girl Talk
Monday, 30 January 2012
Thursday, 26 January 2012
Dream Career?
Hi All,
After yesterday's rather depressing post, I thought I would share something a bit more positive today :) A few weeks ago, I discovered that the City Business Library in London holds free seminars on everything from How to Treble your Reading Speed to How to be a Director (check it their website here: www.cityoflondon.gov.uk/cbl). This was a great find for me as its FREE and all the topics are pretty relevant to where I am at the moment.
This morning I attended a seminar titled "How To Create Your Dream Career" presented by a career coach called Susan Andrewes. The seminar was targeted at anyone who is tired and just wants to find out how to get that dream career - that calling/passion that can also make them a living. The presenter told us how, 4 years ago, she decided to walk away from a job she hated. No plan. No dream. Just a feeling that there had to be something out there she could do and enjoy (sound familiar?). Today, she is doing what she absolutely loves, gets paid for it and is helping others to do the same.
She started off the seminar by asking us the following:
After yesterday's rather depressing post, I thought I would share something a bit more positive today :) A few weeks ago, I discovered that the City Business Library in London holds free seminars on everything from How to Treble your Reading Speed to How to be a Director (check it their website here: www.cityoflondon.gov.uk/cbl). This was a great find for me as its FREE and all the topics are pretty relevant to where I am at the moment.
This morning I attended a seminar titled "How To Create Your Dream Career" presented by a career coach called Susan Andrewes. The seminar was targeted at anyone who is tired and just wants to find out how to get that dream career - that calling/passion that can also make them a living. The presenter told us how, 4 years ago, she decided to walk away from a job she hated. No plan. No dream. Just a feeling that there had to be something out there she could do and enjoy (sound familiar?). Today, she is doing what she absolutely loves, gets paid for it and is helping others to do the same.
She started off the seminar by asking us the following:
- What do you want to create in your life? We all have the capacity to create something and that is the key to living the dream. It doesn't have to be the next Eiffel Tower or the next best-selling novel. It just something we would be passionate about.
- What would you love to get paid to do? If you were to assume that all jobs were paid the same, what would you do? Interesting way to think of this, right? One of the participants said she loved playing with dogs and would love to get paid playing with dogs, someone else said they loved socialising and would love a job where they could socialise.
Wednesday, 25 January 2012
Job Hunting - Understanding the game
Hi All,
As I mentioned in my last post, I currently looking for job. Living in a first world country and in one of the world's most populous cities means that job-hunting is a stressful and full time job. When I first moved to London 6 years ago, I was pretty naiive - I thought as long as I had the qualifications, the experience and the confidence, I could do anything I wanted. It became clear after a few weeks that things don't work that way in a saturated job market. It's a dog-eat-dog world where the only shrewdest and well-connected survive.
6 years later, I am back in the job hunting game and amazed at how much crazier the whole process has become. After weeks of sending applications directly to companies, scouring online job boards and applying to dozens of jobs, contacting agencies, registering on every known job website, I haven't had any success. I am being hounded by agencies daily, but all they want is information about my last company or companies I have applied to (I explain why below) - once they have that information, you never hear from them again.
It was getting insane and I needed to understand what was going on. So I decided to do a bit of research into how the whole system works and what I needed to do to get that job I wanted. Speaking to few people about this, I received all sorts of advice - from suggestions that I register with every agency and jobsite on the planet and just apply for everything, to suggestions that I change my name (apparently if it sounds foreign, they won't shortlist you), to suggestions that I "pad up" my CV (or lie a little bit) just to get in the door, and so much more. After a while I concluded that this was a crazy game and noone had any idea what the rules were.
My research began by looking at what was going on the recruiter's side. What were companies/hiring managers doing? How were the recruiting agencies playing this game? And more importantly, what were they doing with our CVs and applications?
As I mentioned in my last post, I currently looking for job. Living in a first world country and in one of the world's most populous cities means that job-hunting is a stressful and full time job. When I first moved to London 6 years ago, I was pretty naiive - I thought as long as I had the qualifications, the experience and the confidence, I could do anything I wanted. It became clear after a few weeks that things don't work that way in a saturated job market. It's a dog-eat-dog world where the only shrewdest and well-connected survive.
6 years later, I am back in the job hunting game and amazed at how much crazier the whole process has become. After weeks of sending applications directly to companies, scouring online job boards and applying to dozens of jobs, contacting agencies, registering on every known job website, I haven't had any success. I am being hounded by agencies daily, but all they want is information about my last company or companies I have applied to (I explain why below) - once they have that information, you never hear from them again.
It was getting insane and I needed to understand what was going on. So I decided to do a bit of research into how the whole system works and what I needed to do to get that job I wanted. Speaking to few people about this, I received all sorts of advice - from suggestions that I register with every agency and jobsite on the planet and just apply for everything, to suggestions that I change my name (apparently if it sounds foreign, they won't shortlist you), to suggestions that I "pad up" my CV (or lie a little bit) just to get in the door, and so much more. After a while I concluded that this was a crazy game and noone had any idea what the rules were.
My research began by looking at what was going on the recruiter's side. What were companies/hiring managers doing? How were the recruiting agencies playing this game? And more importantly, what were they doing with our CVs and applications?
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)