Friday, March 18

Looking for a job? It’s more likely to look for you

Kannu 

This was an interesting article. I know you are 1 - 1.5 years away from looking for a job, and you being in Oxford is pretty much guaranteed to get you a job, but good lessons to be learnt. The networks are very important, get your name out there, have a good set of people, write articles which people read, know people and collect favours :) 

Love 

Baba 



Three-quarters of American job switchers don’t find their new role, it finds them, according to a new study by the Federal Bank Reserve of San Francisco.
Rather than going through the standard search-and-apply protocol, the majority of new hires seem to find their way in through professional networks, word-of-mouth referrals or after being approached by headhunters.
Less than 25% of people in employment when they switched actively looked for jobs and even two-thirds of the unemployed relied on “informal contacts” to land their new role.
While this might be good news for people who hate trawling through job ads, it can be disheartening for those that are new the industry or don’t have a strong network of contacts.
That said, if you’re anxious to make the leap and no obvious leg-up presents itself, you still need to be looking for a job. The study found that people who actively searched were 10 times more likely to find work than those that didn’t.

Tuesday, March 15

the questions to ask every day

lovely quote on the net. I am sure the book of the dead will have more to say about this, but...

You know, the ancient Egyptians had a beautiful belief about death. When their souls got to the entrance to heaven, the guards asked two questions.  Their answers determined whether they were able to enter or not.  
‘Have you found joy in your life?’ 
‘Has your life brought joy to others?’


once you boil it down to this formulation, then life is good. And why wait for the end of your life? just think of this at the end of every day...if not, why not?