Finding job these days have come a long way.
Gone are the period where people use to buy newspaper to look for one in the classified section.
Now, all you need is your smartphone with internet connection to find your dream job, even abroad.
Below are the list of job websites to help you attain your goal.
http://www.stjobs.sg
http://hk.jobsdb.com
https://www.careerengine.org/
http://www.bayt.com
https://www.odesk.com
http://www.st701.com/
http://jobscentral.com.sg/jsloginform.php
http://jobsdb.com.sg/
http://jobstreet.com/
http://www.dbs.com/careers
http://www.gmprecruit.com
http://www.capitagrp.com/jobs/
http://www.singaporejobsonline.com/
http://singapore.job-q.com/
http://www.rbs.jobs
www.streetdirectory.com
http://jobz.sg/
https://careers.deloitte.com/singapore/
http://careers.bloomberg.com/apps/hire
https://execboardinasia.com/
http://www.stengg.com
Showing posts with label Career. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Career. Show all posts
Tuesday, February 14, 2017
Monday, February 13, 2017
10 Heartwarming Illustrations That Make You Want to Fall in Love Again...
Okay, its Valentines Day, and of course seems everyone is feeling in love, couples are sweet to each other and single are expecting to meet their someone. Here are some illustrations that we'll all want to fall in love again and again....
Saturday, January 28, 2017
Looking for a Job? Be Part of Convergys Family!
We are urgently hiring so higher chances of getting hired and to start immediately.
Newbies, Fresh Grads and Undergrads are also welcome to apply!
Qualification
-At least 2 years in college
-Highschool graduates with atleast 6 months call center experience handling international account
-Average English skills
LOCATIONS / SITES:
ALABANG::
Block 44, North Bridgeway, Northgate Cyberzone, Fillinvest, Corporate City, Alabang, Muntinlupa.
BACOLOD:
One San Parq, San Antonio Park Square,
Mandalagan, Bacolod City.
BAGUIO:
Building No A, Baguio-AyalaLand TechnoHub, John Hay Special Economic Zone, Baguio City
CEBU:
9th, 11th & 12th Flr, i2 Building, Jose Ma. del Mar Avenue, Cebu IT Park, Lahug, Cebu City
CLARK:
SM City Clark, Manuel A. Roxas Hwy, Clark Freeport, Angeles, 2009 Pampanga
DAVAO:
J.P. Laurel Ave, Poblacion District, Davao City, Davao del Sur
LAGUNA:
976 Lucero Street, Santa Rosa City, Laguna
MAKATI:
6796 Ayala Ave. cor. Salcedo St., Legaspi Village, Makati City
MALL OF ASIA:
9F to 10F Tower B, Two eCom Center SM iCity2, Mall of Asia Complex Pasay City
MANDALUYONG/ SM MEGAMALL:
8 flr, Building C SM Mega Mall, EDSA Corner Julia Vargas Avenue, Ortigas Center, Mandaluyong.
MANILA:
North Road, Santa Cruz, Manila
QUEZON CITY:
Delta Building UP Ayala Land Technohub; 1121 Quezon City
QUEZON CITY:
SM North EDSA Annex, 6th floor 1105, SM City North SM City North EDSA Annex 1 Tunnel, Quezon City
Thursday, January 26, 2017
Office Etiquette or Office Manners
Office Etiquette or Office Manners is about
conducting yourself respectfully and courteously in the office or
workplace.
The essence of good manners and etiquette is to be respectful and courteous at all times and with everybody.
Therefore, treat your co-workers, cleaners, maintenance people and others with respect and courtesy.
If your boss criticizes your work, inquire about what precisely is wrong with it. Consider the comments, discuss them amiably if you disagree with the comments but defer to the bosses opinion if he/she is adamant.
Make new employees feel welcome and comfortable around you. Don't be a busybody.
Office etiquette means being thoughtful when interacting with your peers.
Keep your work area tidy. Try not to be messy.
Show consideration for other people’s feelings.
If there is conflict, do not get personal in your remarks.
It is extremely rude to arrive late for a meeting.
It is ruder still to not attend at all. Having a good excuse does not exonerate you.
Do not dominate the meeting. All communication must take place through the chairperson.
Do not interrupt another speaker.
Pay attention to the proceedings quietly. Don’t shuffle your papers.
Do not leave the meeting until the chairperson closes it.
Never be petty or small minded in your behaviors.
Always be particularly respectful to those older than yourself even if they are junior to you in position.
Your elders are generally more mature in judgement and life’s experiences and this deserves your respect even in the workplace.
- First impressions are important! You are the ambassador/s of the business.
- Always act with honesty and dignity.
- Chewing gum and popping bubble gum in the presence of co-workers is neither cool nor dignified. Never do it whilst attending customers.
- Wear appropriate office attire, for example correct footwear, not thongs (flip flops) - they are strictly casual or beachwear.
- No exposed midriff to display tattoos and body piercing.
- Be neat, clean and as conservative as the business requires you to be .
- Smelly people put us off. So, be sure to shower regularly and use a suitable deodorant.
- Do not cough or sneeze in anyone's direction. Use a tissue, if possible, to contain the germs and then say, "Excuse me”.
The essence of good manners and etiquette is to be respectful and courteous at all times and with everybody.
Therefore, treat your co-workers, cleaners, maintenance people and others with respect and courtesy.
- Keep your interruptions of others to a minimum and always apologize if your intrusion is an interruption of a discussion, someone’s concentration or other activity.
- Show respect for each other’s workspace. Knock before entering.
- Show appreciation for the slightest courtesies extended to you.
- Be helpful and co-operative with each other.
- Brush up on your computer skills so that you can help others.
- Aim to improve your other workplace skills and attributes too.
- Speak clearly without shouting. Loud people are a vexation.
- Say, “Please; Thank you; you’re welcome”, as part of your everyday courtesy.
- Be discreet and compassionate in your criticism of a co-worker.
- Don’t gossip about any co-worker’s private life.
- Do not try to sell things to your colleagues.
- Don’t hover around while waiting for a co-worker to get off the phone. Leave a note for them to call you or return later.
- It’s not a good idea to take your iPod to your office. It hinders communication.
- Avoid sexist comments about a co-worker’s dress or appearance.
- Take responsibility for your mistakes, apologize and go about correcting the mistakes.
- Apologize if you are clearly in the wrong. If in doubt, apologize anyway. It’s no big deal.
- Never blame someone else if it is your mistake.
If your boss criticizes your work, inquire about what precisely is wrong with it. Consider the comments, discuss them amiably if you disagree with the comments but defer to the bosses opinion if he/she is adamant.
Make new employees feel welcome and comfortable around you. Don't be a busybody.
Office etiquette means being thoughtful when interacting with your peers.
Keep your work area tidy. Try not to be messy.
Show consideration for other people’s feelings.
If there is conflict, do not get personal in your remarks.
It is extremely rude to arrive late for a meeting.
It is ruder still to not attend at all. Having a good excuse does not exonerate you.
Do not dominate the meeting. All communication must take place through the chairperson.
Do not interrupt another speaker.
Pay attention to the proceedings quietly. Don’t shuffle your papers.
Do not leave the meeting until the chairperson closes it.
Never be petty or small minded in your behaviors.
Always be particularly respectful to those older than yourself even if they are junior to you in position.
Your elders are generally more mature in judgement and life’s experiences and this deserves your respect even in the workplace.
Sunday, May 29, 2016
Saturday, March 26, 2016
Wednesday, April 22, 2015
Internet Freedom, Free VPN Software for Everyone
Gets you where you want to go...
Censored by your country, corporation, or campus?
After dealing with repressive regimes around the world, this software are uniquely suited to help you get to the content you want, whenever and wherever you want it.
Trust, Speed, Simplicity:
Since 2008, Psiphon has helped millions of people in freedom-restricted countries around the world safely access censored knowledge and ideas. Now Psiphon can do the same for you.
...and gets you there safely.
Want to surf securely when using public WiFi?
Free internet is nice, but stolen cookies and accounts are not.
Psiphon gives you a safe path to the Internet, no matter what network you're using to connect.
Click here to visit and download the application....
Compatible to following Operating System:
Censored by your country, corporation, or campus?
After dealing with repressive regimes around the world, this software are uniquely suited to help you get to the content you want, whenever and wherever you want it.
Trust, Speed, Simplicity:
Since 2008, Psiphon has helped millions of people in freedom-restricted countries around the world safely access censored knowledge and ideas. Now Psiphon can do the same for you.
...and gets you there safely.
Want to surf securely when using public WiFi?
Free internet is nice, but stolen cookies and accounts are not.
Psiphon gives you a safe path to the Internet, no matter what network you're using to connect.
Click here to visit and download the application....
Compatible to following Operating System:
Friday, May 16, 2014
5 Job Interview Tips to Make Interviewers Love You
by Michael Cadiz
Most
job seekers don't look forward to attending job interviews. The sweaty
palms, the tentative smile, the butterflies in the stomach-----these are just some of the not-so-pleasant feelings often associated when stepping inside the interview room. Thankfully, there are ways for you to make interviewers fall in love with you without going through the Jennifer Hudson route. Read the rest of the article to find out how: |
1. Build a solid first impression
Yes,
first impressions do matter and building a strong, solid foundation as
soon as
you meet your interviewer will make it easier for them to love
you. Start with a
confident handshake and follow it up with a genuine
smile. This will show the
interviewer that you are happy to see them
face to face and look forward
to an engaging job interview. Mind your
manners during the interview:
sit up straight, meet the interviewer's
eyes while talking and turn off your phone
during the session.
|
2. Deal with your nervousness but don't dwell on it
It's
okay to be nervous, what's not okay is dwelling on it so much that it
hampers
your ability to be in the moment. Most interviewers are aware
that job interviews
can get nerve-wracking and they won't hold it
against you. What you should do
then is to breathe slowly, calm your
nerves, and focus.
Do
your research prior to the interview schedule so you can answer each
and
every question the interviewer throws your way. If you are confident
about
how much you know about the company, the job position, and the
person or the
people interviewing you, you can divert your attention
from being nervous to
deciding how you can best answer each question.
Now, if you get asked a
question you don't know the answer, calm down,
pause, and rephrase the
question back to the interviewer to confirm your
understanding. This will
give you enough time to quickly pick your mind
for a suitable reply .
|
3. Be a good storyteller
Storytelling
is a great way to get interviewers to like you, provided you know
exactly how to do it. It serves its purpose well when you're able talk
about
your most memorable accomplishments, biggest challenges, the ways
you
deal with conflict, and how you recover from a stumble to the
interviewer
without sounding rehearsed.
The
ability to tell a good story will allow you to relate real-life
experiences in
answering interview questions, most especially
situational ones. The next
time you have an interview coming, prepare a
list of standard and situational
questions and think of a story you can
use to answer them. Start by
stating the problem (the interview
question), describe how you solved the
problem, and end it by sharing
the outcome with the interviewer. Continue
adding more stories to your
personal library and you will have more
than enough to answer whatever
questions the interviewer can think of.
|
4. Listen, learn, and react accordingly
The
biggest pet peeve of most interviewers is when they have to repeat
every question because the applicant is not listening attentively. The
moment you step inside the interview room, leave everything except
your
wits out. Focus your attention on the interviewer, so listen, pay
attention,
and react accordingly. For example, when the interviewer
cracks a joke,
smile. When he or she talks about the weather, reply.
This indicates
active listening and communicates your focus and
attention.
Learn
to read non-verbal cues so you can react to body gestures
accordingly-----
eyebrow tilting, lip curling, head-scratching-----they
all mean something and
the ability to read them correctly will give you
the advantage you need to
hopefully land the job offer.
|
5. Make the interviewer feel important
Nothing
can make interviewers love you more than by making them feel
important
and this means never forgetting the interviewer's name and position.
Take note of that information and use that to help you draft questions
you
can ask him/her at the end of the interview. Just before the end of
the session,
you will probably be asked if you have questions and this
is the perfect
opportunity to use what you learned about the
interviewer. Let's say your
interviewer asks you if you have any
questions, you may say something
along the lines of, "You mentioned that you're the HR Manager, could
you give me an idea of what the company culture is like?"
|
Make
sure you sound genuinely interested when asking the question and
be
ready to listen to the interviewer talk about himself/herself for a
while.
When you manage to get them to do so, you have succeeded in
making
them feel important. There is nothing wrong in satisfying the
interviewer's
ego and when you do, they will love you and definitely
remember you.
|
5 Job Search Mistakes and How To Fix Them
Most of us have probably experienced a point in our job search when it seems like it’s going nowhere.
Regardless of the time and effort you’ve invested in your search, you still feel like nothing has paid off. Especially if your search is taking longer than you anticipated, you’re probably wondering where you went wrong.
After the recession, the average length of time it took an individual to secure a job doubled from five weeks to 10 weeks. This is worrisome for many job seekers because this time can definitely cost you in other aspects of your life, such as a lack of steady income.
If you’ve found your job search to take longer than you anticipated, there’s a chance you’re making some mistakes holding you back from landing a job. To help you find more clarity in your search, here are some solutions to turn it around for the best:
Mistake #1: You aren’t prepared for your search
When you lack a strategy for your job search, it’s easy to feel like you’re wandering aimlessly through job boards and postings. Every job seeker needs to have a goal followed up with a plan. If you find yourself randomly applying for jobs and not following up with each application, then you’re lacking the preparation you need for a successful search.Solution: Create a strategy.
The key to turning around your job search is beginning with the end in mind. Ask yourself where you want to be in the next six months, upcoming year, and even five years from now. Once you have an idea of where you want to be in the future, search for opportunities that will help you accomplish those goals.
As you begin applying for jobs, staying organized is essential. You can start by creating bookmark folders and a spreadsheet to keep track of jobs you’ve applied for and ones you’d like to apply for. You should also begin building a list of contacts who can help you during your search, too. This way, you’ll know exactly who to contact when trying to network your way into a position.
Mistake #2: You don’t have examples of your work readily on hand
The majority employers will expect you to show them what you’ve accomplished as you apply for jobs and attend interviews. If you don’t have copies of your best work conveniently located, it could definitely set you back during your search.Solution: Create a folder on your desktop for your portfolio.
A good way to keep all of your work organized is to create a designated desktop folder for your portfolio. This way you can easily locate samples of your work when you apply for jobs online or an employer requests one. It’s not uncommon to find ourselves sifting through our hard drives to find our best work. By keeping everything centrally located, you’ll be more efficient when applying for jobs.
Mistake #3: You attend networking events in groups
Although networking events and job fairs are great opportunities to make connections, they can also be counterproductive. A common problem job seekers run into is attending these events in groups. When this happens, you end up doing less networking than you would if you went by yourself because you tend to gravitate towards the people you arrived with.Solution: Go solo or schedule private meetings with employers.
As scary as it may sound, consider going to a networking event by yourself. This will force you to step outside of your comfort zone to talk with employers and make connections.
Another option is to set up informational interviews with employers. If you’re feeling intimidated by attending a large networking event by yourself, meeting an employer at their office or for coffee can be a much more comfortable setting for conversation.
Mistake #4: Not taking responsibility for your search
It’s easy to blame outside factors such as the economy or employers for your unsuccessful job search. However, when you have this attitude, you’re actually setting yourself up for failure. Many job seekers don’t take responsibility for their job search because they easily feel discouraged when things don’t go right. This is probably one of the largest setbacks you can create for yourself during your search.Solution: Be proactive.
Instead of wallowing in your failures or fears, you need to turn that energy into a positive attitude. For example, if you’ve received interviews but haven’t had any job offers, consider following up with the interviewer to find out where you went wrong. This feedback will help you learn where you need to improve for your next interview.
Mistake #5: Being self-absorbed in your job search
As you attend networking events, job fairs, or interviews, it’s easy to become self-absorbed. There’s a lot of pressure as a job seeker to sell yourself to employers, however, it’s possible to sell yourself a little too much.Job seekers who are self-absorbed are individuals who only talk about themselves or don’t answer the right questions during interviews. Sure, employers want to learn what you have to offer, but on the same note, they also want to hear your interest in your company.
Solution: Step back and evaluate your situation.
Job seekers finding themselves focused too much on selling their skills to employers should step away from their search and evaluate their progress. It’s important to take an objective look at your search because it can help you find the roadblocks you’ve been creating for yourself.
Start your evaluation by making a list of the positive and negative things you find yourself doing with your search. For example, let’s say you have a flawless resume and cover letter which has landed you numerous interviews. However, prior to the interview you do very little research on the employer. You’ll discover that this mistake in your preparation could be holding you back from landing the job.
If you find yourself making some of these mistakes, it’s not too late to turn around your job search. Whether you’ve been on the first for two weeks or two months, searching for a job is a learning process. You’re going to discover what works best for you and what employers want. Just remember to be attentive to your search and be aware of mistakes you could be making.
Author Bio
Heather Huhman writes for Glassdoor.com.
Saturday, December 16, 2006
Finally, Here it is!
Finally, I've started a blog for the professional walk of Ralm's Journey.
Here, everything will be shared to the world in terms of what was learned, what was experienced, and what would be of help to everyone in the workplace or career.
Credits will always be given to whom it is due.
It is the bloggers deepest desire that as he walks and journey in this life, he at least contributes to someone, somebody out there.
Never quit and be the best then my friend, and let's enjoy this wonderful life!
Here, everything will be shared to the world in terms of what was learned, what was experienced, and what would be of help to everyone in the workplace or career.
Credits will always be given to whom it is due.
It is the bloggers deepest desire that as he walks and journey in this life, he at least contributes to someone, somebody out there.
Never quit and be the best then my friend, and let's enjoy this wonderful life!
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