Wednesday, October 1, 2014

How do you know you find right career ?

Warren Buffett claims that he tap-dances to work every day. And why not? In 2013 alone, he made $12.7 billion. That’s $1.5 million per hour – even while sleeping. Clearly, Buffett picked the right career – not just for himself, but also for those lucky enough to have picked up a few shares of Berkshire Hathaway.
My father bred new strains of onions, carrots and cucumbers as a professor and research scientist. Having grown up as a farm boy, he was in heaven, developing high-beta-carotene carrots in a quest to keep 500,000 kids per year in developing countries from nutritional blindness. He believed he had the greatest job in the world and would never have traded careers with Warren Buffett.
Cecile Pelous was an executive in the fashion industry nearly 30 years ago, working with the grand couturiers in Paris, when she sent a letter to Mother Theresa. “Can you use me?” she asked. Mother Theresa wrote a one-word response, “Come!” Cecile sold her house to start an orphanage in Nepal. Before long, she had legally adopted 79 kids and was raising and educating a hundred more from the streets to help them lead productive lives. Cecile wouldn’t trade places with Buffett either.
Whatever you’ve picked as a career, I hope it makes you want to tap dance – at least a few times in your work life. When you look back and survey where you’ve been, look ahead to the distant shore, or consider the people who have rowed alongside you, take an occasional pause to click your heels.
Few of us know what career is in store for us when we take our first job. But here are some signs that you've increased the odds for a spontaneous outbreak of tap dancing:
1. You've found something you can be really good at. I recall taking up piano lessons at the same time as another young hopeful would-be musician. It wasn’t long, though, before she was in “John Thompson Book Three,” while I remained stuck in “Book Two.” Had I stayed with piano, I’d have been as miserable as those on the receiving end of my performances. My fellow student, however, went on to delight others with her gift as she became a professional musician. Thankfully, I merged into her audience – to the benefit of all. There’s no sense in fighting Mother Nature on the career front if you ever hope to tap dance.
2. You like the nuts and bolts of the job. Pick something where you don’t have to fake it to make it. When I watch natural extroverts gather energy from social situations, I recognize they have something I don’t. Whereas Bill Clinton comes alive and is energized by others, being on stage for too long drains my energy. I can finally host events without anxiety, even enjoying the occasional party – but I’m always happiest to retreat into a book or a private conversation with a friend. This means that as much as I love policy issues, governance and leadership, a career in elected politics would have undone me.
3. The job lifts you. For those doing what they were meant to do, the normal irritants of the job become a kind of “atmospheric dust” that creates the foundation for beautiful sunsets. Every career has its dust, but you might be in the wrong one if that’s all you see. If you find yourself grousing, fussing and fomenting, give yourself – and the rest of us – a break. In your torrent of objections and cautions, you’ll never build a great career – and you might just keep others from achieving their dreams. No career is perfect, but the right one for you will be filled with many uplifting sunsets.
4. You're in the thick of things. Life in the backseat or on the periphery of the action rarely makes for a great career. Naturally, there are lots of great support roles on the edge of every industry, but if you’re determined to leave a mark, it generally pays off to operate at the center. If you love accounting, work for an accounting firm. If you're fascinated by the law, get into the judicial system. If you’re an engineer, build cool new stuff. If you love finance, work for a bank or an investment house. Build the motor, buy the brake pads.
5. You're in an industry that fits your personality type. Engineers are not like real estate developers, who in turn don’t think like fashion mavens, who are wired differently from lawyers and accountants. We all have psychometric preferences – ones that tend to make us more or less like those in various industries. While this alone shouldn’t determine what you choose (as there are many roles on every winning team), make sure you understand your dominant traits and those of industry leaders. Then get on a field with those playing the same sport as you.
6. You like the other people in your field. My best-ever career (and investment) decisions have come from genuinely liking and admiring people I’m working with. Grappling with the discomfort of interpersonal contretemps is never productive. It saps everyone and it ensures suboptimal performance. Also, it can take down a career faster than anything else. If you can handle snakes, you’ll be OK getting into the viper pit; but if not, pick another industry.
7. You've found an inspiring mentor. Having someone to look up to is a key to finding a meaningful career. Your mentor doesn’t need to be your file leader – or even in your industry. But if you would have a great career, find a mentor… then become one yourself.
8. You look forward to Mondays. Don’t let your week become what Thoreau called a life of “quiet desperation,” awaiting the weekends for rejuvenation. But this also doesn’t mean you should be a workaholic. There is an emotional chasm between being a workaholic and loving work. Workaholics are driven by fear; joyful workers are motivated by passion. They both work hard, but it’s not the same. So find passion. Eschew fear. I can still hear Trammell Crow say, “Work is more fun than fun” – and mean it. And Confucius said, “Choose a job you love, and you will never have to work a day in your life.” This is the essence of having found a great career – one that grows out of passion, that merges work, life, family and friends into a whole with few bright-line boundaries. This sort of “career” is a Friday-less and Monday-less one.
9. You learn, grow, become, test, try. As Oliver Wendall Holmes wrote, “Alas for those that never sing, but die with all their music in them.” Great careers test us, try us, stretch us. We find out if we can hit the high notes and we learn to recover from the low ones. But those who have figured out how to have a great career – and not just a great job – don’t die with their music in them.
10. You're proud of what you do. Once when climbing a mountain with a successful entertainment industry executive, I apologized for what I was doing in my life at that point – particularly as I compared it with his fame and fortune. He carefully chose a moment to pull me out of the earshot of others to say: “Don’t ever be ashamed of what you’re doing with your life. Life is not a competition. Unless you self limit, you can make a greater difference in the lives of the young people you work with than I’ll make in a hundred lifetimes working with the world’s celebrities.” Finding the gold amid the dross of my present situation became the key to an important renewal. And it started by feeling proud of what I was doing.
If you're planning out your future, you're not likely to be satisfied with a series of jobs that merely keeps food on the table. Instead, turn your progression of jobs and assignments into a career that creates relationships, promotes learning, and makes a difference – all of which will send you tap-dancing to the office.

Monday, September 29, 2014

Answer question

What is the reason for the decision to make a job or career change at this time?
it's several things like age ,education, experience,personality,haelth and other
How do you set goals and hold yourself accountable?
earn more business work hard customer relationship and  finish my project with responsibility make a group resolution and achievement my goal to be success in this field
Are you comfortable with a commission only pay structure?
if it's work for me the batter job I will do it
       Explain any rapid moves or gaps in your employment.
it's worst art in life when not find job that I had experience with machine operator and group leader job is very few in this state. so I decide to change career
How did you hear about this opportunity? (i.e. Referral, Google, LinkedIn, etc.)
visit Hendricks valkwagon for car maintenance and discuss with manager


 What have you done in the past to prepare yourself for success?
I was food manager in my store and next year I double the business with increase grocery and whatever customer need and inventory goal and tracking
What does customer service mean to you? Please provide us with a specific example of a time when you provided excellent customer service in the workplace.
customer satisfaction, what ever customer needed and whatever they like or not like concern and customer happiness and dealing with customer with polite and make my goal to get customer purchase productsame is above

cover latter send for sales person job

Hello sir
I use to work with customer service related in past few year and now I decide to change career I love to do sales person type job in my past life I work so hard and I got a bad vision and eye glasses because my age looking for forward to do batter job in different type of work like this job.
industrial and manufacture and salesperson and customer service type of work done in past. looking for batter advantage and opportunity and I know how to do salesperson job because I thing I am batter then new person who's just finish school or college and they do their job then what ever I do my job is different with my skill and knowledge. Attraction and personality work best in this career.
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online application done -after next message.

Thanks for joining our Talent Network, hemal

Wednesday, September 10, 2014

send message to production company

my name is hemal shah
hindsightATL
 

hemal shah acting resume

                                               Hemal shah
                                          10519 pickerel lane
                                          charlotte NC 28213
                                           704-906-9640 Cell
                                         704-547-8379 Home
ACTRA/AEA/AEA Eligible/AFTRA/AFTRA Eligible/SAG/SAG Eligible/SEG/UBCP Apprentice/UDA/UDA Eligible

Height: 5'8
Weight: 150 lbs
Hair:Black
Eyes:Black
Skin:brown
Shirt:16
Waist:34
Suite:42R
Chest:38
Hips:37
Inseam:25
Shoes:8 & 1/2
 Feature Film: one church (2014 shooting process release in february2015)
Tara Ram PamPam
(Feature)
India 2002
Lead - Side Hero pz network
Preity Zinta

Theater:
Ma Te ma (Drama)
Archy 1987
Lead - comedian man Vijay kumar
Vijay shah
Other:
Krishna Birthday: Charlotte Hindu Temple 08/14/2011
School Volunteer Stage Drama  (1976 To 1982 )
Stage drama: Charlotte community
Charlotte Hindu Temple
List of commercials available on Request.

Training:
John Casablanca's Modeling And Acting School
charlotte, NC
Graduate (10-04-2012) 
johncasablancas
Runway:
John Casablancas
Dance:
Disco, Indian, English, Mexican/Hat Dance, Rumba, Salsa, Samba, Spanish.
Sports:
Badminton, Baseball, Basketball, Body Building, Bowling, Cricket, Cycling, Football, Golf, Karate, Karate, Racing – Auto, Running, Skydiving, Soccer, Tennis, Volleyball, Weight Lifting, Yoga.
Singing:
Country, Musical, Reggae.
Instruments:
Bells, Drums – Cymbals, Flute, Piano, Saxophone, Violin.
Languages:
English, Hindi, Gujarati,Urdu.spanish
Accents: British - standard, French, German, Indian, Italian, U.S. regional - Boston, U.S. regional - New York, U.S. regional - Southern, U.S. regional
Voice:
Bass, Mezzo Soprano, Soprano.
Other:
Foreign Language Song & Voice, Hindi Actor Star
 Voice, Hindi Language Song & Voice, Love, Romance

Job application user name and password

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family dollar

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hcareer.com
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hendrickautomallconcord
reference email hemalshhausa
load browse document and answer question with log on
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monster.com
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pass=XXXXXXX2
snangjob.com
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pass=XXXXXXXX
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