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Minggu, 19 September 2010

How to Get Ready For a Job Interview - Three Job Search Tips That Work

If you're looking for employment, you need to know how to get ready for a job interview. You can talk to anybody and everybody about what to do, but it won't help unless you get job search tips that work.

Employers say people applying for a job often make mistakes during the interview process. It doesn't do any good to have a great resume if you don't seem like a good hire when you meet in person.

Here are three ways to make sure that you are ready for your job interview.

1. Arrive on time.

The best way to make a bad impression on a potential employer is being late. If you're just a couple of minutes late, the people doing the interview will remember it during the rest of the hiring process.

Find out where you have to go. If possible, go there a day early just so you know how to get there and how long it takes. Then leave in plenty of time, allowing for possible traffic delays.

If you're late for that initial meeting, the employer will automatically think that you're likely to be late for work often. No matter how good your reason, it will almost certainly be seen as an excuse.

Furthermore, if you're late, you are telling the people doing the hiring that you don't value their time. Whatever the reason, you were somewhere else doing something else while they were waiting for you to show up.

2. Research the job and the company.

Applicants that come across as knowledgeable about the position for which they are applying and the organization doing the hiring have a clear advantage over other candidates. It is especially impressive when you can match your strengths to what the potential employer needs.

Consider this scenario. A newspaper needs to hire a reporter to cover local government. An editor goes through a stack of resumes and decides to invite two people to come in for an interview. They have similar backgrounds.

During the discussions, one candidate knows about journalism. He talks about how he develops sources, covers events and writes stories. He's clearly articulate and qualified.

The second candidate goes over her background, but also mentions how she thinks her aggressive reporting style will fit in with the newspaper's inclination toward investigative journalism. She has read previous stories about the city council and throws out several ideas for potential stories.

Which reporter will get the job?

3. Be confident, but not cocky.

Many job applicants think they have to show how smart they are. Unfortunately, they come across as arrogant.

Remember that in addition to your qualifications, the potential employer will be thinking about how you will fit into the workplace. If the person interviewing you thinks you have some sort of superiority complex, he or she is not likely to recommend that you be hired.

These suggestions will help you feel relaxed and confident during the hiring process. Once you know how to get ready for a job interview, you can concentrate on finding other job search tips that work.



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Freelance Writing - Get Writing Jobs From Your Blog

Got a freelance writing blog? Your blog makes a wonderful promotional tool. Over time, it will become your primary source of jobs. Here's what's essential: your blog must be professional, it may show what you can do, and it must be aimed at the right audience.

1. Choose a Blog Topic Your Buyers Read

Many freelance writers start a writing blog. While this may be fun as a hobby, it's not a great tactic professionally.

A writing blog is aimed at writers. None of the buyers of your writing are going to read your "writing" blog. So if you want to get jobs from your blog, choose your topic very carefully -- it must be aimed at buyers.

Professional writers know exactly who buys their writing. They target a specific audience, or a specific persona. This is exactly what you need to do when choosing a topic for your blog.

For example, perhaps you're writing a book. In that case your target audience would be agents and editors. If you're writing magazine articles, your target audience would be magazine editors. If you're writing for the web, your target audience will be website owners in a specific niche -- such as dieting, business, health and so on.

2. Blog About Your Successes

Have you heard the term "ego surfing"? Everyone looks up their own name on the web to find out what's being said about them. This applies to individuals and it applies to businesses too.

You can use this to your advantage. Blog about your successes. For example, if you you've just been contracted to write something, blog about it. Unless the fact that you're working for a particular company is secret for one reason or another, you should feel quite happy in mentioning company names on your blog.

I've had a company representative contact me within minutes of mentioning a company's name, so if you want to get writing jobs fast, name drop.

3. Include a Briefing Form on Your Blog

If you're a freelance writer who wants writing jobs, don't keep it a secret.

I'm constantly amazed at the number of writers who offer very little contact information on their blog. Indeed some writers have no contact information at all; I suppose they expect their buyers to contact them via smoke signals.

People don't know what to do unless you tell them. In copywriting terms every page on your blog needs a "call to action". Tell your site's visitors what you want them to do.

You should not only include contact information (including your cell phone number) on every page of your blog, you should also include a briefing form as a blog page.

A briefing form is a form which lets your buyers enter the details of the writing job, right onto the form. You'll receive the form via email, and you'll have all the details of what the job entails: this makes sending the prospect a quote fast and easy.


 
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Discussing the Editor Resume

Introducing the Job of Editor

The editor is the pivotal functionary in a publication, whether print or online, whose most important function is to improve the quality of communication and does so by working with words. Anyone who is fascinated by words, can't ignore errors in newspapers, winces at broadcasters' blunders, is offended by an illogical or bad argument, or inappropriate use of statistics has the makings of an editor.

Key Responsibilities

An editor performs a variety of roles for his publication. As acquisitions editor, an editor develops ideas for books, finds suitable writers to write them, evaluates manuscripts or proposals and makes recommendations about them to publishers. As developmental editor, they coordinate projects from the proposal stage to the final manuscript while incorporating inputs from authors and others concerned with the final publication. Under substantive or structural editing, they clarify or reorganize the content or structure of a manuscript. Under stylistic editing, and editor clarifies meaning while eliminating jargon and improving readability. Under copy editing, editors check for errors in grammar, spelling and punctuation while evaluating the consistency of presentation and facts. Often editors have to rewrite the content of a manuscript and conduct research to find source material for articles or books. Sometimes editors may have to find suitable pictures or artwork to accompany a text and to check the accuracy of facts and quotes used by a writer. The job also includes indexing and proof reading, sizing up photos and artwork and filling in page referencing so that the final copy is absolutely without any error. In addition, editors also perform any work required to integrate design and content in order to turn the edited manuscript into a printed book, magazine or journal.

Level of Education Required

There is no requirement of any particular type of education for the work of an editor and employers value reputation and experience over educational credentials. Still, most editors have attended university or college and many of them have degrees in journalism, mass communication, English or some technical writing field. If you aspire to be an editor, having such a degree will help. It's also best to begin by gaining early experience by working on newsletters, magazines or brochures for organizations in your community.

Additionally, computers have come to play an important role in the publishing process. Therefore familiarity with one or more word processing systems and computer graphics can increase your chances of landing an early editorial job. There is hardly any formal training available for the career of an editor and most of the training is acquired on the job.

Career Path

Most editors start as proofreaders, researchers or copy editors in a publishing house and move on to become senior editors. Many become freelance writers after holding one or more in-house positions and then return to in-house work as editors. The online revolution has given a tremendous boost to the editing career as new websites, online magazines, e-books and the like all need editors in large numbers.


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