Employment Information Guide

Employment For Foreign Dentist Section


 

Employment For Foreign DentistNavigation


|

Employment Network Plus Home Page
Partners
Tell A Friend about us
Job Hunting: Some Tips For Daily Positive Action |
Chicago Employment |
Job Hunting: Some Tips For Daily Positive Action |
Employment Law |
Employment Law |
National Work At Home Employment Center |
Chicago Employment |
Employment Opportunity |
Employment Opportunity |
Employment Law |
Virginia Employment Commission |
Chicago Employment |
Employment |
Chicago Employment |
Employment Law |

List of employment Articles

Employment For Foreign Dentist Best seller

Buy it Now!



Sitemap



Social bookmarking
You like it? Share it!
socialize it

Newsletter

Subscribe to our newsletter AND receive our exclusive Special Report on employment
Email:
First Name:



Main Employment For Foreign Dentist sponsors


 

 

Welcome to Employment Information Guide

 

Employment For Foreign Dentist Article

Thumbnail example. For a permanent link to this article, or to bookmark it for further reading, click here.


You may also listen to this article by using the following controls.

Creative Quiting-Do it Right!

from: John Groth

Quitting your job? Rules to Follow


Resigning from a job is always difficult. It’s something we all have to do at one time or another. Maybe it’s for career advancement, a better opportunity or maybe your current job is just intolerable.

In any case it’s always an opportunity, whether it’s a planned departure or resignation, it does not have to be an unpleasant experience. In fact it could be an opportunity to convey a positive message, to strengthen good work relationships and keep you in good standing with your ex-employer.

It’s been estimated that most professionals will resign from four to six jobs in their working lifetime. Here are some ideas to make the most of your goodbye.

Burning Your Bridges is a Bad Idea: Never, never, never write about how badly you were treated, how screwed up the organization is or how your boss is a jerk. Burning your bridges, may give you a few minutes of satisfaction but could lead to greater future regret.

For example, with a change in direction, what was a bad job may become a good job. Your toxic registration letter, however, will have a long life and people working at your former employer will have long memories. At the very least they will question you judgment.

What if you apply at another employer, but the hiring official lives next to your old boss. What are the odds they talk about you over the back fence? You’ll never know why you weren’t considered for the job. So, as your mother advised, if you can’t say something good say nothing. It’s always the best policy.

Stay Positive: This idea builds on the first idea. Focus on drafting your resignation by discussing the positive achievements of your time with the employer. If you have to participate in an exit interview, no matter what assurances HR tells you, find something positive to say or say nothing.

Also, be careful later completing a questionnaire mailed to your home. Recently, an HR department was exposed, although giving written assurances of anonymity, by coding the exit questionnaire which was on the back side of request letter. They apparently, just changed the middle initial of the person signing the letter, and thus knew who responded and how they answered the questions and/or added a narrative to some of the open ended questions.

Keep it Simple: You’re not writing the next “War and Peace.” Make the resignation letter simple and if possible memorable. What did you learn, and what did you value on your experience at the employer? You can never thank or congratulate enough people for what you learned or experienced in your job. When you depart on a good note, you never know when your career will need the assistance of former co-workers or managers.

Draft you Resignation Letter: Spend some time putting the resignation letter together. Keep it short but it should say exactly what you want to say. It can’t be emphasized to much-keep it positive. Don’t make it a critique of the company, your boss or co-workers.

Show Appreciation and Class: If you show respect, and your last action is remembered as a class act, you’ll have that bridge to cross should you ever need to revisit that area again.

Overall try to make the goodbye, even under difficult circumstances, a positive experience. This approach could pay big dividends to your career.


Other Employment For Foreign Dentist related Articles

Chicago Employment
Home Employment Part 2
Employment Search Part 2
Employment
Employment Law

Do you want to contribute to our site : submit your articles HERE


 

Employment For Foreign Dentist News

More Men Enter Fields Dominated by Women

As steady full-time jobs with benefits are increasingly elusive, more men are reaching for a chance at the American dream in female-dominated occupations.

Read more...


More men entering fields dominated by women

As steady full-time jobs with benefits are increasingly elusive, more men are reaching for a chance at the American dream in female-dominated occupations.

Read more...


151 OFWS in Riyadh complete 13th Tulay Project IT and computer course offered by OWWA

A May 9, 2012 press release from the Department of Foreign Affairs: One hundred fifty-one Filipinos in Riyadh graduated on May 4 from one of two computer courses offered by the Overseas Workers Welfare Administration (OWWA). The commencement exercise, which is the 13th since the project started, was held at Liwasang Bonifacio, the multipurpose court of the Philippine Embassy in Riyadh, Saudi ...

Read more...


America’s failing powerhouse

The American economy has been driven by waves of technological change and the successful adoption of ideas from elsewhere. Michael Lind, the author of "Land of Promise," tells us how it happened, and what history teaches us about the way ahead. Your latest book is a sweeping economic history of America. In a nutshell, how did America become such an economic powerhouse? Well, it did so as a ...

Read more...


The peace narrative

John Gittings, the author of "The Glorious Art of Peace," says history is usually studied and written from the perspective of war, and can look very different when viewed from the perspective of peace. Was it hard to come up with this list of five books on peace, given the shelves of material that there are on war? I could write a book list for Foyles bookshop of three or four dozen excellent ...

Read more...