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    With a Grain of Salt (Because You Can't Always Believe Everything You Hear or Read)
    I always wonder if the 'experts' who appear on the morning shows (The Today Show; Good Morning America; CBS Morning Show) have any idea that they frequently sound stupid to perhaps half the people who are listening to them.Consider the other morning, for example. According to one 'expert,' dentists all over the country are extremely worried because people are drinking so much bottled water, and, therefore, are not getting enough fluoride from drinking tap water."It is easy to drink fluoridated tap water," the expert said. "Everyone can just turn on their tap and drink fluoridated water."Really?Everyone?What about those people who drink well water and are not hooked into a municipal water system that fluoridates the water supply?I don't know about people who live out in the country in ot
    e got to develop a plan to get in the game. Allocate 2 hours a week, or even a month, to getting and staying current or learning something completely new. A high level of competence sells no matter the economy.

    HAVE A PLAN B READY TO EXECUTE
    You may not be ‘expecting’ to lose your job or be re-organized into the job from he**, but who is? The point is –always be ready, willing, and able to do something else. If you love what you do, then all you need is a current resume and job search plan in your back pocket at all times. Your plan B should include the network and competencies pieces discussed in this article. If you think you might like to try something new then you definitely must start creating that plan. What would you need to know in order to make a move into something new? Who would you need to know? What would be the first 3 things you would do if you were no longer employed? Create your plan B and start w

    Logo Designers Would Give Michael Jordan a Run for His Money. Take Control of Your Design Experience
    A waste paper basket is surrounded by a smattering of scrunched up balls of paper. A hush falls over the studio as the creative director takes aim at the miniature basket ball hoop hanging delicately over the bin. He aims and fires from a distance of 2 metres. After the whooping and high fives have finally died down, the studio resumes back to some normality. A junior designer rummages through the bin to locate the winning paper ball as it did, coincidentally, have his latest logo creation on it that was waiting for a critique from the creative director - hmmmmm.The excitement, tension and ulcer inducing stress of putting that latent entrepreneurial flair into practice can bring with it decisions that were never really considered at the time of inception. One such area is the translation of the essence of your business into an identifiabl
    A 5 POINT STRATEGY FOR ENSURING YOUR JOB SECURITY

    Think Job Security is a thing of the past? Think again. While it may be true that no one is exempt from a downsizing, layoff, or unexpected re-organization in today’s economic climate, that doesn’t have to mean you have no job security. Today’s workers simply need to redefine what job security really is given the competitive environment we live in, and where security comes from. You can (and should) have a sense of job security, but it won’t come from your employer. You must give it to yourself. Your number one priority, if you wish to have career longevity and fulfillment, is to remain highly employable. Here’s a proven 5 point strategy to ensure you have security in an uncertain job economy.

    1. Under-promise, over-deliver
    2. Nurture Your Network
    3. Invest in Your Competence
    4. Have a Plan B and Plan C Ready to Execute
    5. Build Your Reserves

    UNDER PROMISE and OVER DELIVER
    The first strategy is simply to outperform your peers. Under promising may sound like a lethal career strategy, but in reality it’s the opposite, as long as you consistently over deliver. Bosses and peers become most frustrated with those who make empty promises, right? These are the people who OVER promise and then consistently UNDER perform. By getting really skilled at setting reasonable expectations, building in time for the unexpected (which you can almost always expect!), and then meeting or beating every agreed upon target, how much does that increase your value to the organization? Lots. People want to know what to expect and be wowed. Wow! them with your performance, not your promises. Valuable employees manage to escape much of the corporate shake ups, even when the shake ups hit their home turf. Create a reputation for being someone who delivers value and you’ll add a lot of staying power to your career.

    NURTURE YOUR NETWORK
    Do you maintain relationships with a diverse group of people—from close friends to casual business acquaintances? Or is your social life basically built around the coffee pot and bagel box at work? When faced with changing jobs (by choice or not), it is important that you have strong, reliable network in place. You don’t want to be building up relationships at a time when you need them most…it drains your energy and looks and feels too desperate! You want to continually work toward having strong relationships with a variety of contacts because you enjoy them and they enjoy you. These relationships are in the spirit of helping whenever it’s needed. You may include professional contacts within and outside your employer, as well as a diverse group of acquaintances through community, school, and social circles. Stay plugged in with others. It can make the difference between a long and difficult job search, and a smooth job change.

    INVEST IN YOUR COMPETENCE
    Staying current in your field is critical to long term employability—a.k.a. ‘security’. If your employer provides some of this, great! Take them up on it. But if they don’t (as many are cutting back here), take it upon yourself. Create your own professional development plan. Find professional associations, training programs, published material (books, internet sites, magazines and journals, etc…) and/or mentors/peers that can help you stay abreast of trends and issues impact your field, industry and geographical area. In order to be employable (whether at your current employer or somewhere else), you have to be current and be able to talk about future trends. If your most recent ‘update’ to your knowledge, skills, or abilities was the day you walked down the aisle to pick up your degree (and that wasn’t last year), then you’ve got to develop a plan to get in the game. Allocate 2 hours a week, or even a month, to getting and staying current or learning something completely new. A high level of competence sells no matter the economy.

    HAVE A PLAN B READY TO EXECUTE
    You may not be ‘expecting’ to lose your job or be re-organized into the job from he**, but who is? The point is –always be ready, willing, and able to do something else. If you love what you do, then all you need is a current resume and job search plan in your back pocket at all times. Your plan B should include the network and competencies pieces discussed in this article. If you think you might like to try something new then you definitely must start creating that plan. What would you need to know in order to make a move into something new? Who would you need to know? What would be the first 3 things you would do if you were no longer employed? Create your plan B and start wo

    Researched Internet Opportunities - How To Find A Perfect Home Business Opportunity
    Home business is ideal. It allows people like you and me to stay home with our families. To be able to work when we need to and not when our boss tells us to. It allows a freedom that no other business offers.Home business can be the fit that you’ve been looking for. And there are so many options and opportunities available. There is a plan for a home business that will fit everyone, the only thing holding people back is the finding of the opportunity that will fit.Weeding through internet opportunities can be time consuming. There are thousands of places and sites on the internet that are claiming to be the perfect opportunity. They say they have the right option for you. They claim to know exactly what you are looking for, and that can be a problem.Obviously, they don’t know you. They don’t know what you are passionate
    p>UNDER PROMISE and OVER DELIVER
    The first strategy is simply to outperform your peers. Under promising may sound like a lethal career strategy, but in reality it’s the opposite, as long as you consistently over deliver. Bosses and peers become most frustrated with those who make empty promises, right? These are the people who OVER promise and then consistently UNDER perform. By getting really skilled at setting reasonable expectations, building in time for the unexpected (which you can almost always expect!), and then meeting or beating every agreed upon target, how much does that increase your value to the organization? Lots. People want to know what to expect and be wowed. Wow! them with your performance, not your promises. Valuable employees manage to escape much of the corporate shake ups, even when the shake ups hit their home turf. Create a reputation for being someone who delivers value and you’ll add a lot of staying power to your career.

    NURTURE YOUR NETWORK
    Do you maintain relationships with a diverse group of people—from close friends to casual business acquaintances? Or is your social life basically built around the coffee pot and bagel box at work? When faced with changing jobs (by choice or not), it is important that you have strong, reliable network in place. You don’t want to be building up relationships at a time when you need them most…it drains your energy and looks and feels too desperate! You want to continually work toward having strong relationships with a variety of contacts because you enjoy them and they enjoy you. These relationships are in the spirit of helping whenever it’s needed. You may include professional contacts within and outside your employer, as well as a diverse group of acquaintances through community, school, and social circles. Stay plugged in with others. It can make the difference between a long and difficult job search, and a smooth job change.

    INVEST IN YOUR COMPETENCE
    Staying current in your field is critical to long term employability—a.k.a. ‘security’. If your employer provides some of this, great! Take them up on it. But if they don’t (as many are cutting back here), take it upon yourself. Create your own professional development plan. Find professional associations, training programs, published material (books, internet sites, magazines and journals, etc…) and/or mentors/peers that can help you stay abreast of trends and issues impact your field, industry and geographical area. In order to be employable (whether at your current employer or somewhere else), you have to be current and be able to talk about future trends. If your most recent ‘update’ to your knowledge, skills, or abilities was the day you walked down the aisle to pick up your degree (and that wasn’t last year), then you’ve got to develop a plan to get in the game. Allocate 2 hours a week, or even a month, to getting and staying current or learning something completely new. A high level of competence sells no matter the economy.

    HAVE A PLAN B READY TO EXECUTE
    You may not be ‘expecting’ to lose your job or be re-organized into the job from he**, but who is? The point is –always be ready, willing, and able to do something else. If you love what you do, then all you need is a current resume and job search plan in your back pocket at all times. Your plan B should include the network and competencies pieces discussed in this article. If you think you might like to try something new then you definitely must start creating that plan. What would you need to know in order to make a move into something new? Who would you need to know? What would be the first 3 things you would do if you were no longer employed? Create your plan B and start w

    Logistics Engineering
    Logistics engineering mainly deals with the application of engineering methods to solve logistics problems. Logistics is the science of planning, organizing, and executing activities for delivering the required goods or services to the right location at the right time. Logistics engineering supports every stage of an activity to satisfy customer requirements.Modern technologies, communication links, and control systems are essential to manage materials, services, and financial goals. Logistics engineering help to improvise new materials to suit the situation for a cost effective performance. Strategy management, research methodology, industrial engineering, supply chain management, quality assurance, and systems simulation and modelling are integrated in the logistics engineering field. This linking supports the functional area of logist
    staying power to your career.

    NURTURE YOUR NETWORK
    Do you maintain relationships with a diverse group of people—from close friends to casual business acquaintances? Or is your social life basically built around the coffee pot and bagel box at work? When faced with changing jobs (by choice or not), it is important that you have strong, reliable network in place. You don’t want to be building up relationships at a time when you need them most…it drains your energy and looks and feels too desperate! You want to continually work toward having strong relationships with a variety of contacts because you enjoy them and they enjoy you. These relationships are in the spirit of helping whenever it’s needed. You may include professional contacts within and outside your employer, as well as a diverse group of acquaintances through community, school, and social circles. Stay plugged in with others. It can make the difference between a long and difficult job search, and a smooth job change.

    INVEST IN YOUR COMPETENCE
    Staying current in your field is critical to long term employability—a.k.a. ‘security’. If your employer provides some of this, great! Take them up on it. But if they don’t (as many are cutting back here), take it upon yourself. Create your own professional development plan. Find professional associations, training programs, published material (books, internet sites, magazines and journals, etc…) and/or mentors/peers that can help you stay abreast of trends and issues impact your field, industry and geographical area. In order to be employable (whether at your current employer or somewhere else), you have to be current and be able to talk about future trends. If your most recent ‘update’ to your knowledge, skills, or abilities was the day you walked down the aisle to pick up your degree (and that wasn’t last year), then you’ve got to develop a plan to get in the game. Allocate 2 hours a week, or even a month, to getting and staying current or learning something completely new. A high level of competence sells no matter the economy.

    HAVE A PLAN B READY TO EXECUTE
    You may not be ‘expecting’ to lose your job or be re-organized into the job from he**, but who is? The point is –always be ready, willing, and able to do something else. If you love what you do, then all you need is a current resume and job search plan in your back pocket at all times. Your plan B should include the network and competencies pieces discussed in this article. If you think you might like to try something new then you definitely must start creating that plan. What would you need to know in order to make a move into something new? Who would you need to know? What would be the first 3 things you would do if you were no longer employed? Create your plan B and start w

    Medical Billing - The Weak Links
    They say that any organization, project, idea, or anything is only as strong as its weakest link. That is no more true than in the world of medical billing. The problem is, medical billing has so many weak links in its structure that it is a miracle that anything at all gets done. In this article, we take a look at just a few of these potential disaster areas.The biggest weak link in medical billing is the system itself. Oh, you can make all the arguments you want about how they're doing the best that they can with a system that was doomed to fail from the start but it doesn't change the fact that the medical billing process is a nightmare to begin with.Let's start with the billers. Because of all the regulations, a ton of knowledge is needed in order to bill a claim correctly. The truth is, there's not really a lot of training f
    between a long and difficult job search, and a smooth job change.

    INVEST IN YOUR COMPETENCE
    Staying current in your field is critical to long term employability—a.k.a. ‘security’. If your employer provides some of this, great! Take them up on it. But if they don’t (as many are cutting back here), take it upon yourself. Create your own professional development plan. Find professional associations, training programs, published material (books, internet sites, magazines and journals, etc…) and/or mentors/peers that can help you stay abreast of trends and issues impact your field, industry and geographical area. In order to be employable (whether at your current employer or somewhere else), you have to be current and be able to talk about future trends. If your most recent ‘update’ to your knowledge, skills, or abilities was the day you walked down the aisle to pick up your degree (and that wasn’t last year), then you’ve got to develop a plan to get in the game. Allocate 2 hours a week, or even a month, to getting and staying current or learning something completely new. A high level of competence sells no matter the economy.

    HAVE A PLAN B READY TO EXECUTE
    You may not be ‘expecting’ to lose your job or be re-organized into the job from he**, but who is? The point is –always be ready, willing, and able to do something else. If you love what you do, then all you need is a current resume and job search plan in your back pocket at all times. Your plan B should include the network and competencies pieces discussed in this article. If you think you might like to try something new then you definitely must start creating that plan. What would you need to know in order to make a move into something new? Who would you need to know? What would be the first 3 things you would do if you were no longer employed? Create your plan B and start w

    National Background Checks
    With global terrorization rising around the world, US companies are now compelled to verify the backgrounds of all foreign-born job candidates and employees who manage and staff foreign offices. Companies use Internet-based background screening systems that are favored by many international clients.Job candidates are required to enter their professional and personal data into a questionnaire at a secure Web site exclusively designed for each client. The companies receive the questionnaire over the online information-gathering system. This allows their screening specialists to proceed immediately while remaining in compliance with privacy laws that require candidates' authorization on the transfer of data across international jurisdictions. When investigators have finished authenticating the data, client reports are transferred online or by e-
    e got to develop a plan to get in the game. Allocate 2 hours a week, or even a month, to getting and staying current or learning something completely new. A high level of competence sells no matter the economy.

    HAVE A PLAN B READY TO EXECUTE
    You may not be ‘expecting’ to lose your job or be re-organized into the job from he**, but who is? The point is –always be ready, willing, and able to do something else. If you love what you do, then all you need is a current resume and job search plan in your back pocket at all times. Your plan B should include the network and competencies pieces discussed in this article. If you think you might like to try something new then you definitely must start creating that plan. What would you need to know in order to make a move into something new? Who would you need to know? What would be the first 3 things you would do if you were no longer employed? Create your plan B and start working on gathering some of the key pieces (information, contacts, experiences, etc….). Pull it out every so often, update it, and keep it working for you. It’s like job security insurance. It’s there when you need it. And then, create your Plan C. You just never know.

    BUILD UP YOUR RESERVES
    Are you prepared for a job loss should one occur unexpectedly? Do you have reserves of money to carry you through 6-12 months without a regular paycheck? Do you have reserves of confidence in your ability to land on your feet and make the most of whatever comes your way? Do you have reserves of energy to conduct a full scale job search? Do you have strong, stable friendships that could and would support you if you needed them?

    Having a strong reserve—financially, physically, emotionally, and socially—will help you be strong and confident before, during, and after any career challenge or change. This level of confidence keeps you afloat and, in fact, makes you more attractive as an employee (because you are strong and confident!). You may be less affected by a corporate shake-up and not have to draw upon your reserves. But, if you need them, they are there for you. How secure is that?!

    Employers are no longer able to provide the kind of job security they once did. But that doesn’t mean we all have to walk around vulnerable and stressed. Create your own brand of job security and take control of your career. After all, it’s YOUR career—it doesn’t belong to the company anymore. And that can be a great thing!

    This article may be reproduced, in its entirety, along with the following information:

    © 2006, Shawn Driscoll, Succeed Coaching & Development. This article is provided courtesy of Shawn Driscoll, Career Success Coach and owner of www.succeedcoaching.com. Professionals: upgrade your work life today! We provide products and services to help you succeed at work, in business and in life. Sign up to receive your free Success Wise ezine—and get success tips, inspiration, and resources to skyrocket your success—at www.succeedcoaching.com.

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