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Atricle Dump - 10 Ways to Protect Your Online Persona
Is Hard-Hitting Advertising Effective? your qualifications, professional affiliations, and accomplishments.Many years ago I attended a seminar about advertising. The guest speaker was a well-known advertising copywriter from Chicago. He quoted his favorite ad. "WANTED, WATCHDOG.ONE THAT BITES."That just about sums up my feelings about advertising. I simply am not switched on to hard-hitting advertising which is full of exaggerations, half-truths and the like. It takes much mo Polishing Your E-mail Personality: 6. Use an appropriate e-mail address. If you just can't part with your "babygrrl0101" moniker, create a separate e-mail account using your first and/or last name for all professional correspondence. 7. Use attachments sparingly. Crashing a potential employer's computer with a giant attachment will not bode well fo Don't Forget Conference Folders Resume? Check. References? Check. A positive online persona? What?!Is your business holding a customer business meeting, seminar, or trade show in the near future? If so, it may be wise to consider promotional conference folders to not only keep the agenda and informational papers together, but as a business gift giveaway.These promotional gifts have several benefits: First, they can range from inexpensive to quite handsome, depending If you haven't thought about the role your Web activity and e-mail personality play in your hiring potential, it's time to give it some consideration. Because in our current tech-savvy culture, employers can learn all they need to know about you before you even get an interview. Here are some tips on successfully managing your online persona, and boosting your hiring potential. Regulating Your Recreational Web Activity: 1. Don't use your real name. Whether you're blogging, sharing photos, or posting on message boards, it's important to use shorter names or nicknames. Your potential boss does not need to stumble onto your online gripes about your current job or photos of your latest pub crawl. Keep your personal information personal. 2. Make use of privacy settings. Many social networking sites offer settings that allow you to keep your site private and control viewing and posting privileges. That way, if you post some edgy content, you can make sure it reaches its intended recipients -- and no one else. 3. Watch what you share about current or former jobs. When you were hired, there's a good chance that you signed a confidentiality agreement restricting your communication of information acquired on the job. When in doubt, don't post it. 4. Google your name. You might be famous for something you weren't even aware of. If anything questionable arises, contact the site and try to get it removed. 5. Use your Web activity to your advantage. Instead of fretting over what employers might discover about you, play a proactive role in creating your own online persona. Boost your hiring potential by building a site to market yourself, highlighting your qualifications, professional affiliations, and accomplishments. Polishing Your E-mail Personality: 6. Use an appropriate e-mail address. If you just can't part with your "babygrrl0101" moniker, create a separate e-mail account using your first and/or last name for all professional correspondence. 7. Use attachments sparingly. Crashing a potential employer's computer with a giant attachment will not bode well for Finding Air Transport ing potential.There are a variety of options open to you for air transport. You will find that these options are very versatile in several ways. They all use the principals of flying but they also allow for some of the most amazing types of air transport out there. Getting around has never been grander and more and more people are taking advantage of flying in various air transport mechan Regulating Your Recreational Web Activity: 1. Don't use your real name. Whether you're blogging, sharing photos, or posting on message boards, it's important to use shorter names or nicknames. Your potential boss does not need to stumble onto your online gripes about your current job or photos of your latest pub crawl. Keep your personal information personal. 2. Make use of privacy settings. Many social networking sites offer settings that allow you to keep your site private and control viewing and posting privileges. That way, if you post some edgy content, you can make sure it reaches its intended recipients -- and no one else. 3. Watch what you share about current or former jobs. When you were hired, there's a good chance that you signed a confidentiality agreement restricting your communication of information acquired on the job. When in doubt, don't post it. 4. Google your name. You might be famous for something you weren't even aware of. If anything questionable arises, contact the site and try to get it removed. 5. Use your Web activity to your advantage. Instead of fretting over what employers might discover about you, play a proactive role in creating your own online persona. Boost your hiring potential by building a site to market yourself, highlighting your qualifications, professional affiliations, and accomplishments. Polishing Your E-mail Personality: 6. Use an appropriate e-mail address. If you just can't part with your "babygrrl0101" moniker, create a separate e-mail account using your first and/or last name for all professional correspondence. 7. Use attachments sparingly. Crashing a potential employer's computer with a giant attachment will not bode well fo Getting the Job You Love - Easy Steps! al networking sites offer settings that allow you to keep your site private and control viewing and posting privileges. That way, if you post some edgy content, you can make sure it reaches its intended recipients -- and no one else.If you are stuck at a job or a career that you hate, you can find a job you love, with some work and effort.Many people in the world have jobs that they hate and they often see no way out of it. So, they often fail to put their best efforts forward and they only dream about what could be.There are things each and every one can do. With focus and real effort, it's 3. Watch what you share about current or former jobs. When you were hired, there's a good chance that you signed a confidentiality agreement restricting your communication of information acquired on the job. When in doubt, don't post it. 4. Google your name. You might be famous for something you weren't even aware of. If anything questionable arises, contact the site and try to get it removed. 5. Use your Web activity to your advantage. Instead of fretting over what employers might discover about you, play a proactive role in creating your own online persona. Boost your hiring potential by building a site to market yourself, highlighting your qualifications, professional affiliations, and accomplishments. Polishing Your E-mail Personality: 6. Use an appropriate e-mail address. If you just can't part with your "babygrrl0101" moniker, create a separate e-mail account using your first and/or last name for all professional correspondence. 7. Use attachments sparingly. Crashing a potential employer's computer with a giant attachment will not bode well fo Navi Mumbai - SEZ in doubt, don't post it.Pick up any national or international newspaper, all have one thing in common that is, Navi Mumbai – SEZ. Yes, this has become the latest focus of conversation not only in India but also in majority of the Asian countries. Special Economic Zone or popularly known as SEZ is planned to be set up in India’s most advanced and populace state Maharashtra. And Navi Mumbai (or New Bomb 4. Google your name. You might be famous for something you weren't even aware of. If anything questionable arises, contact the site and try to get it removed. 5. Use your Web activity to your advantage. Instead of fretting over what employers might discover about you, play a proactive role in creating your own online persona. Boost your hiring potential by building a site to market yourself, highlighting your qualifications, professional affiliations, and accomplishments. Polishing Your E-mail Personality: 6. Use an appropriate e-mail address. If you just can't part with your "babygrrl0101" moniker, create a separate e-mail account using your first and/or last name for all professional correspondence. 7. Use attachments sparingly. Crashing a potential employer's computer with a giant attachment will not bode well fo Lamination of Signs your qualifications, professional affiliations, and accomplishments.I suspect that everyone has an idea of what lamination is even if you have only seen it in passing. Restaurant menus are a common example. A plastic finish is placed over the menu to protect it from food and stains. But did you know that you can laminate just about anything that is flat? If it needs to be protected and reused, it is something to consider for lamination. Th Polishing Your E-mail Personality: 6. Use an appropriate e-mail address. If you just can't part with your "babygrrl0101" moniker, create a separate e-mail account using your first and/or last name for all professional correspondence. 7. Use attachments sparingly. Crashing a potential employer's computer with a giant attachment will not bode well for your hiring potential. Test any necessary attachments on friends or family members before sending them to the hiring powers-that-be. 8. Don't flaunt your IM acronym vocabulary. You may feel cool because you know that FMTYEWTK stands for "far more than you ever wanted to know," but an employer won't be impressed. Write in complete sentences, don't use all lowercase or all caps, and utilize a formal, professional tone to maintain a positive online persona. 9. Don't forget to spell-check. It's a simple step, but it can make the difference between a positive first impression and a trip to the cyber trash bin. 10. Remember to be yourself -- the best, cleanest version of yourself, that is!
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