SKILLS STILL THE KING

Posted by admin on July 22nd, 2009 and filed under Recruitment | No Comments »

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GLOBAL EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES ARE STILL

AVAILABLE FOR THOSE WITH THE NECESSARY SKILLS.

The recent downturn in global market will have more effects than people realize. We are already seeing evidence of Governments tightening the immigration controls and entry qualification criteria regarding residency and work permits to protect local job opportunities in a shrinking economy. Foreigners working in these countries on work permits will have difficulty renewing the temporary permits which generally operate on a one –or two- year basis.

 

We predict that countries which have a strong social system will be worst affected as nationals from these countries working abroad might have to return to their home country as a consequence. The trend will become more evident the next 12 to 18 months as the work permits affected will expire during this period

Dubai has been severely affected by the global meltdown in financial markets and an economic growth rate of only around 1.5% to 2 % is expected for 2009. As a result of the downturn in the property sector, scores of projects have been cancelled, resulting in thousands of job losses.

Until recently, many of the world’s top construction experts were working on projects in Dubai and many of these projects have been curtailed and new work cancelled. This has resulted in a steady exodus of these skills from

 

 

 

Dubai. We have not yet seen an influx of South Africans returning to South Africa. There are numerous reasons for this. For those who have emigrated with their families it is a very expensive exercise to return to South Africa, and many of these individuals may still be investigating their long-term options in other foreign markets before considering returning home. The contraction of employment opportunities in countries such as Dubai, the UK and Australia presents South African employers, industry and government with an opportunity to selectively target and encourage skilled South Africans who are able to assist with skills transfers and transformation to return to South Africa.

Good news is that while thousands of jobs have been lost worldwide, the economies of Saudi Arabia, Qatar and Abu Dhabi, are still largely intact.

Saudi Arabia expects an economic growth rate of around 5.5 % this year, Qatar a growth rate of around 5% and Abu Dhabi, an economic growth rate of around 7 %.

Unlikely Dubai, these countries have petroleum-based economies. Unlike Dubai they have also embraced Shariah compliant Finance. This results in a more cautious and regulated approach to access credit finance, which has benefited these economies and appears to have protected and isolated them for the financial meltdown in credit markets.

There is an opportunity for South Africans to find employment in these three countries. The attractive part for South Africans is that remuneration is tax free. The lifestyle is attractive: foreigners live in compounds, similar to estate living in South Africa.

Private, international schooling for children who are already on their third or fourth work permit.

Demand for SA skills is high: South Africans have always been highly sought after as employees because of their work ethic, their qualifications and their work experience.

Three or four years ago, South Africans were comparatively cheap to recruit. They are now paid on par with their European, Australian or Canadian counterparts. Saudi Arabia, Qatar and Abu Dhabi have quota systems where targets have been set in terms of how many foreigners are allowed into the country. Targets have also been set per nationality.

Of interest to South Africans is that all three countries have exceeded their quota for Indian foreigners. They are looking for white and blue collar workers. This present an opportunity for more South Africans, from different work levels, to work in these countries. In the past, only highly skilled professionals were recruited.

It is important to recognize that these countries have different approach to labour from South Africa. There are no unions in the work environment nor are there any consultative committees. On entering the country, an employee is required to surrender his passport to his employer. These are only returned at the end of his contract.

Foreign women are not generally allowed to work in Saudi Arabia, and to a lesser extent in Qatar. The latter is, however, quite prescriptive in terms of the types of work environments that women can work in. They are not comfortable with a woman working in a male dominated team. It is, however, possible to obtain work permits for women based on their technical expertise and special skills.

Despite the meltdown in global financial markets, one’s marketability in the workplace is still based on one’s skills, knowledge and expertise. It is imperative, therefore, to continue to enhance one’s skills, qualifications and experience. This will make you more marketable. It will also enable you to swim in a much bigger pond

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CLIMBING UP THE CORPORATE LADDER IN A DOWN ECONOMY – DON’T LET THE RECESSION KNOCK YOU OF COURSE

Posted by admin on July 22nd, 2009 and filed under Careers, Recruitment | No Comments »

What do you do when your well-thought out career plans come to a screeching halt due to a down turn in the economy? You rethink your strategy and remain agile.

 

The traditional hallmark of rising in the corporate world has been a steadily increasing salary, along with expanded responsibilities, promotions, and higher-ranking titles. When a company is struggling, raises are expendable, but you still have the opportunity for non-economics gains. If you take it in your stride, maintain an optimistic attitude, and assume additional duties without complaint, you will be well positioned to reap the economic benefits when the economy turns around, as it always does.

 

A sophisticated professional knows you can advance your career in numerous ways outside of income, and looks at the hard and soft markets as natural occurrences and plans accordingly. Pauses in monetary rewards don’t mean your upward career track has to be stalled; when the recession is over you will recover from the temporary economic stagnation. Here are some strategies to employ that will help you stay the course:

 

  • Pursue continuing education and certifications, and finish your degree if you don’t have one yet. Join, contribute, and assume leadership roles in industry associations. Make friends with your competitors.
  • Assume more difficult or advanced positions, and accept promotions even if there is no salary increase immediately attached to them. You should not be in the same position for more than two or three years, so don’t wait to be available to move up.
  • If you are asked to take on a larger workload or consistently more challenging projects, ask if you can have a promotion, at least by title as compensation. Or negotiate bonuses based on performance returns.
  • Reflect honestly on where you need to improve and make changes. Are you taking care of your appearance and health and keeping up with technology.
  • Maintain an open dialog with your manager. Ask what you can do to make their job easier. Take on as many high-profile projects as you can, particularly if it gives you exposure to other departmental executives.
  • If you don’t already have a mentor, establish a relationship with one now. Offer to be a mentor also; you never know who your next boss will be, and it may be someone you influenced on their way up who will remember.
  • Keep track of all your achievements and include them on your resume as you update  it periodically

 

Your career will take place over most of your adult life, so make sure you take a long-term view while remaining flexible during the inevitable short-term cycles. Think of other roadblocks in your past and the coping mechanisms that worked for you. While they caused despair at the time, now you can reflect back with hindsight and perspective, pleased that you made it through with no permanent negative con sequences. Have confidence that with dedication, perseverance and planning you will keep climbing the ladder of success

 

By: August Cohen-

 

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12 Things People Won’t Tell You When You Lose Your Job

Posted by admin on July 3rd, 2009 and filed under Employment | No Comments »

The first 30 days after a job loss will no doubt be filled with fear, anxiety and impatience.
After all, the life you were living just changed instantly. You might hear experts talk of the typical advice they give to people who have lost their jobs, advising them to update their resumes, lean on their network of contacts and even start that hobby they always wanted to try. That’s all good advice that works in theory and you should follow it. Here are some tips for getting you through some of the challenges of coping with a job loss that people won’t necessarily tell you about

1. Give yourself some real time to figure out your next step. That may mean weeks, not a few hours! Don’t feel compelled to jump right back into the work force. You will feel shock-the same way you would shock after any loss. Take sometime to deal with that. When you are ready to jump back in, keep your options open. This might be a good time to explore a new field that you’ve always wanted to try but never had time to, start a business, go back to school. Expand your horizons and don’/t limit your job search to where you live. The job you end up with may often surprise you and be different than what you set out to get.

2. The next job you take may be a transitional one. Whether it’s full or part time, embrace it. Every experience is a valuable one and you never know where it may lead. It’s OK to freelance or find part-time work to get some cash flow until you find the perfect new position. In fact, you may find that you don’t need full-time job as much as you thought you did to be happy and secure.

3. Look for companies, not jobs, and change the way you apply. Find companies with mission and values that you can get behind. Employers are much more interested in candidates who have a passion for the company than someone who is just looking for a paycheck. Remember, your resume and cover letter are not unique. With the huge number of layoffs today, there are likely to be many more people you have to compete against for a single position. You have to find new skills and new selling points in your abilities to highlight on resume and your social networking pages.

The job hunt game has changed. Your reputation and your online persona play much more of a role in getting you a new job than your resume or your cover letter ever could.
Your profiles on Facebook, MySpace and LinkedIn should be spruced up and optimized as much as possible to make you as attractive as you can be to a potential employer. And don’t forget Google-people are using it to check up on prospective candidate. Google yourself and see what comes up. You can’t really change out there, but at least be aware so if it’s brought up you can address it

4. Celebrate- maybe even take a vacation. You probably didn’t take time away while you were at your last job- use this period of adjustment to break free. It’ll give you a chance to get some perspective,. Have drinks or party and celebrate being laid off. Put a positive spin on this. Enjoy yourself. This will be one of few times in life that you’re unencumbered by work. Read. Sleep. Do all the things you never get to do…believe it or not, you’ll miss this time when it’s gone

5. Take care of your health and check in with a doctor. Use your health insurance while you still have it. I bet you haven’t been taking care of yourself or haven’t had the time. Get a full physical, go to the dentist. You ca n also explore meditation, acupuncture, or other complimentary therapies that ca n help you distress. Finding your next dream job is an endurance test and requires a lot of energy. Start eating well, do a cleanse, go to the gym- your energy and self- esteem will get a boost and this will be felt by everyone around you, including future employers.

6. Something good will come from this. (I call this The Change Guarantee). Write it down somewhere visible. In the end, this job loss is probably a good thing. Make yourself write list of a 3 things that help you see the upside from this downside. You’ll end up better off, no matter what. You may not see it now, but you’ll triumph over this job loss in ways you couldn’t imagine.

7. Don’t rehash the story, blame something or someone for the loss or explain it to everyone ad nauseam. Blame never accomplishes anything. Don’t get addicted to your story, why you got fired, how unlucky you are. It will hold you back. There is no shame or embarrassment to be had. Every successful person has lost a job at some stage-welcome to the club. Instead of feeling shame, honor this as just a life change that will make you stronger. You don’/t need to justify anything t anyone. You don’t need make excuses, or show progress to anyone but yourself. Do what you ca n, when you can.

8. Your friends and family won’t necessarily react the way you expect, when certain people in your life learn your job loss they’ll avoid you like the plague. They are so uncomfortable with prospect that they avoid speaking to you or about it. Some are jealous. Some feel sorry for you, some feel embarrassed because they still have a job, some get worried for their own jobs…it’s all about them, not you, so don’t worry! Avoid negative press and fellow unemployed people- stick around optimistic people, not victim cycles. Ask yourself, “Who are you not thinking of that ca n help you?” And, “Who is holding you back?” is there a partner or even family member that might require you to place a boundary on discussions related to work while you now go through this next phase?

9. Practical things you may think of:
• Pull all your contacts and catalogue all those loose business cards. You never know. Something may spark an idea. Send them e-mail
• Get some blank business cards made with your name, e-mail and contact information.
• There are strict deadlines for Cobra and health insurance. Make sure you’re aware of these. Too many people miss them.
• Check out unemployed benefits, regardless of you situation or salary. You never know. There are many people who are eligible who never claim useful benefits.
• Make sure Visas and work permit are all in order if applicable.
• See a financial advisor. Even if you can’t afford to keep someone or retainer, most mutual funds and banks will give you a free consultation. Free website like mint.com will help you keep track of finances as well
• Send a thank you note to your boss and colleagues that you enjoyed working with, and ask them to keep you in mind if they hear of any positions you’d be right for
• Write down what you are looking for and what your intention is. Make your list. Read it every day. Intention is a very strong force.

10. Always frame things in the positive. Say things like “I’m excited I’m back in the job market, It’s give n me a chance to really go after a job that I love, “as opposed to, I recently got fired/ lost my job

What you can control during this time of change are the words you use, question you ask yourself and the stories you tell to others people who are optimists and have positive beliefs will always get through this change better than others. Do whatever it takes to keep your outlook strong. Always reach for a better thought, even if it feels unnatural.

11. Accept this! Let go of the way life should have gone. Resisting the job loss causes more pain. Sometimes you know why you were fired, sometimes you just don’t. Don’t waste anytime figuring it out. Be mature about anything you feel may have contributed to it. See the difference between reality and illusion. (The reality is you lost your job; the illusion is you’ll never find another job.) Take a moment to go inside yourself, get silent ands listen to your intuition. Turn that inner microphone on…what do you really want to do next? Not all the answer or actions are outside of you, some are inside. Some of your best ideas will come when you slow down enough and tune in.

12. Looking for a job is now your job. It may take a lot longer to find a new job than you think it will. Many people are running out their unemployment benefits, taking six months or more to find a new job. Perseverance and patience should be your new best friends. You might have settle to settle for less. We’re in a tough economics climate and the dream job you want might not be available for the next few years. Some jobs leave the market and never come back, and you may be facing that reality. Don’t get discouraged though. You always have the potential to move up wherever you are. Remember, even in a bad economy, there are always jobs for good people. Don’t get caught up in the scarcity cycle that there are no jobs out there.

Article source:http://EzineArticles.com/?expect=Ariene_DeBonvoisin

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Do You Work For Your Company Or At Your Company?

Posted by admin on July 2nd, 2009 and filed under Employment | No Comments »

THERE IS A BIG DIFFERENCE

Most employees show up to work each day and then go home and put everything that happened at work out of their mind. They do the same five-days a week and they collect a check to pay their bills. Of course, during a recession, companies are looking to get rid of this type of labor, and keep the employees who do not merely work AT the company, but they work FOR the company, and to make sure the company retains a profit, and keep its customers happy. So, I have a question for you

Do you work FOR your company or merely AT your company? You see there is a huge difference between the two ways of looking at things and it will show in your work. Those folks which are self-employed understand this because they own the company and they have a vested interest, it is their baby. Most executives and many managers treat the company, not just as a place to work, but a conquest. No, not all managers and executives think like this; but, the great ones do.

If your are an employee that wants to move up in the company and perhaps someday become an executive you need to treat each day at work like this, treat it as if is your own company and those customers are your customers. When you do this you’ll yourself moving up the ladder and surpassing those other employees who just don’t care.

Oh sure, while they’re at work they try to do a really good job but they are staring at the clock 10 minutes before five. When five o’clock hits they are already in their car starting the engine and driving outside the parking lot. And even if they are not actually there, they are in their minds.

The choice is yours, but in a recession I must remind you, your chances of being laid off are much higher if you are one of them and not one with company. As former business owner and founder of a corporation, I ca n surely tell you which employees I would let go first when cutting costs. Those employees who only work at our company would be the first to go.

Those employees that worked for our company and for the customer are the employees we would keep to make it through the rough times. Indeed, those are the employees we always promoted and now that I am retired, those are the employees who are running the company. Please consider this

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expect= Lance_Wilson

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Preparation For An Interview

Posted by admin on July 1st, 2009 and filed under Interviews | No Comments »

Attitude

The right attitude is everything! Be: friendly, motivated, ambitious, professional and alert. Remember to smile. If you get very nervous, tell the client that you are very nervous and this will immediately make you feel more relaxed.

Presentation

First impressions count! Ask the consultant what the company would expect for each interview (informal, corporate, conservative, etc) and make sure that you are able to make the initial good impression through your appearance.

Preparation

Make sure you can answer questions such as:

  • What are your strengths?
  • What are your weaknesses?
  • Mention one or two weaknesses that you are aware of and indicate how you are attempting to remedy them.
  • What skills do you have to offer this company?
  • Are you a team player or do you prefer to work on you own?
  • What motivates you?
  • What are your short/ long-term goals?
  • How do you deal with pressure?
  • Why should our company employ you?
  • Why would you like to work for this company?

Make sure you can give examples when answering the questions to ensure that your answers are not merely what you think they want to hear.

Self knowledge

If, by the end of the interview, you are feeling that you would really like the job, make it known! Your enthusiasm and commitment must be shown.

Answering questions

If you don’t understand a question, don’t be afraid to ask the client to repeat it.
Do not only answer ‘yes’ and ‘no’! For example if you are asked whether you can handle pressure, ‘yes’ is not an appropriate answer - give examples of situations where you have handled a pressurised situation in the past.

Before you go to the interview

Find out about the company
Ask the consultant who has set up the interview.
Look the company up on the internet.

Asking questions

Remember you are there to interview them as much as they are there to interview you! This is YOUR career.
Types of questions to ask:

  • About the company
  • How long has the company been in operation?
  • What are the main products the company trades in?
  • Who are the major customers of the company?
  • Are there branches or subsidiaries in other centres?
  • How many employees are there in the company?
  • Has the company recently won any major contracts or awards?

About the position

How long has this position been in existence?
What are the promotional opportunities in the company?
What are the most important expectations of the person filing this position?
What would the client consider to be the most important skills required for the job?
What is the company culture like?
Do colleagues interact socially, at sports or in teams, etc.?

Do NOT

Be late for your appointment!
Leave your cell phone on!
Leave your pager on!
“Run down” your current employer/manager!

Types of questions

You can expect to be asked a variety of questions e.g.
1. The hypothetical question (”what if” questions)
Example: You fail to meet an important deadline. What would you do?
2. The yes-or-no question
Example: Have you prepared financial statements before?
Don’t simply answer “yes” or “no”. Give the interviewer more information.
3. The what-do-you-think-the-other-guy-thinks question
Example: What do you think your current employer will think of your leaving?
Avoid being a mind reader. Rather state that you will explain your reasons for leaving when the time comes and believe that your manager will accept that.
4. The non-question question
Example: I’ve enjoyed reading your CV, but I’m not sure you have the experience we are looking for.
Turn this into a question and ask “perhaps you could give me an example and I’ll be able to quantify my experience in that area”.
5. The A-or-B-orientated question
Example: What is more important to you: salary package or what you will learn?
Your answer should be that you’re sure they would pay a market related package and therefore the learning opportunities would be of enormous benefit to you and them.
6. The why question
Example: Why should we hire you?
Think about your qualities in the workplace and relate them. Give examples to back your answer.
7. The open-ended question
Example: So, tell me about yourself/your previous job.
Prepare for such questions in advance as far as possible by putting together a summary statement of your work experience so far, outlining positive experiences, qualities and accomplishments which are relevant to the job you are being interviewed for.

Questions you might be asked

Here are some questions that are invariably asked in some form or other at most interviews:
1. Why should we employ you?
This is a chance to show that you have done your homework and have researched the company and that you have thought about the job and what you can bring to it.
2. What do you expect us to pay you?
You could respond by saying: “I expect to be paid a market related package for my experience”. If the interviewer pushes you, quote a range, never give a single figure.
3. Why did you leave your last job/why are you prepared to leave your present job?
Mention reasons such as needing to seek new challenges and lack of growth.
4. What are your career goals?
Limit yourself to the foreseeable future. Speak about what sort of experience you would like to gain.
5. How well do you work in a group or do you prefer to work independently?

Illustrate your ability to be flexible.

Relate some of your successful experiences in working in teams, using examples from work situations.
You also need to indicate an ability to work on your own, using your own initiative.

Questions you might want to ask

Prepare them!
Examples:
If I get the job, what would be my areas of responsibility?
To whom would I report?
What scope would I have for advancement and promotion?
Why did my predecessor leave?
What are the future plans of the company?
Who are the company’s competitors?
What percentage growth has the company shown over the past five years?
What training courses does the company offer to develop its staff?
Does the company grant study leave?
In what way are achievements recognised?
Are employees allowed to work flexi-time or do they have to adhere to 9 to 5?

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