How to Prepare for a Job Interview

How to Prepare for a Job Interview

After months and months of looking for that perfect job, a company finally calls you, asking you to come for an interview. What are job interviews? Why do so many people stress over them? And why do companies ask for a job interview?

Like a person wanting to know another, especially a potential companion or friend, companies seek out potential applicants—those who prove to have the skills, the patience, and the discipline to take on the job—and ask them to come over for a personal conversation. Although it is not possible to get to know a person very well in just one day, or perhaps even in just less than an hour, it is still good to interview an applicant, if only to see how he or she handles a conversation.

Yet job interviews are not simply for the employer’s benefit. An applicant can also turn it into his or her advantage, in that it can be seen as an opportunity to show the employer one’s strengths. A good first impression will do wonders to one’s application.

You might wonder, ‘what is an applicant’s best weapon?’ True enough, you have to be at your best, physically; you need to dress properly, maybe add a touch of make-up, pay attention to the small details, but your best bet will still be knowledge. Knowledge not only about the super job you are applying for, but also some basic knowledge about job interviews in general. Being prepared physically is one thing; arming yourself with basic knowledge about what to expect in job interviews might be your key to getting that position you’ve dreamt about.

Super Job For You gives information on how to get a job and how to hire good people. If you are looking for Cast Parts Jobs look at this website. This Castings Blog will give you more information you can use for manufacturing.

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Stay Ahead of Recession

The first major sign of trouble on the horizon is poor cash flow. Either the business owner doesn’t have and execute a marketing strategy that works (more on that in a bit) or it is because the people who owe the business owner do not pay their bills on time. Everyone, it seems, is trying to hang onto someone else’s money for some strange reason. One business owner confided to me that a large organization he did business with paid him more than 90 days after he sent the invoice in for approval and payment. In the meantime, he had to pay all of the bills for his company and his family.

The sense of urgency at the large company, apparently, was non-existent. The individuals who open the mail, process the invoices and cut checks aren’t concerned with the “problems” of the small business providing the products and services to their organization. Why should they? An employee of a large company gets a paycheck week in and week out, along with vacations, paid sick days, paid holidays and a lot of fringe benefits. Since they don’t work for a small business, it is unlikely they have ever had to deal with cash flow issues.

The business owner, on the other hand, lives and dies by the daily balance in their company checkbook. That figure determines whether or not they can hire more people, add inventory and improve the selection of goods and services, upgrade their offices and equipment, and serve their customers and clients better.

The Santa Clarita Valley (where I have now lived for 18 years) is home to nearly 11,000 businesses, and the vast majority of them are small. I am not going to recite the numbers, but there is a very good chance that if you are reading this, one of your neighbors is employed by a small business located in your town. You can help that neighbor, you can help your neighborhood, and you can help your city and every one who lives there by simply paying the bills that you owe to small businesses on time. If you can’t pay, then don’t ignore the bill—call the business and make some type of arrangement to take care of the obligation you have created.

If by chance you are someone in a large organization who does business with small organizations, and you have anything at all to do with the check processing system, please take the time this next week to see what can be done to reduce the time it takes to get a check cut to the businesses that provide services and products to your organization. Remember that your neighbor, the small business owner, doesn’t get a paycheck each and every time payroll is cut. They get what is leftover, after everyone else gets paid. In other words, they get paid when the check from your organization arrives in their mailbox. That vital difference may mean keeping the doors open and people on the payroll.

Another small business storm cloud that seems to be crop up as regularly as a summer thunderstorm over the San Gabriels is lack of a marketing strategy. For the life of me, I cannot understand how a business owner can run a business by sitting down and waiting for customers or clients to “find them.” Then analogy would be similar to trying to find a specific sentence on specific page on a specific web site on the Internet, only without a search engine. Yes, you could do it, but it would take a long while. In the meantime, the business will go out of business, the facility covered in dust and cobwebs.

If your business is not where you want it to be in the greatest of all economies, then something is wrong—very wrong—with how you do business. Your marketing, or lack of it, may be the culprit.

Marketing isn’t a science, and it isn’t an art. It’s a blend of both. It is also a set of skills that can and must be learned if one is to have a business that is successful. Learning can be painful but it is also definitely profitable (see last week’s column).

One can learn marketing by reading. There are thousands of books on the subject, and many of them are available for free at your local public library. Start reading today—the library is open on Sundays! While you are there, pick up a video tape on any number of subjects related to getting and keeping customers: sales, marketing, customer service, and so on. You can also pick up audio tapes to listen to when you drive, or during slow times during the business day.

Brian Tracy is a great author with many wonderful books to choose from. His books have been converted into tapes and CDs so there is no excuse not to read or listen. Harvey Mckay has authored many books on the process of gaining and keeping customers. Jay Conrad Levinson has written a series of books on “Guerrilla Marketing” which are inexpensive and timeless in the information that is provided. If you can’t put to use something from these three authors, then you should close up your business and get a job working for someone else!

The one way out of a period of poor cash flow and slow sales is to generate more revenue, from better customers and clients. There are going to be periods of rough weather and turbulence in every business and life. How you choose to deal with those times will determine your ultimate business success. Will you turn on the radar and scan the horizon to avoid bad weather, or will you fly into it without knowing the duration or intensity of the storm? Only you can decide.

Super Jobs For You gives information on how to get a job and how to hire good people. If you are looking for a Die Casting Job look at this website. This Die Casting Blog will give you more information you can use for manufacturing.

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Business Marketing Effort

It would be nice to believe that every organization is a proponent of continuous marketing (which means marketing in both strong and slowing economies), but not everyone has done so.

Many of the organizations that did not market when times were good are now suffering. Others that should know better are becoming nervous as the bad news of the economy is reported and so these firms are cutting back on marketing and other expenditures.

When times are good, and business is plentiful, businesses are often so busy they do not have time to market. They are busy taking care of current client demands and as a result they did not take the time to look into the future. They might be aware of trends in their own industry and often hear or read about the macro economy but fail to make the connection between the two and how it might affect them.

Marketing, particularly in a slow economy, has to move to the top on the list of company priorities. In a good economy is should also be a high priority.

Marketing is an investment in the future of the organization. Firms that cut their marketing expenses at the first sign of economic trouble live in the short-term.

While it always makes good sense to manage expenses, cutting for the sake of cutting without a rationale other than just reducing expenses is foolish.

The problem with most business leaders is that they want the “quick fix” to turn things around.

There is no magic pill to take and no shots the doctor, however talented, can give a company to make marketing work.

Marketing takes time. Because it takes time, getting started and staying with it is essential. The results of efforts and expenditures today may not yield fruit for months, perhaps even years. The sales cycle from the first, positive impression the organization makes until the sale is completed could be a lot longer than desired.

Everyone wants results tomorrow but it rarely works that way.

One of the critical differences between the mindsets of “marketing as an investment” versus “marketing as an expense” is that organizations who take the long-term view intend to be around for the next twenty years.

Those taking short-term view see marketing as something that they must do, almost with a sigh of “If I have to…” With a foundation of regret, what will the results be?

Proactive marketing forces companies to see what is happening in their own industry, and take notice of the technological, governmental, environmental, cultural and political environment that could affect them.

Website Marketing BtSEO

In periods of rapid expansion, most companies can throw up new products and services and not worry about the downside. In a slowing economy, the opposite is true. A slowing economy allows every company the opportunity to take a step back and determine where limited resources will be spent. This is the opposite of random cutting and slashing of advertising, creative and promotional spending.

By taking time to analyze the business and the external environment, a company can seek the answers to these questions:

What items produce the most revenue?

Which clients are more valuable than the rest?

What is the strongest competitive advantage?

What products and clients are the most profitable?

What geographic markets make sense to expand into and which should be exited?

What market segments should continue to be invested into and which should be put on hold or exited?

Google Web Site Marketing

Once these questions are answered, strategies can be developed to exploit the opportunities that have been thoughtfully considered.

All of this helps to provide the company with additional focus and better direction to navigate through difficult times.

Conventional wisdom would state that when the economy slows down, companies should cut back on spending and “hunker down” to ride it out. Market leaders don’t think that way.

Starbucks has and will continue to raise prices and at the same time, regain focus to further increase sales and profits during this slowdown. The company is focusing on increasing per store unit sales through elimination of unprofitable items, adding new items to their core offering (beverages) and increasing training of employees. The firm has also reduced previously announced expansion plans.

Even before this, Starbucks has enjoyed a higher per ticket order than all other “quick serve” restaurants and this renewed focus will increase the differential. All this is taking place while the price of coffee and other items purchased by Starbucks are increasing.

Regardless of the size of the business or the size of the budgets, your clients, now more than ever, need to know that your company is alive, well and ready to do business.

If they don’t hear from you, you can bet that they will be hearing from your competitors who aren’t hunkering down but are ramping up.

Super Job For You gives information on how to get a job and how to hire good people. If you are looking for Cast Parts Jobs look at this website. This Castings Blog will give you more information you can use for manufacturing.

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Why People Avoid Probate

Why People Avoid Probate. Probate court was set up for very noble reasons — it aims to protect the interest of a deceased person’s surviving family members by validating the authenticity of his last will and testament. People, however, have taken to avoiding the probate process for three major and very valid reasons: money, time and privacy.

On the issue of money, take not that probate costs a considerable amount in court costs and attorney’s fee. In Valencia, California alone, a person could lose 4-8% of the value of his estate in probate. The second deciding factor — time — also shows a large discrepancy when comparing the probate process to the distribution of a person’s assets through other means. Probate usually takes several months and sometimes even a year or more. On the other hand, there are ways of settling one’s estate that only takes a few weeks to complete. Finally, people take privacy into consideration. Probate is a public process, which means that probate documents are readily accessible to the general public. Most individuals want to keep their financial transactions to themselves.

Because of these concerns, many have learned to appreciate the value of setting up a living trust. While this move does not allow them to avoid all estate taxes, it costs much less then probate in the long run. And because it is a private transaction, it falls outside the control of probate; hence, a trustee can execute the stipulations of the trust without having to report to probate court. Although this process is more financial rather than legal in nature, it is still advisable to consult a lawyer before and during the process of setting up your trust.

Mortensen Law
Tax, Trust & Estate Attorneys, P.C.
24300 Town Center Drive Suite 390
Valencia, CA 91355

(661) 799-8035
(661) 799-8838 fax

Super Jobs Information gives information on how to get a job and how to hire good people. If you are looking for Aluminum Castings Jobs look at this website. This SEO Information will give you more information you can use for Search Engine Optimization.

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