Sunday, May 31, 2020
How To Make The Presentation Of Your Life!
How To Make The Presentation Of Your Life! My 27th Pluralsight course was published last night: Presenting to the Boss(es). This is a course designed to help you prepare for, perform, and follow-up on, the most important presentation of your life. This might be a presentation where you are pitching something to a prospect, informing your board of directors, showing your product to your product manager, demoing concepts on stage in front of a huge audience, or simply asking for a raise. The outcome of your presentation could be that your career takes off, accelerates, that your project gets more funding, or that you buy your team more time and resources to get the project finished. Or, if the presentation goes poorly, you might get fired, all of your team loses their jobs, the company dies, you lose customers, you miss market opportunities, etc. This is The Performance Of Your Life. And this course helps you know how to do a great job before, during and after. The three modules are: Preparing for an Outstanding Presentation (42 minutes) Optimizing the Presentation (52 minutes) Debriefing and Follow-up After the Presentation (30 minutes) You can get free access to this course by following these instructions: not only will you be watching this course within a couple of minutes, but youâll also earn another seven day upgrade: Pluralsight 30 day pass and free JibberJobber upgrade instructions If you watch this, or any, course, please rank it (unless you didnât like it :p) and leave a comment! How To Make The Presentation Of Your Life! My 27th Pluralsight course was published last night: Presenting to the Boss(es). This is a course designed to help you prepare for, perform, and follow-up on, the most important presentation of your life. This might be a presentation where you are pitching something to a prospect, informing your board of directors, showing your product to your product manager, demoing concepts on stage in front of a huge audience, or simply asking for a raise. The outcome of your presentation could be that your career takes off, accelerates, that your project gets more funding, or that you buy your team more time and resources to get the project finished. Or, if the presentation goes poorly, you might get fired, all of your team loses their jobs, the company dies, you lose customers, you miss market opportunities, etc. This is The Performance Of Your Life. And this course helps you know how to do a great job before, during and after. The three modules are: Preparing for an Outstanding Presentation (42 minutes) Optimizing the Presentation (52 minutes) Debriefing and Follow-up After the Presentation (30 minutes) You can get free access to this course by following these instructions: not only will you be watching this course within a couple of minutes, but youâll also earn another seven day upgrade: Pluralsight 30 day pass and free JibberJobber upgrade instructions If you watch this, or any, course, please rank it (unless you didnât like it :p) and leave a comment!
Wednesday, May 27, 2020
Can Remote Resume Writing Jobs Help You?
Can Remote Resume Writing Jobs Help You?Nowadays, many people who are looking for career advancement have turned to the internet in order to find online resume writing jobs. The internet is a great source of a high quality resume writing job. In order to land one, you should learn what is required by a good online resume writing job.When looking for a good job, all you have to do is contact a well established company. You should start off by searching for a company that has lots of job openings and pays a decent rate. For starters, check out the company's website and see if there are any requirements or certifications for the job. Also check out the company's website in order to get the required certification.After you have identified the company that you want to get a job with, get hold of their local and international jobs listing and email them your resume. The best thing about getting a remote employment is that you can apply to numerous companies for remote work. You can easily get a variety of jobs in a short period of time.Before submitting your resume, make sure you have filled out all the fields so that the employer can recognize your information. Make sure that you include the right information on your resume such as your name, contact number, date of birth, current address, contact number, and other relevant information.You should try to be concise when creating your resume as this will help your prospective employer understand your abilities and provide more information on your skills. Your resume must present your skills clearly and easily so that your prospective employer can identify you as an applicant.Once you have submitted your resume to a number of companies, make sure you keep adding to it as you learn valuable tips from them. You can even get free advice on how to write a good resume from the companies you work with.One of the most common mistakes made by most people is to not proofread their resume before sending it out. This means that t he first draft was incorrect because you have not reviewed it yet. Once you have your resume edited and read, make sure that you make any corrections.As you can see, there are a lot of benefits to be gained from working from home including the ability to work when you choose and earning good things for yourself. However, it is important that you do your homework before you get started. With the correct research, you can take full advantage of your newfound freedom and become an entrepreneur.
Sunday, May 24, 2020
Personal Brands Stick It - Personal Branding Blog - Stand Out In Your Career
Personal Brands Stick It - Personal Branding Blog - Stand Out In Your Career If you were a bumper sticker, what would you say for all the world to see, as we drive by you stuck on a fender? Would you tell us to give peace a chance? Would you tell us youâre a fan of mixed martial arts? Would you boast your kid made honor roll? Would you boast your kid beat up a kid on honor roll? During my first week in training at The Coca-Cola Company, I got a mega dose of what big brands know best, and pass on to the people who represent them. Seven words or less Memorable brand messages are brief, bold and brilliant. Seven words or less pretty much covers everything they want us to remember. Volvo = safety. Disneyland= happy. Coke: the pause that refreshes (and a litany of other vitality-oriented slogans). We are connected to these brands and the values they embody â" the qualities of an ideal life they promise comes with purchase. Like the toy in Cracker Jack or the mood ring in Lucky Charms, a brand personality may feel as real as something we hold in our hands. Thatâs why we welcome brands into our lives. And, why we proudly wear their insignias and logos. We believe that joy, security, freedom, peace of mind, creativity or success comes with the product â" or whatever desirable state of mind we canât get on our own. Personal brands: how do you know how we feel about you? If you blog, and we like your personal brand: we happily subscribe to your missives. We hit âshare,â sending out your message like we are sending a gift via email. Actions provide feedback We look for you as we duck in and out of our Facebook page. We throw a glance at Tweetdeck zillions of times a day, and hope you pop up with something pithy that we might retweet. If you put in a subject line that is meaningful, we are motivated to open your email. As personal brands, perhaps attached to bigger brands, we are both consumers and promoters. Unless mass-marketed brands, personal brands donât act like there is a one-way mirror. We rely on the porous relationship we have with our audiences. The audiences we compete for are besieged with communication clutter, and at the same time are besotted with messages that are crisp, clear, and relentless. Are you successful in the trafficking of messages? The world is driving by you all the time. Consider whatâs sticking about you. Author: Nance Rosen is the author of Speak Up! Succeed, and an expert on business communication who teaches at UCLA Extension, and speaks all around the world to audiences on social media and career trends. Nance is a former marketing executive at The Coca-Cola Company and currently is CEO of NanceSpeaks and executive publisher at PegasusMediaWorld. She has appeared on CNBC and regularly contributes to media outlets including the New York Times, ABC, CBS radio, Investors Business Daily, MediaPost and the San Francisco Chronicle.
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