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Other Added - My Struggle, or, What Do You Do With a Degree in English
College and Business Counselors and the Advice that they Give ntern. I had been a personal assistant and later, an office manager, at a commercial real estate firm. At least I knew what I didn’t want to do.Often College students complain that their counselors gave them bad advice. Sometimes these students complain that they were put into the wrong classroom, major or the career guidance counselor gave them bad information. Most major colleges and universities have a job placement program and they do a pretty good job of placing between 60 and 90% of all their students in Fortune 500 companies.But merely being placed in a good job to which you are not suited can be very problematic to your future, not to mention your mental health and stress level. It does not just happen in schools either, it happens with SCORE Business counselors telling small business people they cannot do it or that the business will not work. This also happens with Business professors, telling the students they Which leads me back to the beginning and again, we have the question of: What do you do with a degree in English? What were my skills? I could write a sentence. I could edit that sentence. I could read. A lot. I was well-versed in ready entire 500-page books in two days. I was also really good at pretending like I had some really deep thoughts about it, when all I was really thinking was “Does this book make my thighs look big?” I could teach, but I’d soured on that a long time ago. I’m creative. I’m excellent at organizing. I write well. I’m moody and sometimes dramatic. I really like to write. I’m good at solving problems, proofreading, editing, researching and assisting people. I feel stifled sitting in a corporate environment 40 hours a week. Sometimes I think that what’s served in the cafeteria is more important than the actual work I’m doing. I have no business skills, but I can act. And I can read. I will find something, something that suits me in more ways that I could ever imagine. Something that will give me freedom, creativi The Era of 'Finger in the Air' Publication Strategies is Almost Over When choosing a career for yourself, you think about two things: One, you think about what you like to do. Do you enjoy being around people all day? Maybe it’s that you love arts and crafts. Second, you think about what skills you’ve acquired, be it from school or from life. Are you good at analyzing situations? Maybe your specialty is creating peace between two competing forces. Can you correct a sentence like no other? Are you good at teaching a skill? Kids? Street smarts? Or is it that you’re really good at selling things? For me, it all came down to one, simple question: What do you do with a degree in English? I’ve asked myself this question almost every day for the past three years and I still don’t have an answer.Somewhere in most organisations is a cupboard. Inside that cupboard is stack after stack of boxes. Inside those boxes are publications – brochures, annual reports, textbooks, manuals or the like – whose only purpose seems to be gathering dust. Sound familiar? It doesn’t have to be that way, says Iain Plunkett of on-demand specialist, The Garret.I once stood with a company director in front of his own particular cupboard. He wanted to show me his current annual report. ‘We have a few copies in here,’ he said. His feeling of dread before opening the cupboard was palpable.Sure enough, we were faced by a wall of cardboard. A few had miraculously become a few hundred or even a few thousand. You could say it was a product of poor planning. But, more accurately, it was a product of a When I graduated from college, aside from the normal grunts and groans of “get a job,” I think the first thing someone asked me was “Well…” and then an Expectant Pause. “What are you going to do with your life?” For some reason, throughout my five years at college, whenever I heard this question, I always had some witty and sarcastic reply ready, like “Oh, you know, you’ll find me over on that street corner, in my box.” We had a good laugh and the topic was usually changed. I didn’t take it seriously, but then again, I didn’t know too many college students who took anything seriously. Not speaking for anyone else, I never took it seriously because I figured that when I finally graduated, I’d have it all figured out because I’d be an Adult. Adults can make decisions. Adults know what they want, when they want it and how to get it. Adults don’t eat cream cheese and jelly on mini-bagels, nor do they gulp down hot chocolate with marshmallows and whipped cream. In their pajamas. And when they do wear pajamas, it’s something sophisticated like plaid or polka dots, not Happy Bunny or cute purple puppies. Clearly, I was not an Adult. Sure, I was 22 years young, but when I wasn’t at school, I was still living in the house I grew up in, across the hall from my parents’ bedroom. I wore giant pink bunny slippers, sweatpants and my boyfriend’s oversized sweatshirts. My mother made me dinner and my father did my laundry. This isn’t in any way their fault – of course you want to make life as comfortable as possible for your children, the fruit of your loins – but partially because of this, I still felt like a child. In being treated like a child, in feeling like a child, it becomes increasingly more difficult to make that transition to adulthood the longer you stay in that situation. Three years later, I’m still in that situation. It’s a dangerous choice to make: Do you spend every penny you have, still in debt from all those student loans, just so you can see your parents only on the holidays? Do you scrounge and save, live at home and be treated like a child? I thought it was a no-brainer. I was broke, I had been an English major and I was $23,000 in debt with student loans. I went home to my mommy and daddy. So what if I couldn’t come and go as I pleased? So what if I still wore my old blue robe with yellow ducks? I could do whatever I wanted in my own little space of a room, and also, when I was sick, I knew I’d automatically have someone to take care of me. But, still, the question of qualifications plagued me. It followed me everywhere I went, through every classified ad I read. It followed me through everything I wasn’t qualified to do, through meals and movies and long sessions spent at Friendly’s gorging myself on ice cream because I had no qualifications. If it were up to me, I’d create a game show. It’d be called “Choose a Career: The Wheel of Fortune.” How great would that be? You go through all of your schooling, or not, and then get a spot on the show. Each “contestant” would come up, bright eyed and bushy tailed, to the Career Wheel, a mystical force that would head you off toward, guide you to, your next step in life, your life’s purpose. You don’t end up spending years of your precious life at an unsatisfying job, wasting your days away until you choose what you should’ve chosen years ago. You don’t have to dig down, deep inside, soul-search your innermost wishes to find out what you really want to do with yourself, what you’re actually qualified to do. You can’t be disappointed in yourself because, hey, you didn’t choose it, the Career Wheel did. It’s not like I hadn’t tried a few “careers” out. In my short time out of college, I had been a receptionist at a sign company where I was given a 20-minute break everyday, no benefits and where I had to baby-sit the boss’ children. I had been a substitute teacher at my old high school where the students would curse at me in Spanish when I told them I didn’t care that their friend was waiting for them in the hallway. I had been a talent agency intern. I had been a personal assistant and later, an office manager, at a commercial real estate firm. At least I knew what I didn’t want to do. Which leads me back to the beginning and again, we have the question of: What do you do with a degree in English? What were my skills? I could write a sentence. I could edit that sentence. I could read. A lot. I was well-versed in ready entire 500-page books in two days. I was also really good at pretending like I had some really deep thoughts about it, when all I was really thinking was “Does this book make my thighs look big?” I could teach, but I’d soured on that a long time ago. I’m creative. I’m excellent at organizing. I write well. I’m moody and sometimes dramatic. I really like to write. I’m good at solving problems, proofreading, editing, researching and assisting people. I feel stifled sitting in a corporate environment 40 hours a week. Sometimes I think that what’s served in the cafeteria is more important than the actual work I’m doing. I have no business skills, but I can act. And I can read. I will find something, something that suits me in more ways that I could ever imagine. Something that will give me freedom, creativit The 7 Surefire Signs of Clients to Avoid changed. I didn’t take it seriously, but then again, I didn’t know too many college students who took anything seriously. Not speaking for anyone else, I never took it seriously because I figured that when I finally graduated, I’d have it all figured out because I’d be an Adult. Adults can make decisions. Adults know what they want, when they want it and how to get it. Adults don’t eat cream cheese and jelly on mini-bagels, nor do they gulp down hot chocolate with marshmallows and whipped cream. In their pajamas. And when they do wear pajamas, it’s something sophisticated like plaid or polka dots, not Happy Bunny or cute purple puppies.You’ve heard me get on my soapbox several times about needing to really hone in on your target audience BEFORE you go out there and market yourself extensively. One of the major reasons is that most people try to market to EVERYBODY, fearing that if they niche themselves too much, they’ll narrow down their prospective client pool too much.We now know that this is actually not true, quite the contrary, because experts make more per hour than generalists, the media is ONLY looking for experts and not jacks-of-all-trades, experts stand out in the marketplace and it’s much easier to market to a specific group than it is to a whole mess of people. Otherwise, our message isn’t compelling enough and we don’t catch anyone’s attention.Today, I want to take you on a dif Clearly, I was not an Adult. Sure, I was 22 years young, but when I wasn’t at school, I was still living in the house I grew up in, across the hall from my parents’ bedroom. I wore giant pink bunny slippers, sweatpants and my boyfriend’s oversized sweatshirts. My mother made me dinner and my father did my laundry. This isn’t in any way their fault – of course you want to make life as comfortable as possible for your children, the fruit of your loins – but partially because of this, I still felt like a child. In being treated like a child, in feeling like a child, it becomes increasingly more difficult to make that transition to adulthood the longer you stay in that situation. Three years later, I’m still in that situation. It’s a dangerous choice to make: Do you spend every penny you have, still in debt from all those student loans, just so you can see your parents only on the holidays? Do you scrounge and save, live at home and be treated like a child? I thought it was a no-brainer. I was broke, I had been an English major and I was $23,000 in debt with student loans. I went home to my mommy and daddy. So what if I couldn’t come and go as I pleased? So what if I still wore my old blue robe with yellow ducks? I could do whatever I wanted in my own little space of a room, and also, when I was sick, I knew I’d automatically have someone to take care of me. But, still, the question of qualifications plagued me. It followed me everywhere I went, through every classified ad I read. It followed me through everything I wasn’t qualified to do, through meals and movies and long sessions spent at Friendly’s gorging myself on ice cream because I had no qualifications. If it were up to me, I’d create a game show. It’d be called “Choose a Career: The Wheel of Fortune.” How great would that be? You go through all of your schooling, or not, and then get a spot on the show. Each “contestant” would come up, bright eyed and bushy tailed, to the Career Wheel, a mystical force that would head you off toward, guide you to, your next step in life, your life’s purpose. You don’t end up spending years of your precious life at an unsatisfying job, wasting your days away until you choose what you should’ve chosen years ago. You don’t have to dig down, deep inside, soul-search your innermost wishes to find out what you really want to do with yourself, what you’re actually qualified to do. You can’t be disappointed in yourself because, hey, you didn’t choose it, the Career Wheel did. It’s not like I hadn’t tried a few “careers” out. In my short time out of college, I had been a receptionist at a sign company where I was given a 20-minute break everyday, no benefits and where I had to baby-sit the boss’ children. I had been a substitute teacher at my old high school where the students would curse at me in Spanish when I told them I didn’t care that their friend was waiting for them in the hallway. I had been a talent agency intern. I had been a personal assistant and later, an office manager, at a commercial real estate firm. At least I knew what I didn’t want to do. Which leads me back to the beginning and again, we have the question of: What do you do with a degree in English? What were my skills? I could write a sentence. I could edit that sentence. I could read. A lot. I was well-versed in ready entire 500-page books in two days. I was also really good at pretending like I had some really deep thoughts about it, when all I was really thinking was “Does this book make my thighs look big?” I could teach, but I’d soured on that a long time ago. I’m creative. I’m excellent at organizing. I write well. I’m moody and sometimes dramatic. I really like to write. I’m good at solving problems, proofreading, editing, researching and assisting people. I feel stifled sitting in a corporate environment 40 hours a week. Sometimes I think that what’s served in the cafeteria is more important than the actual work I’m doing. I have no business skills, but I can act. And I can read. I will find something, something that suits me in more ways that I could ever imagine. Something that will give me freedom, creativi Employee Time Clocks - Enter The Modern World ike a child, it becomes increasingly more difficult to make that transition to adulthood the longer you stay in that situation. Three years later, I’m still in that situation. It’s a dangerous choice to make: Do you spend every penny you have, still in debt from all those student loans, just so you can see your parents only on the holidays? Do you scrounge and save, live at home and be treated like a child? I thought it was a no-brainer. I was broke, I had been an English major and I was $23,000 in debt with student loans. I went home to my mommy and daddy. So what if I couldn’t come and go as I pleased? So what if I still wore my old blue robe with yellow ducks? I could do whatever I wanted in my own little space of a room, and also, when I was sick, I knew I’d automatically have someone to take care of me.For decades, businesses and factories monitored the working hours of their employees using time clocks. A particular favorite was the punch card system, where the employee had to insert their card into the time clock, so their hours could be stamped on the card. The payroll officer would then collect these cards each week and pay the employees accordingly.It's a simple system, but unfortunately it's also very easy to cheat. Joe Bloggs is a bit late today? That's okay, John Doe can pop his card in the time clock and nobody will know the difference. Most companies have severe penalties in place for employees found faking time clock information, particularly clocking on or off for other employees, but the chances of detecting it have always been small.Not only is the system But, still, the question of qualifications plagued me. It followed me everywhere I went, through every classified ad I read. It followed me through everything I wasn’t qualified to do, through meals and movies and long sessions spent at Friendly’s gorging myself on ice cream because I had no qualifications. If it were up to me, I’d create a game show. It’d be called “Choose a Career: The Wheel of Fortune.” How great would that be? You go through all of your schooling, or not, and then get a spot on the show. Each “contestant” would come up, bright eyed and bushy tailed, to the Career Wheel, a mystical force that would head you off toward, guide you to, your next step in life, your life’s purpose. You don’t end up spending years of your precious life at an unsatisfying job, wasting your days away until you choose what you should’ve chosen years ago. You don’t have to dig down, deep inside, soul-search your innermost wishes to find out what you really want to do with yourself, what you’re actually qualified to do. You can’t be disappointed in yourself because, hey, you didn’t choose it, the Career Wheel did. It’s not like I hadn’t tried a few “careers” out. In my short time out of college, I had been a receptionist at a sign company where I was given a 20-minute break everyday, no benefits and where I had to baby-sit the boss’ children. I had been a substitute teacher at my old high school where the students would curse at me in Spanish when I told them I didn’t care that their friend was waiting for them in the hallway. I had been a talent agency intern. I had been a personal assistant and later, an office manager, at a commercial real estate firm. At least I knew what I didn’t want to do. Which leads me back to the beginning and again, we have the question of: What do you do with a degree in English? What were my skills? I could write a sentence. I could edit that sentence. I could read. A lot. I was well-versed in ready entire 500-page books in two days. I was also really good at pretending like I had some really deep thoughts about it, when all I was really thinking was “Does this book make my thighs look big?” I could teach, but I’d soured on that a long time ago. I’m creative. I’m excellent at organizing. I write well. I’m moody and sometimes dramatic. I really like to write. I’m good at solving problems, proofreading, editing, researching and assisting people. I feel stifled sitting in a corporate environment 40 hours a week. Sometimes I think that what’s served in the cafeteria is more important than the actual work I’m doing. I have no business skills, but I can act. And I can read. I will find something, something that suits me in more ways that I could ever imagine. Something that will give me freedom, creativi Leadership: Being Open to Feedback oose a Career: The Wheel of Fortune.” How great would that be? You go through all of your schooling, or not, and then get a spot on the show. Each “contestant” would come up, bright eyed and bushy tailed, to the Career Wheel, a mystical force that would head you off toward, guide you to, your next step in life, your life’s purpose. You don’t end up spending years of your precious life at an unsatisfying job, wasting your days away until you choose what you should’ve chosen years ago. You don’t have to dig down, deep inside, soul-search your innermost wishes to find out what you really want to do with yourself, what you’re actually qualified to do. You can’t be disappointed in yourself because, hey, you didn’t choose it, the Career Wheel did.Oftentimes leaders say they are eager for opinions about their performance. In many cases, they honestly do want it. Some say they are open to feedback, but their behavior says otherwise. People in leadership roles can find it challenging to go about getting honest feedback concerning their job performance. Many executives hire coaches and consultants like me to collect feedback anonymously from people who otherwise would be uncomfortable offering opinions. We, as neutral parties, can report what we learn without fear of reprisal.Jerry, the deputy director of a large non-profit organization, told me that he is confident in his talent as a leader and is committed to improving his skill. During our first session, we decided to do a 360 assessment to step up his growth. We used an on-li It’s not like I hadn’t tried a few “careers” out. In my short time out of college, I had been a receptionist at a sign company where I was given a 20-minute break everyday, no benefits and where I had to baby-sit the boss’ children. I had been a substitute teacher at my old high school where the students would curse at me in Spanish when I told them I didn’t care that their friend was waiting for them in the hallway. I had been a talent agency intern. I had been a personal assistant and later, an office manager, at a commercial real estate firm. At least I knew what I didn’t want to do. Which leads me back to the beginning and again, we have the question of: What do you do with a degree in English? What were my skills? I could write a sentence. I could edit that sentence. I could read. A lot. I was well-versed in ready entire 500-page books in two days. I was also really good at pretending like I had some really deep thoughts about it, when all I was really thinking was “Does this book make my thighs look big?” I could teach, but I’d soured on that a long time ago. I’m creative. I’m excellent at organizing. I write well. I’m moody and sometimes dramatic. I really like to write. I’m good at solving problems, proofreading, editing, researching and assisting people. I feel stifled sitting in a corporate environment 40 hours a week. Sometimes I think that what’s served in the cafeteria is more important than the actual work I’m doing. I have no business skills, but I can act. And I can read. I will find something, something that suits me in more ways that I could ever imagine. Something that will give me freedom, creativi Will Fed Rate Hikes Fuel Business Owner Burnout? ntern. I had been a personal assistant and later, an office manager, at a commercial real estate firm. At least I knew what I didn’t want to do.Heads up to business owners. The recent Federal Reserve short-term interest rate hike was the 15th consecutive increase since June 2004 and the first since Ben Bernanke took over as chairman of the central bank in February.The Fed indicated that even more rate hikes may be necessary in the next few months. "Some further policy firming may be needed to keep the risks to the attainment of both sustainable economic growth and price stability roughly in balance," the Fed said in its statement.Translation: more rate hikes ahead, let’s hope it doesn’t hurt the economy and your business.The target for the federal funds rate is now 4.75 percent, the highest it has been in five years. This overnight bank lending rate affects the amount of interest business owners pay for various Which leads me back to the beginning and again, we have the question of: What do you do with a degree in English? What were my skills? I could write a sentence. I could edit that sentence. I could read. A lot. I was well-versed in ready entire 500-page books in two days. I was also really good at pretending like I had some really deep thoughts about it, when all I was really thinking was “Does this book make my thighs look big?” I could teach, but I’d soured on that a long time ago. I’m creative. I’m excellent at organizing. I write well. I’m moody and sometimes dramatic. I really like to write. I’m good at solving problems, proofreading, editing, researching and assisting people. I feel stifled sitting in a corporate environment 40 hours a week. Sometimes I think that what’s served in the cafeteria is more important than the actual work I’m doing. I have no business skills, but I can act. And I can read. I will find something, something that suits me in more ways that I could ever imagine. Something that will give me freedom, creativity, good food and a non-stifling environment. But even if I end up taking a job as something else, something I never intended, or even if it’s almost everything I intended, this time, it will make me happy. One day, when I least expect it, I might even become one of those Adults I speak about with such distance. I am going to keep my Happy Bunny pajamas.
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