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Other Added - The 4 R’s - Reading, Writing, Arithmetic and Retail?
Using Your Passion to Find Employment School SystemUsing the conventional approach, many people try to find work based on pay, and then they struggle to make these choices fit their own interests and abilities. Over time, they become trapped in their selection by fear, lack of attractive alternative opportunities, or reluctance to leave their comfort zone. The only thing that motivates many people to a new level is circumstances that force them to consider changing directions. Whether or not a person likes the work they find themselves doing, they tend to stick with it because they have a knack for it, and are able to satisfy their ambition Can you protect your kids by limiting their exposure to TV, internet and magazines at home? Well, somewhat. Pediatricians recommend limiting ‘screen time' to less than 2 hours per day. But kids are getting plenty of exposure at school as well. The report cites advertisements on school busses and book covers, and in school gyms and bathrooms. More than 200 school districts have signed exclusive contracts with soft-drink companies. There are also more than 4500 Pizza Huts and 3000 Taco Bells in school cafeterias across the country. Furthermore, Channel One, now shown in 25% of middle and high schools, contains 10 minutes of current events program Looking For Work In Close Protection Do your kids walk around the house humming jingles from commercials? I know mine have.One thing anyone in this industry will tell you if you sit back and hope work will come; you are living in a dream world.I have been in the close protection security industry since 1988 and still go looking for work, it’s like any other business if you want to succeed you must be willing to put the hours in at first to build your business, and then and only then can you start enjoying the fruits of your labour.I quite often find it frustrating and annoying that things take time when all you want is it to happen now?The truth is you must gain trust in every sense of the wor Kids are a Huge Market A new report from the American Academy of Pediatrics published this month in Pediatrics highlights the scope of advertising to children. According to the report, kids are exposed to about 3,000 ads per day in the United States from TV, radio, internet, billboards, etc. Why so many? Kids spend about $180 billion a year and influence parental spending of another $200 billion. Advertisers are reportedly marketing to an increasingly younger age group in an attempt to establish brand recognition. Recent studies, reported last month at the Radiological Society of North America meeting, show that the brain works harder to process information from new brands than from recognized ones. The study also reported that strong brands activated brain regions associated with positive emotions, reward and self-identity. In contrast, weak brands activated regions of negative emotion and working memory. Advertisers want to get kids familiar with their brands early so that they can influence a lifetime of buying power. Most Messages are Not Healthy This is not new, but what we should be concerned with is the types of messages our kids are getting. About half of the ads that kids see are for food but only 3% push healthy foods. However, it's this next statistic that blew my mind. According to the Pediatrics report, there are more beer and hard liquor ads in youth-oriented magazines than there are in adult magazines! This is according to a Washington Post article from September 24th, 2002. Tobacco companies also spent about $217 million in teen magazines in 2000 and the report cites evidence that they have developed specific advertising campaigns for kids as young as 13. The campaigns aren't limited to junk food, alcohol and tobacco. Prescription drug companies spend twice as much on marketing as they spend on research and development and promote the message that there is a pill for everything. A survey of doctors concluded that 92% of patients request an advertised drug. The top 10 drug companies in the Fortune 500 now make more money than the remaining 490 companies combined. Studies show that kids under 8 years old are unable to distinguish between advertising and factual messages. In fact, the FTC realized back in the 70's that marketing to kids under 6 was unfair and deceptive but decided it would be too hard to enforce a ban. However, many European countries have succeeded in doing just that. Pediatricians are now calling for tighter regulations on advertisers in the U.S., as well. The Invasion of the School System Can you protect your kids by limiting their exposure to TV, internet and magazines at home? Well, somewhat. Pediatricians recommend limiting ‘screen time' to less than 2 hours per day. But kids are getting plenty of exposure at school as well. The report cites advertisements on school busses and book covers, and in school gyms and bathrooms. More than 200 school districts have signed exclusive contracts with soft-drink companies. There are also more than 4500 Pizza Huts and 3000 Taco Bells in school cafeterias across the country. Furthermore, Channel One, now shown in 25% of middle and high schools, contains 10 minutes of current events program What's Your Workplace Doing To Your Health? ological Society of North America meeting, show that the brain works harder to process information from new brands than from recognized ones. The study also reported that strong brands activated brain regions associated with positive emotions, reward and self-identity. In contrast, weak brands activated regions of negative emotion and working memory. Advertisers want to get kids familiar with their brands early so that they can influence a lifetime of buying power.Americans pay a heavy price for their unhealthy lifestyle habits. Employers, while not ultimately responsible for our individual health, can do a better job to support our good health versus sabotage it. Below is a simple checklist to help you determine how healthful your workplace is. The more items checked off, the more health supportive the company is:Vending machines offering junk food containing large amounts of sugar, refined carbohydrates, trans fatty acids, and sodium are nowhere to be found. Whole fresh fruits and vegetables (organic when possible), whole grain breads and bag Most Messages are Not Healthy This is not new, but what we should be concerned with is the types of messages our kids are getting. About half of the ads that kids see are for food but only 3% push healthy foods. However, it's this next statistic that blew my mind. According to the Pediatrics report, there are more beer and hard liquor ads in youth-oriented magazines than there are in adult magazines! This is according to a Washington Post article from September 24th, 2002. Tobacco companies also spent about $217 million in teen magazines in 2000 and the report cites evidence that they have developed specific advertising campaigns for kids as young as 13. The campaigns aren't limited to junk food, alcohol and tobacco. Prescription drug companies spend twice as much on marketing as they spend on research and development and promote the message that there is a pill for everything. A survey of doctors concluded that 92% of patients request an advertised drug. The top 10 drug companies in the Fortune 500 now make more money than the remaining 490 companies combined. Studies show that kids under 8 years old are unable to distinguish between advertising and factual messages. In fact, the FTC realized back in the 70's that marketing to kids under 6 was unfair and deceptive but decided it would be too hard to enforce a ban. However, many European countries have succeeded in doing just that. Pediatricians are now calling for tighter regulations on advertisers in the U.S., as well. The Invasion of the School System Can you protect your kids by limiting their exposure to TV, internet and magazines at home? Well, somewhat. Pediatricians recommend limiting ‘screen time' to less than 2 hours per day. But kids are getting plenty of exposure at school as well. The report cites advertisements on school busses and book covers, and in school gyms and bathrooms. More than 200 school districts have signed exclusive contracts with soft-drink companies. There are also more than 4500 Pizza Huts and 3000 Taco Bells in school cafeterias across the country. Furthermore, Channel One, now shown in 25% of middle and high schools, contains 10 minutes of current events program MLM Code of Ethics % push healthy foods. However, it's this next statistic that blew my mind. According to the Pediatrics report, there are more beer and hard liquor ads in youth-oriented magazines than there are in adult magazines! This is according to a Washington Post article from September 24th, 2002. Tobacco companies also spent about $217 million in teen magazines in 2000 and the report cites evidence that they have developed specific advertising campaigns for kids as young as 13.Despite the fact that the MLM business model has the potential to provide enormous benefits across many areas: financial, economic, social, educational and philosophical, it has largely failed to live up to it promise. In our view this is because in many cases the commission structure itself promotes greed and stupidity, there has been too much involvement by people with criminal intent, there has been an enormous lack of real business expertise, and there has been totally insufficient debate on principles and ethics. In seeking to play some part in redressing this situation, the fo The campaigns aren't limited to junk food, alcohol and tobacco. Prescription drug companies spend twice as much on marketing as they spend on research and development and promote the message that there is a pill for everything. A survey of doctors concluded that 92% of patients request an advertised drug. The top 10 drug companies in the Fortune 500 now make more money than the remaining 490 companies combined. Studies show that kids under 8 years old are unable to distinguish between advertising and factual messages. In fact, the FTC realized back in the 70's that marketing to kids under 6 was unfair and deceptive but decided it would be too hard to enforce a ban. However, many European countries have succeeded in doing just that. Pediatricians are now calling for tighter regulations on advertisers in the U.S., as well. The Invasion of the School System Can you protect your kids by limiting their exposure to TV, internet and magazines at home? Well, somewhat. Pediatricians recommend limiting ‘screen time' to less than 2 hours per day. But kids are getting plenty of exposure at school as well. The report cites advertisements on school busses and book covers, and in school gyms and bathrooms. More than 200 school districts have signed exclusive contracts with soft-drink companies. There are also more than 4500 Pizza Huts and 3000 Taco Bells in school cafeterias across the country. Furthermore, Channel One, now shown in 25% of middle and high schools, contains 10 minutes of current events program The Telecommuting Tightrope at there is a pill for everything. A survey of doctors concluded that 92% of patients request an advertised drug. The top 10 drug companies in the Fortune 500 now make more money than the remaining 490 companies combined.For many of us, telecommuting seems like the ideal situation. You wake up, shuffle over to your home office, work at your own pace. You take a break when it suits you, you end your day when you're ready to. You can rearrange your work schedule to fit around your personal life.Or can you?What motivates most people to seek telecommuting is the need for a balance between work and play. Ironically, it's often this desire for balance that leads people to the realization that telecommuting is not for them.Take Meg Rottman. Now the President of her own Public Relations company, < Studies show that kids under 8 years old are unable to distinguish between advertising and factual messages. In fact, the FTC realized back in the 70's that marketing to kids under 6 was unfair and deceptive but decided it would be too hard to enforce a ban. However, many European countries have succeeded in doing just that. Pediatricians are now calling for tighter regulations on advertisers in the U.S., as well. The Invasion of the School System Can you protect your kids by limiting their exposure to TV, internet and magazines at home? Well, somewhat. Pediatricians recommend limiting ‘screen time' to less than 2 hours per day. But kids are getting plenty of exposure at school as well. The report cites advertisements on school busses and book covers, and in school gyms and bathrooms. More than 200 school districts have signed exclusive contracts with soft-drink companies. There are also more than 4500 Pizza Huts and 3000 Taco Bells in school cafeterias across the country. Furthermore, Channel One, now shown in 25% of middle and high schools, contains 10 minutes of current events program Finding it Difficult to Get That First Job? Try Volunteering School SystemIf you haven't found a job since graduating or are trying to get back into the job market, the recent gap in your CV or r?sum? could be holding you back. Or perhaps you simply haven’t got the experience you need for the post you really want.Feels like Catch 22? You can’t get a job because you haven’t got enough experience and you can’t get the experience without a job.One possible way out of this dilemma is volunteering, which will enable you to get both valuable experience and a reference. Whilst it may be difficult to consider working for nothing, there are plenty of advantages Can you protect your kids by limiting their exposure to TV, internet and magazines at home? Well, somewhat. Pediatricians recommend limiting ‘screen time' to less than 2 hours per day. But kids are getting plenty of exposure at school as well. The report cites advertisements on school busses and book covers, and in school gyms and bathrooms. More than 200 school districts have signed exclusive contracts with soft-drink companies. There are also more than 4500 Pizza Huts and 3000 Taco Bells in school cafeterias across the country. Furthermore, Channel One, now shown in 25% of middle and high schools, contains 10 minutes of current events programming and 2 minutes of commercials and generates an estimate profit of $100 million annually. Do you Know what your Kids are Seeing? It is estimated that we receive as many advertisements in a single day as our grandparents did in an entire year. Everyone is battling for mind-share. Some of the messages are good and are trying to help you with your health, finances, and relationships and generally improve your lifestyle. Others are just trying to get your cash in exchange for some immediate gratification product. As adults, we have the ability to develop filters to weed out some of the trash. But kids don't have this power yet. Try to spend a day in the life of your kids and see what they are being exposed to. Sit down and watch one of their favorite shows, look through one of their magazines, visit their favorite websites, stroll through the hallways of their school. Pay attention to the ads they are seeing. You may automatically filter these out but they do not. What can you do? First, becoming aware of the messages your kids are getting is a huge step. You can talk to them about the difference between advertising messages and educational information. But the best way to instill positive messages in your kids is to be a good role model for healthy lifestyle practices. What they see and hear from you will carry much more weight than what they see on TV. Copyright (c) 2006 The Brain Code LLC
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