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Affiche du document Job Search Letters For Dummies

Job Search Letters For Dummies

Joyce Lain Kennedy

4h32min15

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363 pages. Temps de lecture estimé 4h32min.
New-style job messages that get you in the door and on your way up From sparkling cover letters to six-word bios, a fresh bevy of job search letters has grown powerfully useful for successful career communications. Job Search Letters For Dummies delivers the quality of New Era know-how you need right now to land good jobs and thrive. Whether you’re a long-time professional or a recent college graduate — or somewhere in between — Job Search Letters For Dummies has you covered. Job Search Letters For Dummies covers the gamut of leading-edge topics, including effective strategies for internal career communications on topics such as raises, promotions, and position changes; rules for communicating professionally with texts and networking on social media platforms such as twitter and LinkedIn; fresh and updated communication phrases to voice accomplishments and make job-fit statements; post-interview etiquette and letters such as thank-yous, "hire me" reinforcement notes, interest revival queries; and much more. Get hired with 40 types of job letters Create short messages for a smartphone world Network on social media sites Model best letters more than 200 pro samples Whether you’re a long-time professional or a recent college graduate — or somewhere in between — Job Search Letters For Dummies has you covered. A note to job seekers from nationally syndicated careers columnist and author or Job Search Letters For Dummies, Joyce Lain Kennedy: Welcome aboard, job seekers! Thanks for checking out this first guide to communications-supported job search and career growth in relentlessly changing technological times.  The right messaging — what you say, why you say it, and when you say it — is as important today to your employment goals as it has been at any time since Leonardo da Vinci wrote the first professional resume in 1482.  Consider recent job–finding history: In 1986 fax machines and postal mail were the most popular ways to send resumes and cover letters. In the 1990s the Internet boom kicked in with new tools to connect jobs and people: e-mail, websites, cell phones, mailing lists, and online bulletin boards. In the 21st century the double-time march of recruiting technology skyrocketed, building a techno-swamp populated with endless ideas of how to connect work and people through smartphones, wonder tablets, apps, and social media for virtual networking.  You’re competing in a new world of work out there. If your job search is treading water — or even drowning— there’s a better way. Make a splash! Engage hiring authorities through a communications-centered campaign with smart content. Introduction  1 Part I: New Tools for New Times  5 Chapter 1: Best Messages: Land Jobsand Leap Ahead 7 Chapter 2: Mobile Meets Job Search 15 Chapter 3: Newcomer Letters that Persuade 27 Part II: Essential Job Search Letters  45 Chapter 4: Job Ad Reply Letters and Notes 47 Chapter 5: Getting Help: Networking Letters 85 Chapter 6: Prospecting Letters 103 Chapter 7: After-Interview Letters 121 Part III: Creative Fresh Messages  139 Chapter 8: Social Media Messages 141 Chapter 9: Branding Statements, Bios, Profiles, and Speeches 151 Chapter 10: Interview Leave-Behind Docs 183 Chapter 11: References and Recommendations 195 Chapter 12: Online Portfolios, Prezis, and Videos 213 Chapter 13: Getting Ahead in the Job You Have 221 Part IV: Best Writing Elements  235 Chapter 14: Writing Your Way to a Job 237 Chapter 15: Language That Snap-Crackle-Pops 247 Chapter 16: Great Lines for Success 263 Chapter 17: Job Seeker’s Skills Finder 279 Part V: The Part of Tens  299 Chapter 18: Remember Ten Social Forget-Me-Not Tips 301 Chapter 19: Top Ten Google Tips for Jackpot Job Search 307 Appendix: Directory of Job Letter Writers 319 Index  327
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Affiche du document Job Interviews For Dummies

Job Interviews For Dummies

Joyce Lain Kennedy

4h14min15

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339 pages. Temps de lecture estimé 4h14min.
Deliver a show-stopping interview performance Does the thought of interviewing for a new job send shivers down your spine? It doesn't have to! Whether you're searching for your first job, changing careers, or looking for advancement in your current line of work, Job Interviews For Dummies shows you how to use your skills and experiences to your advantage and land that job. Following a half-decade characterized by an explosion of economic crises, global expansion, and technological innovation in the job market, today's job seekers vie for employment in a tough era of new realities where few have gone before. In addition to covering how to prepare for an interview, this updated edition explores the new realities of the job market with scenarios that you can expect to encounter, an updated sample question and answer section, coverage of how you can harness social media in your job search, information on preparing for a Web-based interview, and the best ways to keep your credibility when applying for several jobs at once. Out-prepare the competition Overcome your fear of interviewing Ask smart questions about the job and the employer Give the best answers to make-or-break questions Fit your qualifications to the job's requirements Dress like an insider Survive personality tests Interview across cultures Evaluate a job offer Negotiate a better salary Whether you're fresh from the classroom, a prime-timer over 50, or somewhere in between, Job Interviews For Dummies quickly gets you up to speed on the skills and tools you need to land the job you want. Introduction 1 Part I: And the Interview Winner is … You! 7 Chapter 1: Job Interviews Are Show Biz. Seriously! 9 Chapter 2: Tryouts: Getting Past Screening Interviews 29 Chapter 3: 21st-Century Video Interview 39 Chapter 4: Interviewing on the Global Stage 51 Chapter 5: A Chorus Line of Interviews by Type 57 Part II: Backstage Researching and Rehearsing 77 Chapter 6: Research Is Your Ticket Inside 79 Chapter 7: Your Close-Up: Personality Tests 89 Chapter 8: Showing You the Money 101 Chapter 9: Costuming Yourself for a Starring Role 119 Chapter 10: Beat Stage Fright with the R-Word: Rehearse 133 Chapter 11: Looking Good with Questions You Ask 143 Chapter 12: Closing the Show 149 Part III: Actors' Studio: Casting Your Character 165 Chapter 13: Opening Acts for Younger Talent 167 Chapter 14: Selling Scripts for Career Switchers 173 Chapter 15: Star Turns for Prime-Timers 181 Part IV: Lights, Camera, Talk! Answering Questions 191 Chapter 16: What Can You Tell Me About Yourself? 193 Chapter 17: What Do You Know about This Job and Our Company? 213 Chapter 18: What Are Your Skills and Competencies? 217 Chapter 19: How Does Your Experience Help Us? 225 Chapter 20: What Education Do You Have? 233 Chapter 21: What about Your Special Situation? 243 Chapter 22: How Should You Answer a Questionable Question? 259 Part V: The Part of Tens 267 Chapter 23: Ten Tips to Avoid Rotten Reviews 269 Chapter 24: Ten Tricky Questions to Watch Out For 273 Chapter 25: Tens of Lines on the Cutting Room Floor 279 Appendix: Questions by Career Fields and Industries 285 Index 305
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Affiche du document I Wish I'd Known That Earlier in My Career

I Wish I'd Known That Earlier in My Career

Jane Horan

2h26min15

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195 pages. Temps de lecture estimé 2h26min.
The must-read guide to understanding corporate politics in order to get ahead Designed to provide the reader with an understanding of corporate politics from a positive perspective, I Wish I'd Known That Earlier in My Career uses case studies to teach the essentials of organizational dynamics, power networks, and the decision-making processes and dilemmas involved in business. Examining corporate politics and the barriers many managers face in their efforts to reach the top, the book works to build awareness and strategies for business and career success. Taking a refreshing new approach to workplace politics, the book presents new ways to think about embracing opportunities in order to achieve personal and organization-wide career satisfaction. Rather than encouraging employees to move on and start their own businesses, it instead details how to move up within their current companies by learning to understand power bases and conversation more thoroughly. Combines individual case studies and real life situations with helpful tips and techniques designed to help overcome corporate challenges Each chapter tells a story that illustrates a constructive concept that can be easily learned and applied in the real world Covers topics including: political savvy, the benefits of self-promotion, performance management, sexual harassment, and other organizational challenges Essential reading for anyone looking to move forward in their professional life, I Wish I'd Known That Earlier in My Career provides genuinely helpful advice in a highly accessible, easily applicable way. Acknowledgments xi Foreword xv Introduction: Why We Don’t Move Ahead—Politics xvii Chapter 1 The How and Why of Positive Politics 1 Chapter 2 Becoming Savvy 11 Chapter 3 Surviving the Ebbs and Flows of Power 35 Chapter 4 Taking Things at Face Value: Trust, But Verify 49 Chapter 5 Mapping Power: Who’s In and Who’s Out 71 Chapter 6 Managing Perceptions 85 Chapter 7 Reputation and Brand Management: What’s Your Story? 97 Chapter 8 The Spoken Word: Gender and Culture Issues 107 Chapter 9 The Politics of Performance Management 121 Chapter 10 Power, Politics and Sex 135 Conclusion 147 Bibliography 157 Index 165
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Affiche du document A Job to Love

A Job to Love

58min30

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78 pages. Temps de lecture estimé 58min.
A practical guide to finding fulfilling work - by understanding yourself. The idea that work might be fulfilling rather than just necessary is a recent invention. These days, in prosperous areas of the world, we don't only expect to get paid, we also expect to find meaning and satisfaction. It's a big ask and explains why so many people have an identity crisis in their work lives.A Job To Love is designed to help us better understand ourselves in order to find a job that is right for us. It explores the myths, traps and confusions that get in our way, and shows us how to develop new, effective attitudes and habits. With compassion and practicality, this book guides us to discover our true talents and to make sense of our confusion, desires, and aspirations - before it is too late.FIND A CAREER YOU LOVE a guide to finding fulfilling work through self-exploration. PRACTICAL EXAMPLES AND EXERCISES to inspire fresh thinking about our jobs and ourselves. BEAUTIFULLY PRODUCED gift format with ribbon marker.Introduction i. How we came to desire a job we could love One of the most extraordinary and yet quietly routine features of our age is the assumption that we should be able to find work that we not only tolerate, or endure for the money, but profoundly appreciate, for its high degree of purpose, camaraderie and creativity. We see nothing strange in the remarkable notion that we should try to find a job we love. It is possible to be highly sympathetic to this wish and yet refuse to see it as either normal or easy to fulfil and to insist that, in order to stand any chance of honouring it, we need to lavish concentrated brain power, time and imagination on its underlying complexities. For most of history, the question of whether we might love our work would have seemed laughable or peculiar. We tilled the soil and herded animals, worked down mines and emptied chamber pots. And we suffered. The serf or smallholder could look forward to only a very few moments of satisfaction, and these would lie firmly outside the hours of employment: the harvest moon festival next year or the wedding day of their eldest child, currently six years old. The corresponding assumption was that if one had sufficient money, one would simply stop working. The educated classes among the ancient Romans (whose attitudes dominated Europe for centuries) considered all paid work to be inherently humiliating. Tellingly, their word for business was negotium: literally, ‘not enjoyable activity’. Leisure, doing not very much, perhaps hunting or giving dinner parties, was felt to be the sole basis for a life of happiness. Then, at the close of the Middle Ages, an extraordinary shift began: a few people started to work for money and for fulfilment. One of the first people to successfully pursue this highly unusual ambition was the Venetian artist Titian (c. 1485–1576). On the one hand, in his work he delighted in the pleasures of creativity: depicting the way light fell on a sleeve or unlocking the secret of a friend’s smile. But he added something very odd to this: he was extremely interested in being paid well. He was highly astute when it came to negotiating contracts for supplying pictures, and he upped his output (and profit margin) by establishing a factory system of assistants who specialised in different phases of the production process, such as painting drapery (he hired five young men from Verona to paint the curtains in his work). He was one of the initiators of a profound new idea: that work could and should be both something you love doing and a decent source of income. This was a revolutionary idea that gradually spread across the world.Nowadays it reigns supreme, colouring our ambitions perhaps without us even noticing, and helping to define the hopes and frustrations of an accountant in Baltimore or a game designer in Limehouse. Titian introduced a complicating factor into the modern psyche. Previously, you either pursued satisfaction making or doing something as an amateur without expecting to make money from your efforts, or you worked for money and didn’t care too much about whether you actually enjoyed your work. Now, because of the new ideology of work, neither was quite acceptable any longer. The two ambitions – money and inner fulfilment – were being asked to coalesce. Good work meant, essentially, work that tapped into the deepest parts of the self and could generate a product or service that would pay for one’s material needs. This dual demand has ushered in a particular difficulty of modern life: that we must simultaneously pursue two very complicated ambitions, although these are far from inevitably aligned. We need to satisfy the soul and pay for our material existence. Interestingly, it’s not just around the ideal of a job that we have developed high ambitions that combine the spiritual and the material. Something very similar has happened around relationships. For the largest part of human history, it would have been extraordinary to suppose that one was meant to love (rather than merely tolerate) one’s spouse. The point of marriage was inherently practical: uniting adjacent plots of land, finding someone who would be good at milking cows or who might bear a brood of healthy children. Romantic love was something distinct – it might be nice for one summer when one was 15, or might be pursued with someone other than one’s spouse after the birth of the seventh child. Then, in around 1750, a peculiar shift began to take place here as well. We started to be interested in another extraordinarily ambitious idea: a marriage of love. A new kind of hope started to obsess people: that one could both be married and properly admire and sympathise with one’s partner. Instead of there being two distinct projects – marriage and love – a new and more complex ideal emerged: the marriage of passion. The modern world is built around hopeful visions of how things that had previously seemed separate (money and creative fulfilment; love and marriage) could be united. These are generous ideas, democratic in spirit, filled with optimism about what we can achieve and rightfully intolerant of ancient forms of suffering. But in the way we have tried to act upon them, they have also been catastrophes. They constantly let us down. They breed impatience and feelings of paranoia and persecution. They generate powerful new ways of being frustrated. We judge our lives by ambitious new standards by which we are continually made to feel we have fallen short. It’s an added complication that, although we have set ourselves such impressive goals, we have tended to tell ourselves that the way to attain them is not essentially difficult. It is simply a case, we assume, of following our instincts. We’ll find the right relationship (which unites passion with day-to-day practical stability) and a good career (which unites the practical goal of earning an income with a sense of inner fulfilment) by following our feelings. We trust that we’ll simply develop a special kind of emotional rush in the presence of the right person or will, once we’ve finished university, sense a reliable pull towards a career that is right for us. We put a decisive share of our trust in the phenomenon of gut instinct. A symptom of our devotion to instinct is that we don’t readily recognise much need for training and education around getting into a relationship or in the search for a career. We take it for granted, for instance, that children will need many hundreds of hours of carefully considered instruction if they are to become competent at maths or learn a foreign language. We understand that instinct and luck can’t ever lead to good results in chemistry – and that it would be cruel to suppose otherwise. But we’d think it odd if the school curriculum included an almost daily strand over many years of classes on how to make a relationship work or how to find a job that accorded with one’s talents and interests. We may recognise that these decisions are hugely important and consequential, yet by a strange quirk of intellectual history we’ve come to suppose that they can’t be taught or educated for. They really matter, but we seem to believe that the right answer will simply float into our brains when the moment is ripe. The aim of The School of Life is to correct such unwittingly cruel assumptions, and to equip us with ideas with which to better accomplish the admirable (but in truth highly difficult) ambitions that we harbour around our emotional and working lives. 1 Introductioni. How we came to desire a job we could loveii. How alone we are on our search2 Obstacles to Having Goalsi. The ‘vocation myth’ii. The vagueness of our minds3 The Pleasure Points of Worki. Identifying what you loveii. The anti-fixation moveiii. The output/input confusioniv. What is a job like?4 Obstacles and Inhibitionsi. Family work templatesii. Fixing parentsiii. The dangers of successiv. Confidence and inner voicesv. The ‘perfectionism trap’vi. The duty trapvii. The impostor syndromeviii. The job investment trapix. If it were a good idea, I wouldn’t be the one to have itx. Evolution not revolution xi. The energising force of death 5 Consolations i. Happiness and expectations ii. Self-compassion iii. Why no single job can ever be enough iv. Falling in love again v. Good enough work
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Affiche du document Bienvenue chez les Fous ! - Success story et secrets de management d'un laveur de carreaux

Bienvenue chez les Fous ! - Success story et secrets de management d'un laveur de carreaux

Thierry Pick

39min00

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52 pages. Temps de lecture estimé 39min.
Avez-vous déjà vu un PDG pratiquer le " naturisme managérial " ?Chez Clinitex, entreprise de nettoyage à succès, rien n'est impossible. Les entretiens annuels se font lors de marches en forêt, la bonne humeur est une valeur officielle et les agents de propreté connaissent le salaire du PDG.Thierry Pick, le fondateur de Clinitex, partage dans ce livre sa trajectoire atypique et les clés de sa réussite. À la suite d'un parcours scolaire chaotique, il s'est lancé à son compte en tant que laveur de carreaux. Inspiré par la pédagogie de Maria Montessori et par la frugalité de Pierre Rabhi, il a osé développer une entreprise où l'autonomie des salariés est reine.Ses incroyables innovations managériales vous intrigueront, vous impressionneront et vous feront parfois même rire. Cet ouvrage prouve par l'exemple que la performance économique naît du bien-être au travail !1. IntroductionLe cancreÇa, c'est mon papaL'adn et un peu d'histoireL'aventure Clinitex démarreIncompétent, quelle importance finalement ?Posons les bases 2. Premières découvertes managérialesPlaisir et reconnaissanceIdentifier le carburant et le moteurUne insolente et insouciante croissanceAparté sur mon Paris Dakar : la relation à l'expert et l'effet d'entrainementMon retour chez Clinitex 3. Les idées libérantesL'alignementLe pouvoir et la directionL'église au centre du villageLe courage managérialLe naturisme managérialLes salairesMaria Montessori, histoire et lignes directricesProposition de transposition au managementLes 4 accords toltèques 4. Les actions libérantesOrganigramme cellulaireNos réunions internes revisitéesLes boites de chocolatLes waouhsL'entretien annuel revisitéLe pont des artsLe conformismeLa transgressionUne équipe a-t-elle besoin d'un leader ?Le " feel dating "La frugalité économique selon Clinitex 5. Et enfin...Les relations socialesLa mobilité interneL'actionnariat salariéLa transmission
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Affiche du document Bâtir une vision - Outils et repères pour donner un cap à votre entreprise

Bâtir une vision - Outils et repères pour donner un cap à votre entreprise

Jean-Gabriel Kern

4h11min15

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335 pages. Temps de lecture estimé 4h11min.
Rassemblez vos équipes autour d'une vision solide !" Raison d'être ", " mission ", " baseline ", " purpose "... Depuis quelques années, ces expressions envahissent le monde de l'entreprise. Les dirigeants savent qu'une vision claire est essentielle pour motiver leurs équipes, mais ils se retrouvent souvent démunis lorsqu'il s'agit de passer à l'action. Par où commencer ? Quelle place donner au collectif ? Comment élaborer une vision qui réconcilie aspirations et enjeux business ?Jean-Gabriel Kern et Thibault Vignes accompagnent depuis plus de dix ans des entreprises de toutes tailles et de tous secteurs dans leur démarche de vision partagée. Au fil des missions menées sur le terrain, ils ont construit une approche percutante qu'ils transmettent dans cet ouvrage abondamment illustré. Vous y trouverez :• une présentation claire des trois composantes de la vision (raison d'être, valeurs, ambition) ;• des méthodologies éprouvées pour chaque étape du processus de visioning ;• une réflexion pragmatique sur le rôle à jouer par le dirigeant visionnaire et ses équipes ;• six cas à la loupe pour s'inspirer intelligemment de ce qui a été fait ailleurs.Que vous soyez dirigeant, consultant, coach ou membre d'un comité exécutif, ce livre sera votre boussole pour donner un cap à votre entreprise !1. Vision, de quoi parle-t-on ?2. Une raison d'être au bon niveau3. Des valeurs qui sonnent juste4. Une ambition qui donne un cap solide5. Une vision, à quoi bon ?6. Visioning : comment bâtir une vision ?7. Comment trouver sa raison d'être ?8. Comment formuler ses valeurs ?9. Comment définir son ambition ?10. Quelle place pour le dirigeant ?11. Quel est le juste " co " ?12. Sygmatel : deux jours pour formuler sa raison d'être13. Kunegel : une ETI en croissance réaffirme ses valeurs14. Ceetrus : se réinventer à l'heure de l'émancipation15. AMV : Une ambition pour continuer à remplir sa mission16. Mailleux : back to DNA17. Groupama : deux ans pour prendre l'avenir à bras le corps
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Affiche du document The Slow Food Story

The Slow Food Story

Geoff Andrews

1h12min45

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97 pages. Temps de lecture estimé 1h13min.
The Slow Food movement was set up in Italy as a response to the dominance of fast food chains, supermarkets and large-scale agribusiness. It seeks to defend what it calls 'the universal right to pleasure' and promotes an alternative approach to food production and consumption based on the promotion of 'good, clean and fair' local products. This is the first in-depth study of the fascinating politics of Slow Food, which in twenty years has grown into an international organisation with more than 80,000 members in over 100 countries. With its roots in the 1960s and 1970s counter-culture, Slow Food's distinctive politics lie in the unity between gastronomic pleasure and environmental responsibility. The movement crosses the left-right divide to embrace both the conservative desire to preserve traditional rural communities and an alternative 'virtuous' idea of globalisation. Geoff Andrews shows that the alternative future embodied in Slow Food extends to all aspects of modern life. The Slow Food Story presents an extensive new critique of fast-moving, work-obsessed contemporary capitalist culture.Preface PART ONE: IDEAS. 1. Politics in Search of Pleasure 2. The Critique of 'Fast Life' 3. Terra Madre PART TWO: PEOPLE 4. Gastronome! The Arrival of a New Political Subject 5. The Return of the Producer…and the Death of the Consumer? 6. The Movement PART THREE: PLACES 7. Rediscovering the Local 8. Virtuous Globalisation. 9. Slow Food, Gastronomy and Cultural Politics References Index
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Affiche du document AARP® Crash Course in Finding the Work You Love

AARP® Crash Course in Finding the Work You Love

Samuel Greengard

2h21min45

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189 pages. Temps de lecture estimé 2h22min.
Boomers reinvented society. Now they’re reinventing themselves, and AARP wants to facilitate that process.AARP Crash Course in Finding the Work You Love explores both the motivations and the methods of those taking part in the social phenomenon known as recareering. Whether they are old enough to have earned their AARP card or not, a new generation of American workers is no longer counting the days until retirement; instead they’re seeking greater fulfillment in their personal lives by tackling new—and often much more socially significant—work.Switching careers is a challenge at any age, yet boomers may have more to overcome than their younger counterparts: They must beef up their education or seek out retraining; cope with seismic lifestyle shifts such as less income and a new circle of friends; and reconcile themselves to the fact that even the most rewarding position is no panacea for life’s problems.  Author Sam Greengard brings a wealth of knowledge to this timely topic: Since 1981 he has written about career issues for publications as diverse as The Chicago Tribune, Family Circle, The Los Angeles Times, MSNBC/MSN Online, Wired, and Workforce Management. Here, Greengard shows readers how to sort out their feelings about their existing career; successfully transition to a new one; and work toward a greater sense of balance in their daily lives. Profiles of recareering veterans show how others have attained their own goals. These are rounded out by tips, quizzes, worksheets, how-to sidebars, and other practical resources. With this handbook to guide them, readers of any age can finally make the leap to finding the life’s work they will truly love.
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Affiche du document Mon guide pour m'affirmer au boulot toute seule comme une grande

Mon guide pour m'affirmer au boulot toute seule comme une grande

Marie-stephane Berthe

1h27min00

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116 pages. Temps de lecture estimé 1h27min.
Introduction Trouver (et surtout garder !) un emploi relève souvent d’un parcours du combattant quotidien… a fortiori pour nous, les filles, qui devons régulièrement, plus que tout autre, prouver que nous sommes à la hauteur d’un poste. Ce guide va vous accompagner pas à pas dans toutes les étapes et les cas de figure de votre vie professionnelle : car de la recherche d’un job à la promotion tant espérée, nombreux sont les écueils à éviter ! Gestuelle du premier entretien, conflits internes, patron dragueur, responsable hyper-directive, situations de stress à gérer, collègue pas très réglo, subordonné macho… nous allons tout passer au crible et vous donner les pistes pour vous sortir de chaque situation. Car oui, on peut s’entendre avec les hommes, comme avec les femmes, dans le cadre professionnel. Notre maître mot : OSER. Nous souhaitons là encore vous aider à passer les barrières une par une… Pour qu’ensuite vous trouviez dans votre emploi l’épanouissement que nous sommes toutes en droit d’attendre et qu’enfin l’on voie ressurgir au passage cette confiance en soi qui nous fait souvent tant défaut. Attention… hors de question de devenir des louves qui rôdent dans les couloirs en quête d’une proie, prêtes à tout pour défendre leur territoire ou pour le gagner ! Bien au contraire, nous allons aussi vous démontrer qu’il est tout à fait possible de devenir une excellente proue de navire en restant fidèle à ses valeurs.
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