Have you tried LinkedIn?
Temping is how most of my friends got their permanent jobs.
proteanmix said:Temping and volunteering your services to pad out your resume sounds like a good idea and so is SPAMMING!
proteanmix said:If your interest is public policy/criminal justice you may want to check out state/county/city governments. . . Are you interested in the non-profit leg of criminal justice? There's a registry of all non-profit organizations in the US and I think it's indexed according to topic as well. There seems to be a lot of unpaid internships for 3-6 months out there.
I swear to God, if I were Italian I'd be executive V.P. of something by now *arrogance*You don't have connections? Friends whose fathers are owners of midsized firms, for example? (I understand this is more of an Italian way of finding a job...)
You don't have connections? Friends whose fathers are owners of midsized firms, for example? (I understand this is more of an Italian way of finding a job...)
Hmmm...is it really that hard to find a job???![]()
However, through this process I have learned how important networking is, so when I do land a job, I will try to build relationships with people in the organization. *shudder*
8+ years in the same job... very little money or respect to show for it... you bet your ass I'm looking for a job.
This thread is for everyone who is searching for a job to post about their failures and successes (but probably more about failures).
Have you tried LinkedIn?
Hopefully, the interview went well.
Oh. Thanks for asking. I just got home.
Three possible good signs:
1) It lasted an hour and 15 minutes, which seems sort of long
2) I was the first person interviewed for the job. This could mean nothing, however.
3) The group manager who I interviewed with personally invited me back for a second group interview. When I told the HR lady afterwards about the invitation, she seemed surprised that I was already invited back at this point.
I hate this second interview stuff though . . . and with my competition? Maybe I'll just beat them up in the parking lot.
Congrats on the interview.![]()
I'm sure you'll do well on the group interview--I'd show up early, be all friendly to get a read on the other applicants, letting them talk all they want, and try to read their weaknesses. Then I'd politely and assertively rebut their discussion points I'd have hopefully figured out, keeping my mouth shut for any unforeseen topic (likely there'd be very few) unless I had to speak because I'm personally not very good with improv.
Do you know who's interviewing you? Will it be the same person as today's interview? Would they rather have a "yes-man" employee who doesn't ruffle feathers, or a spunky Gen-Y Millennial that speaks her mind?
The other thing I've done in the past is project a ditzy dumb female image in the small talk before something important, and then Te-execute everyone who had let their guard down at crunch time.
When is the next one?
The next interview is with the research group that I would be working as a part of. The idea of all interviewing together seems like a nightmare, though. I don't like having to fight for attention. I would take the strategy of trying to figure out beforehand what strengths I have that others don't and then emphasizing that within the group. I would probably want to stray away from talking about everyone's weaknesses though, in order to appear more favorable in the eyes of the interviewers.
Hopefully, all of the candidates will meet separately with them though. And hopefully, everyone who interviews this week won't get asked back. :steam:
I definitely didn't read properly.