A real world practical guide to dramatically increase your wages, as told by an average working stiff who quit four jobs in five years and tripled his pay!
The proven, step-by-step approach to strategically changing jobs and exponentially improving your salary and career.
The rules have changed. Mergers, acquisitions, downsizing, re-engineering, outsourcing, massive layoffs, and the global economy have reshaped the job market. It's no longer enough to work year after year for incremental pay raises in exchange for job security. Employers today are driven by the bottom line; by and large, company loyalty and commitment have gone the way of the dinosaurs.
To get ahead in today's world you have to manage your career like your finances, by constantly planning ahead for your next job. Quit Your Job Often and Get Big Raises shows you how to get ahead--and dramatically increase your salary--by changing jobs frequently and leveraging your current position for something better. It shows you why you should do it, when to do it, and how to do it.
You'll discover:
How to identify the industries with strong future growth
Why the ability to market yourself is crucial--and how to do it
When you should begin looking for your next job
How to hit the ground running when you do change jobs
And much, much more!
Die Inhaltsangabe kann sich auf eine andere Ausgabe dieses Titels beziehen.
Gordon Miller, founder of QYJOGROUP, a Denver-based career-coaching organization, is a veteran in sales management in the computer services and office products industries. Applying the strategies he outlines in this book, he quit his job four times in five years, each time improving his salary, and ultimately tripling his income.
A real world practical guide to dramatically increase your wages, as told by an average working stiff who quit four jobs in five years and tripled his pay!
The proven, step-by-step approach to strategically changing jobs and exponentially improving your salary and career.
The rules have changed. Mergers, acquisitions, downsizing, re-engineering, outsourcing, massive layoffs, and the global economy have reshaped the job market. It's no longer enough to work year after year for incremental pay raises in exchange for job security. Employers today are driven by the bottom line; by and large, company loyalty and commitment have gone the way of the dinosaurs.
To get ahead in today's world you have to manage your career like your finances, by constantly planning ahead for your next job. Quit Your Job Often and Get Big Raises shows you how to get ahead--and dramatically increase your salary--by changing jobs frequently and leveraging your current position for something better. It shows you why you should do it, when to do it, and how to do it.
You'll discover:
How to identify the industries with strong future growth
Why the ability to market yourself is crucial--and how to do it
When you should begin looking for your next job
How to hit the ground running when you do change jobs
And much, much more!
practical guide to dramatically increase your wages, as told by an average working stiff who quit four jobs in five years and tripled his pay!
The proven, step-by-step approach to strategically changing jobs and exponentially improving your salary and career.
The rules have changed. Mergers, acquisitions, downsizing, re-engineering, outsourcing, massive layoffs, and the global economy have reshaped the job market. It's no longer enough to work year after year for incremental pay raises in exchange for job security. Employers today are driven by the bottom line; by and large, company loyalty and commitment have gone the way of the dinosaurs.
To get ahead in today's world you have to manage your career like your finances, by constantly planning ahead for your next job. Quit Your Job Often and Get Big Raises shows you how to get ahead--and dramatically increase your salary--by changing jobs frequently and lev
The Rules Have Changed: Or How to Make Lemonade When They Hand You Lemons
On July 13, 1997, two days after I quit my fourth job in five years, the most interesting thing happened. I got three job offers and a 30 percent pay increase.
Why, you ask?
Simple . . . The Rules Have Changed.
There are several reasons for the changes: the globalization of the economy (over 50 percent of Hewlett-Packard's income is now derived from overseas markets--and they are only one of many), mergers and acquisitions, new advances in technology and the concept of outsourcing noncore functions. The entire business economy has changed. The old ways may no longer be effective. Companies are changing strategies in order to stay competitive. They are realizing that they must not only be willing to change but be willing to change quickly in response to new technologies, to new business and manufacturing demands. At one time business drove the market; today it's the other way around. Twenty-five years ago it was a different story.
In the fifties and sixties, long-term manufacturing and business planning was a viable activity. And in those days long-term meant years. (I mean, how much difference was there between a 1951 and a 1961 toaster?) Now, long-term is more likely measured in months, sometimes weeks. Technology dictates a fundamental change in attitude and outlook. The feeling that everything is going a lot faster is not an illusion.
To Market, to Market, to Market We Go . . .
And you'd better hurry, because if you don't . . . Well, need we say more? The corporate landscape is littered with the abandoned dreams of businesses that were not in a position to be flexible and responsive. Workers, too. Faster than anyone could have imagined, 286's became 386's, which became 486's, which seemingly overnight turned into Pentiums and Workstations and Lans and Wans and God knows what else. What's next? State-of-the-art is what's in the morning mail. And that's each morning's mail. As in e-mail.
The Old Model says that Workers are faithful, loyal, trustworthy and true; they toil long and hard and get small annual raises, work at least five years before a Promotion comes along, at least another five before an actual Position is available. From there, it's ten years' minimum to a Desk and a tie and a small plastic placard with your name on it. GORDON MILLER. You've arrived. At last. But if the process was slow, at least it was usually reliable. Usually . . . Your loyalty was to some extent returned. (That was in the days before the Merger and Acquisition Monster was born. Such a cute baby. How could we have known?) Of course, as you know by now, that kind of loyalty is a thing of the past. It is dead. D-e-a-d. Why? Because it's no longer good business. Companies have to change quickly or they won't be in business very long . . . Goodbye, Mr. and Mrs. Worker. You're not the Mr. and Mrs. Worker we need for this project. See ya . . .
Oh, companies still talk about loyalty. They have Human Resources Departments, Employee Assistance Programs, and they will tell you that loyalty is important, but the truth is you'll be down-sized right out the door so fast you'll get a nosebleed when and if the company decides that you no longer fit into their plans. The paradigm (now there's a nice Harvard word) has changed. Congratulations, you're now a casualty of re-engineering. No Purple Heart--just a plain old Pink Slip.
Some twenty years ago yours truly entered the Wonderful World of Business. Remember now, I'm just your basic, no-frills, small-town Iowa guy with the olde tyme work ethic. Some schooling. Nothing special. But eager. And do I ever want to make good. Wanna be a Team Player . . . Nose to the grindstone. Idleness is the devil's workshop. A penny saved is a penny earned . . . You know. Stuff I learned from my father, the guy who put a lot into a system that he believed in, lived poor in retirement and died broke. The irony of it is that he still believed in the system when he died. How's that for brainwashing?
The horror stories are almost endless. Nearly everyone of my father's generation has one to tell. First, the Medical Retiree Plan somehow disappears. Poof, like magic. Medicare won't cover all the prescriptions, and then there is Alzheimer's . . . Too expensive, and you old guys are sick too often . . . I know we promised, but we can't do it anymore. So sue me . . . Then perhaps the Acquisition and Merger Monster strikes and the Pension Plan, your carefully nurtured nest egg for the Golden Years (remember those?), also does an el foldo and you have Lost Out. You are now a statistic. A thorough investigation is under way. Indictments may be handed down at any moment . . . In the meantime, we're sorry to inform you that . . . you're . . . screwed . . . Do we suspect foul play here, Watson? We certainly do, but there's nothing we can do about it.
So those of us who are relying on the old conventions to pull us through are in for some surprises. There's no place to run and no place to hide in the present business climate. Time to face the music: Old strategies may not work. Old career paths may not be successful. It's good business for companies to get you to be loyal, though it may not be such good business for you personally. Ask any of the 70,000 men and women at IBM who lost their jobs in the nineties. Loyal to Big Blue? Sure were. How about the thousands of folks at AT&T who were laid off? And just to rub a little salt in the wounds, a recent CEO at AT&T was cashiered after less than a year on the job and received one of those Golden Parachutes to the tune of $30,000,000! That's thirty million for those of us who are confused by all the zeroes.
Might have been able to salvage a few jobs at that price. But since the people voting on the severance package are other managers hoping for similar treatment, it's expected that the coffers will be opened for one of their fallen comrades.
And to put it in very recent terms, here's an account of some notable job layoff announcements during 1998:
Amoco: 6,000
Boeing: 28,000
Compaq: 17,000
Intel: 3,000
Motorola: 15,000
Fruit of the Loom: 5,000
(So who needs all that underwear anyway?)
And who benefits from loyalty if it's a one-way street? You're absolutely right--the Company. See? You're already beginning to learn. (I knew you were smart when you bought the book.) The Company mantra is Be grateful, be grateful. After all, you do have a job. You know how many people don't? Have jobs? Thousands, pal. Maybe millions. Think about it.
A good friend of mine worked for a large software company for years--one of the top salespeople in the country. Top five. Along comes the dreaded Acquisition and Merger Monster, sprinkles a little New Policy dust around after the merger, and my friend gets an offer that works out to one half his usual commission plan . . . After all, you do have a job. You know how many people don't? Thousands, pal. Maybe millions . . . Then there are the poor starving children in Africa, but we don't need to get into that right now.
Outsourcing is another reason that The Rules Have Changed. Forbes magazine informs us that . . . By the year 2002, seventy-five percent of the information technology within corporate America will be outsourced . . . Companies don't want to build an infrastructure, don't want to add overhead, because costs will go up, pricing will have to go up, and they'll no longer be competitive. Remember how it was in sports during the so-called Golden Age? Mickey Mantle and Whitey Ford with the Yankees? Duke Snider with the Dodgers? (So Duke finished with the Giants. Big deal.) One-team guys. That's how business was.
Now, businesses (and sports...
„Über diesen Titel“ kann sich auf eine andere Ausgabe dieses Titels beziehen.
Anbieter: ThriftBooks-Atlanta, AUSTELL, GA, USA
Paperback. Zustand: As New. No Jacket. Pages are clean and are not marred by notes or folds of any kind. ~ ThriftBooks: Read More, Spend Less. Artikel-Nr. G0385495935I2N00
Anzahl: 1 verfügbar
Anbieter: World of Books (was SecondSale), Montgomery, IL, USA
Zustand: Good. Item in good condition. Textbooks may not include supplemental items i.e. CDs, access codes etc. Artikel-Nr. 00102741258
Anzahl: 1 verfügbar
Anbieter: World of Books (was SecondSale), Montgomery, IL, USA
Zustand: Very Good. Item in very good condition! Textbooks may not include supplemental items i.e. CDs, access codes etc. Artikel-Nr. 00099534271
Anzahl: 1 verfügbar
Anbieter: Robinson Street Books, IOBA, Binghamton, NY, USA
Paperback. Zustand: Very Good. Prompt Shipment, shipped in Boxes, Tracking PROVIDEDVery good. Few creases. *. Artikel-Nr. ware81kr5090
Anzahl: 1 verfügbar
Anbieter: Robinson Street Books, IOBA, Binghamton, NY, USA
Paperback. Zustand: Used: Very good. Prompt Shipment, shipped in Boxes, Tracking PROVIDEDBusiness & Managementgood or better copy, may contain creasing, may contain minimal underlining, call or email for more information. Artikel-Nr. Ware736jlw013
Anzahl: 1 verfügbar
Anbieter: Revaluation Books, Exeter, Vereinigtes Königreich
Paperback. Zustand: Brand New. 108 pages. 8.25x5.75x0.50 inches. In Stock. Artikel-Nr. x-0385495935
Anzahl: 2 verfügbar
Anbieter: Ria Christie Collections, Uxbridge, Vereinigtes Königreich
Zustand: New. In. Artikel-Nr. ria9780385495936_new
Anzahl: Mehr als 20 verfügbar