Monday, April 20, 2020
How to Use a Graphic Design Resume For Career Marketing
How to Use a Graphic Design Resume For Career MarketingA graphic design resume is a great tool for you to market yourself to potential employers. Because this type of resume focuses on the creative side of what you do, it allows you to showcase your artistic skills and talents to potential employers.One of the best things about a resume is that they are going to be printed on standard 8.5 x 11 paper so that you can showcase all of your graphic design accomplishments in one place. In fact, there are companies who have graphic design resume templates available so that you don't have to write anything yourself. They will take care of it for you. In fact, many of them can even allow you to upload pictures.Now, when it comes to this type of resume, you want to make sure that you are targeting companies that are looking for someone who is a designer. This means that it needs to show that you have experience in using graphics, such as being a graphic designer or an illustrator. By showing t hat you have experience in designing logos, product labels, advertisements, and other things, you can target a larger audience.Companies that are offering career opportunities that require the use of these types of skills, such as graphic design, can benefit from having someone like you on their team. This can help them because you can help them market their company to the rest of the world. You want to make sure that you can create a nice looking website that is effective in communicating information to the audience that they need to be exposed to.It is important to remember that the larger your business gets, the more work you will have to do to market it to other companies. The more you do to market your business, the more visibility you will have in the marketplace.If you go on to do freelance jobs, you will want to do the best job that you can so that you will stand out from the competition and get hired by some of the online companies that you are competing with. In order to d o this, you need to focus on what you do best and use a graphic design resume to show exactly what you can do.There are all kinds of other benefits to having graphic design resumes to showcase your skills. Many companies offer marketing packages that give you extra time on projects that include a lot of social media. If you want to become an authority in your field, you should consider getting a graphic design resume to help you promote yourself.
Tuesday, April 14, 2020
Tony Robbins #MeToo Comment Highlights Bad Hiring Practices
Tony Robbins #MeToo Comment Highlights Bad Hiring Practices In his now-viral comments, life coach Tony Robbins shared a problematic anecdote on how some men in positions of power are responding to the #MeToo movement with discriminatory hiring practices. âI was just with someone the other day â" very famous man, very powerful man â" who was saying how stressed he was because he interviewed three people that day,â Robbins told a packed crowd in San Jose last month in what now has become a viral and heavily criticized speech. âOne was a woman, two were men. The woman was better qualified, but she was very attractive and he knew, âI canât have her around; itâs too big of a risk,â and he hired somebody else.â âIâve had a dozen men tell me this,â he added. The purposeful dismissal of a qualified female candidate due to her looks is indicative of a larger issue in how companies and men are responding to the national conversation about sexual harassment in the workplace in this #MeToo era. Men grappling with a new attention to harassment are now pondering if they can hug or give compliments to their female colleagues, as the Associated Press reported, and, in cases like the one Robbins cited, taking it to the extreme by refusing to hire attractive women to protect themselves. Robbins said some women in the #MeToo movement were painting themselves as victims âto try to get significance and certainty by attacking or destroying someone else.â Tarana Burke, the founder of the #MeToo movement, criticized Robbins over the weekend, pointing to his hiring anecdote. âTo even repeat that story of his âfriendâ who wouldnât hire the âpretty womanâ as if itâs the MOVEMENTâs fault and not the sexist manâs fault is all you need to hear,â Burke tweeted over the weekend. âItâs deplorable.â Robbins later apologized for his remarks on Sunday, saying he is now âcommitted to being part of the solution.â A representative for Robbins declined a request for clarification from MONEY. Fundamentally, the #MeToo movement does not insinuate avoiding or stonewalling women in workplaces is the answer to issues of sexual misconduct. Hiring practices like the one Robbins cited could limit certain employees from career advancement opportunities and growth, and prevent a workplace from improving its culture, experts told MONEY on Monday. âNo one should be denied an opportunity because of an employerâs inability to control himself from harassing a new hire or the perceived risk of being hypothetically tempted,â Brande Stellings, senior vice president at Catalyst, a nonprofit organization that aims to promote women in business, said in a statement. âWhy should a woman pay the price â" in terms of missed opportunities for career advancement â" for this manâs biases?â Sarah Stoddard, a career trends expert at Glassdoor, a website that features reviews of companies and their recruitment strategies, echoed Stellings. Stoddard said determining who receives a job offer for any reason other than their qualifications is âunacceptable.â âHiring managers should focus on a candidateâs skills and ability to successfully carry out the responsibilities of the job at hand, and not on her or his physical appearance,â Stoddard wrote in an email to MONEY. Recent research from Lean In, an organization founded by Facebook COO Sheryl Sandberg dedicated to elevating women in the workplace, found that 30% of male managers âare uncomfortable working alone with a woman,â and one in six male managers hesitate in mentoring women. Men are also hesitant to travel with their younger female colleagues, according to the research conducted by Lean In and Survey Monkey earlier this year. âThis is a big problem, because it undoubtedly will decrease the opportunities women have at work,â Sandberg wrote in a Facebook post in February. âThe last thing women need right now is even more isolation. Men vastly outnumber women as managers and senior leaders, so when they avoid, ice out, or exclude women, we pay the price.â The findings prompted the organization to launch the #MentorHer initiative, encouraging male managers and employees to mentor women to better position them for leadership roles and career-advancing opportunities. âIf weâre going to change the power imbalance that enables so much sexual harassment in the first place, we need to ensure women get more mentorship and sponsorship, not less,â Sandberg said in her Facebook post. Stoddard from Glassdoor also referred to research from the organization that found company culture is the top factor for employee satisfaction, âwhich then can impact a companyâs bottom line,â she said. Creating a diverse company, Stoddard added, could help combat the issue the #MeToo movement addresses: sexual harassment and abuse. Diversity, she said, âcan act as a buffer against harassment, since it helps protect against bias and fosters a transparent, feedback-rich environment.â And now, male employees and leaders must learn to provide equal opportunity for women â" in terms of mentoring, hiring or promoting, Stellings said. âWhen leaders are expected to mentor and sponsor all talent, a man taking a woman to lunch is not seen as fodder for gossip or speculation, but an ordinary step in the process of a good leader developing a talented team member,â Stellings of Catalyst said. âItâs up to the company to weave this expectation into its culture and make it the norm.â
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