• First and foremost, be careful not to confuse new job jitters with suspicion s. Your new employer almost definitely did not tell you everything why... would he. You were not yet a member of staff so telling you anything about the business that is outside of a recruitment process would not have been shared. This is completely normal. 2ndly you are.most likely on a 3mnth probationary period, use it wisely. In as much as the company will be evaluating your fit for them, you should be evaluating their fit for you. If it doesn't feel right after a fair chance,you have every right to decline a permanent offer,or even not complete the probationary period without any complications.
    That said, dont simply dismiss your instinct because you habe no evidence of something being off. Often this is not as simple as something being inherently wrong, but a matter of an alignment or misalignment with what is truly important for you.at this stage in your career. Don't ignore that,its soul destroying.
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  • I trust my gut feeling. First, I do all my due diligence. If I have 2 alternatives, my gut feeling helps me make the final choice. When interviewing... prospects for a position, a couple of times, one candidate stood out after resume and phone interview. I invited this candidate for interview and asked him to bring a suitcase in case he decided to stay. I did hire him.
    In your case, you have not invested any time in this company yet. When you start, you may want to make an appointment and ask your questions. If the answers do not satisfy you, you may want to move on, if you can afford to. Good Luck.


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  • It's not cocky if you can back it up. It is confidence, and not unwelcomed by most results driven pros.

  • It's not cocky if you can back it up. It is confidence, and not unwelcomed by most results driven pros.

4   
  • I have been there done that. I also lost my confidence @ one point. In retrospect it was completely silly, completely in my head. I do not know you... but would guess like most people you have some very good skills and character traits. Start with the fact that you took the initiative to reach out on this web site for ideas. Being proactive is a wonderful trait. Believe in yourself and find people who believe in you.  more

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  • J M

    22h

    Sorry for your loss of your confidence. Volunteer work may be help in the rebuilding process. You will be employed and meeting and interacting with... those you encounter and allow to see yourself as employed giving and seeking. Please keep us posted. more

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1   
  • HR, mostly offers you standard practice information. The next steps in the recruitment process is majorly in the hands of the recruiting... manager/department. Should the recruiting manager delay in pushing for the next stage, for instance delay the decision making process, the HR partner involved might be left with nothing much to do. Any further call before the final decision is made will only assure you that the position you are interviewed for is still not closed. 2 months ago, I offered advice to a candidate who applied to my former employer, was tested but feedback was delayed. Today, he was excited to inform me that finally a reference check is being conducted for him, after 2 months of taking the screening test, and a month after oral interviews. Therefore, keep your fingers crossed but positive while seeking out new opportunities.
     more

  • Follow up with a thank you to the people who interviewed you, to stay in contact. It could mean many things: Some organizations take awhile in the ... interview process, and also awhile to get back to you. Meanwhile, continue your job hunt. more

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Alma Mater Homecomings: Celebrating Shared History and Enduring Bonds


As our alma maters host homecoming events, it is a time for alumni to reflect not only on the path they have traveled but also on how they present themselves within these familiar halls. While the joy of reconnecting is paramount, a subtle yet significant aspect often goes unaddressed: the art of attending without offense or ostentation.

The fundamental truth of any alumni reunion is simple: It... is a reunion, not a résumé contest. We are there to share memories, reminisce about laughter and lessons, and reflect on the experiences that shaped us. Our presence is a testament to gratitude for the foundation our schools provided, not a showcase of our accumulated net worth or professional accolades.

Adhering to basic alumni etiquette ensures a harmonious experience for all. Punctuality and active participation, whether for a solemn Mass or an engaging program, demonstrate respect for organizers, former teachers, and mentors. Following the dress code is not about appearance but unity and acknowledgment of their planning.

Warm greetings extend a powerful sense of inclusivity. During speeches, especially from jubilarians or educators, mindful attention and putting phones away show respect for and honor the speaker's contribution.

The spirit of sharing, rather than dominating, is crucial. While recounting our journeys is natural, it is important to engage others and allow quieter batchmates to share their narratives. Responsible consumption of beverages is paramount; respecting the program's flow and refraining from side conversations during awards or tributes, ensures every moment is appreciated.

Conversely, common pitfalls can unintentionally cause offense. The most pervasive is flexing job titles, possessions, or travel experiences. A casual mention of a recent European trip is understandable, but repeating it can alienate others. Alumni events are not fertile ground for sales pitches or multilevel marketing schemes. Attendees come to reminisce and reconnect, not to be solicited for business.

The microphone and dance floor, too, have their limits. Batch presentations should be concise and respectful of allotted time. Dredging up embarrassing past incidents, such as academic failures or unrequited romantic interests, can reopen old wounds and cast a pall over the reunion.

A key point is unwavering respect for teachers and staff, the architects of the memories we are celebrating. Taking time to greet them, express gratitude, and perhaps even pose for a photograph is a small act with immense sentimental value. Avoiding cliquish behavior is also vital; while it is natural to gravitate toward close friends, making an effort to mingle across different batches fosters a broader sense of belonging.

The political arena should remain outside reunion conversations. Homecoming is a time for unity and shared history, not divisive debates or arguments. In the age of social media, discretion with photos is essential. Asking permission before tagging individuals, especially in unflattering pictures, ensures everyone's comfort and privacy.

The golden rule, deeply ingrained in our Filipino culture, aptly encapsulates the ideal approach: "Walang lamangan, walang yabang, walang iwanan." This translates to celebrating success without arrogance and ensuring no one is left behind. When sharing personal achievements, framing them with gratitude is key. Instead of boasting about becoming a CEO, a more appropriate sentiment would be, "I am blessed to be where I am today, and I attribute much of that to the foundation this school and these teachers provided."

Alma mater homecomings reinforce the bonds that tie us to our past and to each other. By embracing humility, respect, and a genuine desire to connect, we can ensure these events remain vibrant celebrations of shared history and enduring community.

REGINALD B. TAMAYO,

Marikina City

For letters to the editor and contributed articles, email to [email protected]
 
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  • Two things can be true: you do get along with coworkers, and that team had a different view of “team player.” Blunt rejections often say more about... the messenger than you.

    If you want to stay where you are, you don’t have to become someone else overnight. Maybe ask a trusted colleague or manager for 1-2 specific examples. Then you’ll know if it’s real, or just that team’s bias. You’ve got options either way.
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  • When you're around people like that you never show them that you want something better for yourself never you always have to just keep a smile and... show them that you fake I'm not fake but I can show you fake but I'm really not that and like you just wait until your turn and they'll come on ask you do you want that position you know what I'm saying you got to do it that way to where you're not paying them attention only when they need the attention. more

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Tripp Skipper op-ed: Huntsville deserves a workhorse -- not a show horse


As Alabama barrels toward the May 19 Republican primary, one race in Huntsville has become a flashpoint -- not just for the district, but for what kind of Republican Party Alabama wants to be. The matchup between James Lomax and Mo Brooks isn't just a contest of résumés. It's a choice between forward motion and political déjà vu.

On one side is Lomax, a first-term state representative who didn't... waste time figuring out how Montgomery works. In just a short span, he climbed to House Majority Whip, earned the trust of his colleagues, and, more importantly, put real points on the board. His legislation isn't theoretical, it's tangible. Take House Bill 527, his proposal to let Alabama workers deduct up to $1,000 in overtime pay from their state income taxes, was recently signed into law by Governor Kay Ivey. That's not cable-news rhetoric; that's kitchen-table relief. It's the kind of nuts-and-bolts governing voters say they want but rarely see delivered.

Then there's Brooks -- a man whose political career has stretched across four decades, multiple offices, and more ballots than most voters can count. Alabama House. County Commission. Congress. A failed U.S. Senate run. And now, a return to the very chamber he left before Lomax was even born. At some point, voters are right to ask: is this about service, or is it about an attempt to stay relevant?

Because here's the uncomfortable truth, Brooks has never really left the ballot. And that raises a bigger question about identity. When someone has spent that many years running for and holding office, what happens when the office goes away? For Brooks, the answer seems clear: find another one. Anyone.

Supporters will say he brings experience. Critics will counter with something harder to ignore: despite twelve years in Congress, Brooks himself has acknowledged sponsoring and passing just one standalone bill. One. In a dozen years. That's not exactly a track record that screams legislative productivity.

And that's where the contrast sharpens.

Lomax is operating in the present -- building relationships, moving legislation, and navigating the realities of governing in a growing, economically critical region. Brooks, on the other hand, brings a brand of politics that often thrives on confrontation but struggles in collaboration. And in a legislature where getting anything done requires teamwork, not just talking points, that distinction matters.

Because make no mistake: the Alabama Legislature is not Congress. It's smaller. It's more personal. It runs on relationships and results. Lawmakers who can't -- or won't -- work with others don't just stall themselves; they stall their districts.

And that's the real risk in this race.

Huntsville isn't standing still. With the continued expansion of Redstone Arsenal, the arrival of Space Command, and a steady stream of new industry, this region is one of the most strategically important in the state. It needs a representative who can plug into that momentum, not one who becomes a sideshow.

If Brooks returns to Montgomery, he won't be the center of gravity, he'll be a disruption to it. Leadership will move around him, not through him. Local leaders will look elsewhere for partnership. And the district risks trading influence for noise.

That may sound harsh. But it's also how legislative bodies work.

This race, at its core, is about whether voters want a legislator who has already shown he can get things done -- or one who is still chasing the next platform. It's about whether Alabama Republicans are looking forward or looking back.

And in a state that prides itself on growth, opportunity, and momentum, that's not a small decision.
 
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Malware Brief: Air gaps breached, CPUs hijacked and supply‑chain chaos


Exploring how cyber attackers are undermining trust by targeting isolated systems, hijacking hardware and exploiting the software supply chain

Key takeaways

* Attackers are exploiting assumed trust in isolation models, business workflows and software supply chains.

* Malware distribution increasingly hides inside routine enterprise activity, including hiring and development pipelines.

*... Automated and self‑propagating supply‑chain threats reduce defenders' reaction time and increase blast radius.

This Malware Brief highlights three very different threats that share a common theme: attackers are going where controls are weakest and trust is highest.

APT37 Ruby Jumper: Breaching air‑gapped systems

Key facts

* Threat actor: APT37 (aka ScarCruft), linked to North Korea

* Malware/toolkit: Ruby Jumper

* Target: Air‑gapped and segmented environments

* Initial access: Malicious files plus removable media

* Notable tactic: Cloud services combined with USB propagation

Observers have spotted APT37 using Ruby Jumper, a toolkit designed to move commands and data between internet‑connected and air‑gapped systems. Rather than relying on unusual side‑channel exploits, Ruby Jumper uses vectors that have proven reliable in many forms of attack: people, removable media and legitimate cloud services.

Researchers report that the malware stages data on USB devices and leverages cloud storage platforms for command‑and‑control, allowing instructions to move across environments whenever trusted users do the same. Barracuda threat telemetry consistently shows that removable media and trusted workflows remain recurring weak points in otherwise well‑segmented environments.

This recent blog post discusses vulnerabilities in air-gapped systems more fully.

FAUX#ELEVATE: Fake résumés, real cryptomining

Key facts

* Malware family: FAUX#ELEVATE

* Payload: Illicit Monero cryptominer

* Primary impact: Stolen CPU cycles and degraded system performance

* Distribution method: Multiple, including weaponized résumé files sent to recruiters

FAUX#ELEVATE is a reminder that malware does not need to be sophisticated to be effective. The threat installs a covert Monero cryptominer, quietly consuming CPU resources while leaving victims with sluggish performance, overheating systems and higher power consumption.

Recent reporting shows the malware delivered through fake job applications, where malicious résumé files are sent directly to HR teams. Barracuda Research telemetry regularly shows malware attempting to blend into routine business processes. Hiring workflows remain especially attractive because opening attachments from unknown senders is part of the job.

Cryptomining malware like this often persists and goes undetected longer than more disruptive threats because it avoids obvious damage. The result is a slow, accumulating cost that many organizations don't immediately connect back to malware activity.

CanisterWorm: Supply‑chain malware that spreads itself

Key facts

* Malware: CanisterWorm

* Attack type: Supply‑chain compromise

* Target: Open‑source packages and build pipelines

* Notable behavior: Self‑propagating infection across ecosystems

CanisterWorm highlights how supply‑chain attacks continue to evolve toward automation and speed. Rather than remaining isolated in a single project, the malware actively propagates through package registries and CI/CD environments as developers unknowingly pull in infected components.

Researchers describe behavior that resembles a worm optimized for modern software development workflows. Barracuda threat data increasingly reflects this shift: Once a compromised dependency enters the ecosystem, downstream exposure can expand rapidly before defenders have visibility.

The challenge is not just detection, but containment. The longer these infections circulate through interconnected build systems, the harder recovery becomes.

Why this matters

Across these three threats, the pattern is consistent:

* Physical isolation is treated as a control instead of a risk reduction.

* Routine workflows are trusted by default.

* Software dependencies are inherited without enough scrutiny.

Barracuda's global threat data continues to show attackers taking advantage of each of these assumptions.

BarracudaONE, our cybersecurity platform, uses advanced machine learning and a groundbreaking set of integrated capabilities to deliver total visibility, detection and response across your infrastructure, protecting your entire attack surface even as it grows more complex.
 
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The Art Of The Cold Email


This article is written by a student writer from the Her Campus at PSU chapter and does not reflect the views of Her Campus.

It always starts the same way: a blank screen, a blinking cursor and the quiet, creeping suspicion that you are about to bother someone who is far too important to answer you. Your fingers hover over the keyboard as you reread the name at the top of the email for the fifth... time, wondering if there is a more impressive way to say hello than just... "hi."

Cold emailing feels a little like showing up to a party you weren't technically invited to, knocking on the door anyway and hoping someone inside decides you're worth letting in. It is equal parts confidence and delusion, built on the fragile belief that you, a college student with a half-finished résumé and a Google Doc full of drafts, deserve a moment of someone else's time.

But here is the thing no one tells you at first: that uncomfortable feeling is literally the entire point.

The art of a cold email is not about perfection; it is about permission. Specifically, the permission you give yourself to take up space in conversations you have not yet been invited into.

At some point, you stop overthinking the greeting and start typing.

You introduce yourself, trying to strike that impossible balance between confident and not arrogant, personable but still professional. You mention how you found them, crafting the sentence carefully so it feels intentional and not like you fell down a LinkedIn rabbit hole at 2 a.m. or went through so many hoops to locate their email. You explain why you are reaching out, which somehow feels like trying to summarize your entire ambition in three sentences or less.

And then comes the hardest part: asking.

Asking for advice, for a conversation, for ten minutes of their time, for an opportunity you might not even know exists. It feels small when you write it, but it carries weight because it requires vulnerability. You are admitting that you do not have all the answers, and more importantly, that you believe they might.

You reread the email once. Twice. Maybe ten times. You delete a sentence, rewrite another and swap out one word because it sounds too stiff, then swap it back because now it sounds too casual. You debate exclamation points like they are life-altering decisions.

Eventually, you hit send.

And then...nothing.

No immediate reply. No confirmation that it landed well. Just the quiet whoosh of an email disappearing into the void, leaving you alone with your thoughts and a growing urge to check your inbox every five minutes.

This is where most people decide cold emailing "doesn't work."

But the truth is, the magic of a cold email is not in the instant response; it's the act itself.

Because sometimes, a few hours later, or a few days later, sometimes even weeks...a reply appears. It is rarely as intimidating as you imagined. Sometimes it is warm, even enthusiastic and sometimes it leads to a conversation that turns into an opportunity, or a connection, or just a moment of reassurance that you are on the right path.

And sometimes, there is no reply at all, but don't worry because that part matters too.

Because every unanswered email still counts as proof that you showed up for yourself. That you chose to try instead of waiting to be chosen. That you were willing to risk being ignored in exchange for the possibility of being seen.

Over time, you get better at it. Your emails become clearer, sharper, more you. You stop trying to sound like what you think "professional" means and start sounding like someone worth responding to. The process becomes less about impressing and more about connecting.

And slowly, almost without realizing it, you stop feeling like you are crashing the party.

You start to understand that there was never really a closed door... just one you had to knock on first.

That is the art of a cold email. Not in the perfectly phrased sentence or the strategically placed line break, but in the quiet decision to reach out anyway.

Take it from someone who has landed internships and opportunities that would've never been possible before pressing send.
 
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Most 1:1s Are Career Drift Meetings


He looked me in the eye in a 1:1 and asked, "What do I need to do to get to the next level?" He was hungry, driven, and teachable ... and had no clear road to run on. That is when I was reminded that most 1:1s fail because they pretend to be development conversations while operating like status meetings.

A strong engineer came to me and asked a direct question. "What do I need to do to get to the... next level?" He had drive. He was faithful, approachable, and teachable. He was not missing hunger. He was missing a road, and that detail matters more than most managers want to admit. The lazy leadership answer is "stop waiting for a roadmap and build one." It sounds empowering, and it is also nonsense when someone is trying to get to a place they have never seen clearly defined. If you do not know what the destination looks like, you can run hard and still run wrong.

I have watched this happen more than once. High-agency people do exactly what you ask them to do, then get frustrated when "doing everything right" does not translate into growth. They are not usually missing effort. They are missing signal quality.

The pivotal line in that 1:1 was simple. "I have your back, and I will help create the road" ... not "I will carry you," not "you are on your own." Support first, clarity first, then ownership.

We partnered with HR and built a role matrix across engineer, senior engineer, tech lead, and manager. We defined what each level looked like in behavior, scope, and delivery expectations. Then we mapped where he stood, where he needed to grow, and what evidence would count as real progress.

Within a year, he moved into a senior role. Within 2.5 years, he replaced me. That is one of the proudest moments I have had as a leader ... replacing yourself on purpose.

You are not mentoring when you say "figure it out" without defining what "it" looks like.

Most managers do one of two things in 1:1s. They do status updates, or they do emotional reassurance. Neither one builds growth by itself.

Status-only 1:1s train people to report, not to level up. Reassurance-only 1:1s train people to feel seen, but not necessarily challenged. You need both care and clarity. Without clarity, care turns vague. Without care, clarity turns cold.

The reason this gets missed is predictable. Status updates are measurable and immediate. Career development is slower and messier. It is easier to ask, "Any blockers?" than to ask, "What behavior is holding you back from next level right now, and what are we both doing about it?" One question protects the sprint. The other question changes a career.

This is why your 1:1 should function like a career contract.

If any of those are missing, the contract is ambiguous, and ambiguous contracts create frustrated engineers.

And frustrated engineers do what adults do when the system is vague ... they start running experiments in political survival.

Ambiguity also creates politics. When growth criteria are unclear, people optimize for whatever gets attention. They present harder. They perform confidence. They play proximity games. None of that builds the capability you actually need as an organization.

There is a sequence that works.

That sequence is the difference between mentorship theater and real development. Leaders who skip Step 1 usually blame motivation. It is rarely motivation. It is missing architecture.

You would not ask an engineer to ship a complex system with no requirements and then call them weak when they miss. Yet that is exactly how many leaders run career growth.

If your instinct is "they should just figure it out," ask yourself a harder question ... would you use that same standard for a production migration with real customer impact? If the answer is no, do not use it for someone's growth path either.

The same leadership logic applies.

Career development is architecture work with human consequences.

In fast teams, especially AI-assisted teams, output can hide growth gaps for longer than it used to. Someone can look productive while stalling in judgment, influence, or leverage. If your 1:1 is only about updates, you will miss that drift until it gets expensive. Career clarity is leadership infrastructure, even when HR paperwork makes it look like a side process.

When people know the road, they can self-correct faster, ask better questions, and build confidence that comes from progress, not posturing.

When people do not know the road, they optimize for visibility because visibility is the only signal left. That is how you accidentally build a culture of performative growth. People learn to narrate progress instead of creating it, managers start rewarding confidence instead of capability, and then everyone wonders why the same succession gaps keep showing up.

This is also why your 1:1 quality predicts retention more than most leaders think. People can tolerate hard problems. They do not tolerate feeling stuck with no credible path forward.

There is one uncomfortable part here that leaders love to avoid. Your side of the contract. Most growth plans fail because they are written as employee commitments with manager encouragement. That reads like cheerleading. It is delegation, not something both sides can inspect.

Your side should be explicit.

If you do not write your side down, people stop trusting the process because it looks like another "work on these things and we will see" loop. Trust grows when progress is inspectable for both sides.

This cadence sounds basic, and that is the point. Leadership systems should be boring enough to run consistently and sharp enough to change outcomes. If this feels too formal, good ... informal growth systems are usually where ambiguity and bias hide, and formality is not bureaucracy when it creates fairness and clarity.

If you want to know whether your 1:1 system is real, ask one question at the end of the conversation ... "What changed in your growth plan from this meeting?"

If the answer is vague, your 1:1 was probably morale support plus project updates.

Useful for feelings. Useless for promotions.

If the answer is specific and behavioral, your 1:1 was leadership work.

I started using this question because I got tired of walking out of meetings that felt productive and then watching nothing actually change. We had good conversations. We had trust. We had positive sentiment. We did not have movement. That is a brutal thing to admit as a manager, because it means your intent can be strong while your system is weak.

When this question is built into your cadence, it exposes the exact gap:

And when those are missing, your team usually fills the gap with performance language. You get cleaner updates, better optics, and stronger meeting energy ... but no durable growth.

One practical upgrade that helped me was adding a 3-line closeout doc after each 1:1:

That tiny artifact made the contract inspectable. People stopped guessing what mattered. If you cannot point to a changed behavior contract after a 1:1, you did not run a growth meeting. You ran a conversation.

Take one high-drive engineer and run one contract-style 1:1.

Then hold yourself accountable to your side first.

A 1:1 is where you either build a growth system or build attrition.

If this post lands, pair it with Your Team Doesn't Need a Buddy. It Needs a Coach. for the feedback side of the same problem.

The people on your team are not waiting for another update meeting. They are waiting for a leader who can define the road and walk it with them until they can run it alone. That is the real 1:1 job. Everything else is admin.

One email a week from The Builder's Leader. The frameworks, the blind spots, and the conversations most leaders avoid. Subscribe for free.
 
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The real reason people stay at their jobs


European Labour Authority, Directorate-General for Employment, Social Affairs and Inclusion

Knowing how to retain talent is just as important as knowing how to attract it. In today's competitive job market, companies wonder how to make their employees want to stay. While attractive pay and perks such as free snacks is important, these are rarely the only factors.

According to recent employee... retention statistics, culture, work-life balance and career development are responsible for 69 % of departures. Let's take a look at some of the main considerations affecting whether workers stay with their companies or not.

The fundamentals of staff retention

Fair compensation and benefits may not be the only thing an employee considers when deciding whether to stay or leave, but let's face it, it's hard to keep staff who know they're being paid below market rates or getting inadequate benefits.

Another major factor is work-life balance. People want to be able to get their work done and also have enough time to enjoy other activities that make life worth living. Sending employees late night messages and constantly assigning tasks after hours and at weekends is a sure way of causing burnout - and ultimately losing staff. Employers wanting to improve work-life balance among their workers should offer flexible work arrangements and respect employees' time off. This not only reduces burnout, it also increases loyalty.

Employees stay where leaders recognise their contributions. Bonuses, 'Employee of the Month' awards and professional development rewards can go a long way in making workers feel valued. But sometimes a timely 'Well done! You nailed the project!' can motivate employees just as much as formal recognition.

Career development is another key reason for staying with a company. Without growth prospects, sooner or later employees will look elsewhere. Training and mentorship programmes, upskilling to help workers adapt to evolving industry demands, moves into new roles that broaden employees' skills, and clear career plans are all strategies demonstrating to employees that their professional growth is supported.

For many workers, the values a company upholds are much more important than salary. When their personal values align with their employer's goals, the pride and sense of belonging they feel can outweigh offers of higher compensation from other companies. But talk is cheap. To earn employee loyalty, these shared values have to be visible in the day-to-day running of the company.

A healthy work environment based on trust, respect, collaboration and inclusivity among peers can be a strong reason to stay. Employers can build a positive workplace culture by organising team-building activities, giving employees the opportunity to share their ideas and making sure every employee - no matter their gender, ethnicity or socioeconomic background - feels that they belong.

Ultimately, it's all about good leadership - communicating openly, recognising employees' contributions and showing that you genuinely care. Who wouldn't want to remain with a company where they are valued, respected and treated fairly?
 
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How AI Changes Student Learning And Career Path


Artificial intelligence is no longer a distant technology reserved for engineers, researchers, or large companies. It has entered classrooms, dorm rooms, internships, libraries, and job searches. For today's students, AI is becoming a daily companion that can explain difficult concepts, organize assignments, summarize research, improve writing, support career planning, and even help build a... professional portfolio.

This shift is changing more than study habits. It is reshaping what students need to learn, how they manage their time, how they prepare for work, and how they compete in the job market. AI can be a powerful advantage, but only for students who understand how to use it responsibly and strategically.

The most important change is not that students can now complete tasks faster. It is that student learning itself is becoming more personalized, flexible, and skill-driven.

AI Makes Student Learning More Personalized

Traditional education tends to move at one pace for all learners. Teachers explain a topic, assign homework, and move along according to their syllabus; some students understand immediately while others require additional examples, explanations or practice sessions - this gap between needs can only be closed by AI offering personalized support that tailors its help according to student needs.

Students struggling with calculus can use AI tools to explain derivatives step-by-step, while those learning a foreign language can practice conversation without feeling awkward. Finally, those writing history essays may request assistance in organizing arguments, checking clarity or understanding source material.

This does not replace teachers. Instead, it gives students more ways to keep learning outside the classroom. AI can act like a study partner that is available at any time, which is especially useful for students balancing school, part-time work, family responsibilities, or long commutes.

Students can now get help with:

* Breaking complex topics into simpler explanations

* Creating practice questions before exams

* Summarizing long readings

* Reviewing grammar and structure

* Building study schedules

* Exploring alternative explanations when class material feels unclear

Early in this transformation, many students also began searching for external academic guidance, such as academic writing support from Mypaperhelp, especially when they needed examples of structure, formatting, or research organization. In the AI era, services and tools like these fit into a broader ecosystem of support where students are expected to learn how to evaluate help, use it ethically, and still produce original work.

AI Is Reshaping Career Preparation

Career development used to begin near graduation. Students would visit a career center, create a résumé, attend a job fair, and start applying. Now, AI makes career preparation more continuous.

Students can use AI to explore career paths based on their interests, strengths, and coursework. They can compare roles, identify required skills, create learning plans, and prepare for interviews. AI can also help tailor résumés and cover letters to specific job descriptions, although students should always ensure the final version sounds authentic and accurate.

For example, a psychology major interested in technology might ask AI what careers combine human behavior and digital products. The tool might suggest UX research, customer insights, product management, behavioral data analysis, or learning design. From there, the student can research each path, identify skill gaps, and start building relevant experience.

AI can support career growth by helping students:

* Translate academic experience into professional language

* Identify transferable skills

* Prepare answers for interview questions

* Research industries and job roles

* Build LinkedIn profiles

* Plan portfolios and personal websites

This gives students more control over their futures. Instead of waiting for career advice, they can explore options earlier and make more informed decisions.

New Skills Matter More Than Ever

As AI handles more routine tasks, students need to focus on skills that remain valuable in an AI-supported world. Memorization still has a place, but it is no longer enough. Employers increasingly value people who can think critically, communicate clearly, adapt quickly, and solve ambiguous problems.

The most important AI-era student skills include:

* Prompting: Knowing how to ask clear, specific, useful questions

* Critical thinking: Checking whether AI output is accurate or biased

* Communication: Turning rough ideas into clear messages

* Research literacy: Evaluating sources and evidence

* Creativity: Using AI as a starting point, not the final product

* Ethical judgment: Knowing what kind of assistance is acceptable

* Technical confidence: Understanding how digital tools work

Students who learn these skills will be better prepared for jobs where AI is part of everyday work. Those who ignore AI may find themselves at a disadvantage, not because AI replaces them, but because other people know how to use it more effectively.

The Ethical Side of AI in Education

AI can pose considerable difficulties. Schools and universities are still exploring how best to handle AI-generated work, plagiarism, citation rules, exam integrity, data privacy concerns, as well as student anxiety over what's acceptable and what crosses a line. Students could become confused about what falls within or outside these boundaries.

Transparency is always best: students should understand their institution's rules and use AI only in ways that promote learning rather than replace it. Asking AI to explain a concept differs significantly from submitting AI-generated essay as original work; using it for brainstorming purposes also differs significantly from fabricating sources or concealing assistance from unauthorised sources.

Students could become too dependent on AI technology. If AI always writes the first draft, solves problems for the student, or summarizes reading material for them, they could miss the deeper learning processes involved with education. True, struggle is part of student learning but AI can reduce unnecessary frustration while not eliminating thinking processes altogether.

AI Can Expand Access, But Not Equally

AI can make education more accessible. Students with disabilities may use it for transcription, reading support, organization and communication needs; non-native speakers may gain language help while first generation students can receive guidance regarding academic or professional expectations that may not be apparent at first glance.

At the same time, access is uneven as some AI tools cost money while some students have better internet, newer devices or greater digital confidence than others. Schools need to consider fairness carefully in their use of AI so as not to widen existing gaps further.

Educators also require training. A classroom where AI is effectively utilized requires clear policies, intentional assignments, and open discussion among all members. While banning it completely may not be realistic, teaching students how to utilize it effectively would be far more practical.

The Future Student Will Be an AI Collaborator

Future education won't be determined by students pitted against AI; rather, its future will be defined by students working alongside it. Strong learners will know when to rely on it or use their own judgment when making decisions based on data analysis.

AI can assist students learning faster, working more efficiently, and preparing for careers with greater confidence. Passive studying can become an active practice; career planning becomes more personalized; and AI helps students build skillsets, portfolios and professional identities early in their academic careers.

But AI cannot serve as a replacement for curiosity, discipline, integrity or original thinking; those who make best use of it are those who view AI as a means for growth rather than as a short cut around effort.

AI is revolutionizing student life because it changes what's possible: learning can become more flexible, work get more productive and career preparation start earlier. The challenge now is using these tools wisely and ethically while remaining creative; those who achieve that balance will be better prepared both academically and for life after graduation.
 
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Setting Career Development Goals For Leaders


Career development is an ongoing process that involves identifying one's skills, goals, and interests in order to create a plan for personal and professional growth. For leaders, having clear career development goals is essential for success in their roles and continued progression in their careers. Here, we will discuss the importance of setting career development goals for leaders and provide... some examples to help guide them in their journey.

One of the main reasons why setting career development goals is crucial for leaders is that it helps them stay focused and motivated. Having clear goals allows leaders to stay on track and make progress towards their desired outcomes. Without goals, it can be easy for leaders to become complacent and lose sight of their ambitions. By setting specific, achievable goals, leaders can maintain their drive and determination to succeed.

Another benefit of setting career development goals for leaders is that it provides them with a roadmap for growth and advancement. Leaders who have well-defined goals are better equipped to identify the steps needed to reach their objectives. This can include seeking out new opportunities for learning and development, taking on challenging assignments, and building relationships with mentors and peers who can support their career aspirations. Having a clear plan in place can help leaders navigate the ups and downs of their career paths and overcome obstacles that may arise along the way.

In addition, setting career development goals for leaders can help boost their confidence and self-esteem. When leaders have a clear vision of where they want to go in their careers and are actively working towards it, they are more likely to feel a sense of achievement and fulfillment. This can lead to increased job satisfaction and overall well-being, as leaders see the positive impact of their hard work and dedication. By setting ambitious but realistic goals, leaders can push themselves out of their comfort zones and discover new capabilities and strengths they may not have known they had.

So, what are some examples of career development goals that leaders can set for themselves? Here are a few ideas to consider:

1. Continuous Learning: Leaders should strive to expand their knowledge and skills through ongoing education and professional development opportunities. This can include attending workshops and seminars, pursuing certifications or advanced degrees, and staying up-to-date on industry trends and best practices.

2. Leadership Development: Leaders should focus on honing their leadership abilities and interpersonal skills to effectively manage and inspire their teams. This can involve seeking feedback from colleagues and mentors, participating in leadership training programs, and practicing active listening and communication techniques.

3. Career Advancement: Leaders should set goals for advancing to higher levels of leadership within their organizations or exploring new opportunities outside of their current roles. This can include seeking out promotions, taking on leadership roles in new projects or initiatives, and networking with key stakeholders in their field.

4. Work-Life Balance: Leaders should prioritize their well-being and strive to maintain a healthy balance between their professional and personal lives. This can involve setting boundaries around work hours, taking regular breaks to de-stress and recharge, and finding ways to prioritize self-care and relaxation.

By setting career development goals that align with their values and aspirations, leaders can create a roadmap for success and fulfillment in their careers. Taking the time to reflect on their strengths and areas for growth, leaders can identify areas where they want to focus their attention and energy to achieve their goals. By staying committed to their development and remaining flexible in their approach, leaders can unlock their full potential and make a lasting impact in their organizations and communities.

In conclusion, setting career development goals for leaders is essential for their growth and success in their roles. By establishing clear, achievable goals and taking proactive steps to reach them, leaders can enhance their skills, advance their careers, and create a more fulfilling work-life balance. With a solid plan in place, leaders can navigate the challenges of leadership with confidence and resilience, and ultimately achieve their full potential.
 
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FAQ


Please use our online application via our Application Portal whenever possible. Applications via email or in writing will be only accepted in exceptional cases.

How Long Does It Take to Fill Out the Online Application Form?

Entering your information will usually take five to ten minutes.

What Are the Technical Requirements for the Online Application?

PDFs are ideal. Word, PPT, JPG, PNG, and... GIF files are also acceptable. Individual files should be no larger than 10 MB, and the entire application should not exceed 20 MB.

For optimal performance, we recommend using a modern web browser such as Google Chrome, Mozilla Firefox, or Microsoft Edge.

What Documents Should My Application Include?

Your application should include at least a current résumé as well as relevant certificates and supporting documents (e.g., academic degrees, employment references).

How Long Does the Application Process Take?

The application process, starting with the submission of your application and ending with a potential offer of employment, can vary depending on the position, the volume of applications, and the review process. However, you should generally expect to hear back within two to three months.

Please note: The review process does not begin until after the application deadline has passed.

Who Should I Send My Application To?

Please send your application to the contact person from the department or Human Resources listed in the job posting (see the contact information in the respective posting).

How Can I Get in Touch with a Contact Person Directly?

You can find the contact information directly in the respective job posting. The relevant contact persons are listed there along with their email addresses and phone numbers.

Can I Make Changes or Additions to My Application After Submitting It?

Yes. If you applied through the online portal, you can add to or update your application materials during the application period, but only via email and not online via the application portal. If you have any questions, please contact the Human Resources (PSE) representative listed in the job posting.

Will I Be Sent a Confirmation of Receipt?

Yes. After submitting your online application, you will automatically receive a confirmation via email. For applications submitted via email or in writing, you will also receive a confirmation of receipt via email.

Can I Withdraw My Application?

Yes. Please inform the contact person from the department or the Human Resources (PSE) if you wish to withdraw your application.

How Accessible is the Application Process?

KIT is actively committed to accessibility and equal opportunity. If you need assistance with the application process, please feel free to contact the Representatives of Disabled Employees or the Human Resources (PSE) contact person listed in the job posting.

How Do I Submit an Unsolicited Application to KIT?

If no suitable position is currently advertised, you can submit a unsolicited application using our online form for unsolicited applications. Please indicate a specific career goal. Your application documents will remain in the applicant pool for three months.

Can I Apply for More Than One Position at the Same Time?

Yes, that is possible. Please tailor your application specifically to each position.

Are There Job Openings for International Applicants?

Yes. We assist you with the recognition of foreign degrees and, through our Welcome Service, offer help with questions regarding visas, residency, and work permits.

How Do We Handle Foreign Degrees?

Your degree will be reviewed to determine if it corresponds to a German qualification. If necessary, we will guide you through the recognition process.

In Which Language Can I Apply?

Applications may be submitted in German or English. We welcome applicants from all linguistic backgrounds.

What Language Skills Are Required?

The required language skills depend on the specific position. Generally, a solid command of German or English is expected; details can be found in the respective job posting.

How Does the Selection Process Work?

After the application deadline, we review your application documents for completeness and relevant qualifications. Candidates who are suitable for the position and stand out from other applicants will be invited to a personal interview. In some cases, a second round of interviews may follow.

There is currently no publicly available application tracking system. If you have any questions, please contact the Human Resources (PSE) representative listed in the job posting directly.

Will My Travel Expenses for Job Interviews Be Reimbursed?

Unfortunately, as a general rule, no: Travel expenses for job interviews at KIT cannot be reimbursed. We appreciate your understanding.

What Happens If My Application Is Incomplete?

If important documents are missing, the Human Resources Business Unit will contact you. Please make sure your application is complete and accurate to avoid delays or disqualification on formal grounds. If you still wish to submit additional documents, you can email them to the contact person from the Human Resources Business Unit (PSE) listed in the job posting.

What Happens to My Data After I Apply?

Your data will be processed strictly in accordance with legal requirements and automatically deleted after the statutory retention periods expire, provided you are not hired.

How Long Will My Data Be Stored If I Am Not Hired?

Your data will be automatically deleted 100 days after the conclusion of the process in accordance with applicable data protection regulations. For unsolicited applications, deletion occurs after three months - unless you consent to longer storage.
 
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Building chat infrastructure for 3M users on shaky 3G: architecture decisions we made with Kupu


Everyone knows big names like LinkedIn, Indeed, and Glassdoor. But in Southeast Asia, a new wave of phone-first apps is taking over. This follows the massive success of "Direct Chat" apps in China, like Boss Zhipin (China's leading direct-talk recruitment app).

Now, platforms like Kupu are changing how millions of people find work in Indonesia. In today's fast world, the gig economy is evolving... rapidly. Traditional emails are just too slow and boring. Honestly, the modern HR Tech revolution is all about talking to people right away. This is why these apps need a world-class Chat SDK and a super-steady In-app Chat API. They turn every job post into real, live talk.

Indonesia is a extraordinarily complex puzzle with 17,000 islands. Finding a job for a waiter or a rider in that mess is a giant headache. For years, folks were stuck with paper resumes and old job boards.

But now, Indonesia is going through a big digital change. We are seeing a clear trend here. Recruitment is moving away from just "posting an ad." It is now about "starting a conversation." In this busy world, being able to chat instantly is the most important part of getting a job.

Kupu is already a leader with over 3 million downloads. The team behind Kupu is very smart. They have deep experience from tech giants like Alibaba and Lazada.

Why is Kupu winning? It's because they focus on "Direct Chat." They eliminated traditional paper resumes. Instead, they use smart AI profiles and short videos. Most importantly, the chat is the center of the whole app.

A candidate can message a hiring manager right away. This "Chat-First" model is a game-changer. It cuts the time it takes to hire someone from weeks down to just a few days. This approach proves highly effective in making job hunting as easy as sending a message on a social app is a genius move. Now, millions of users and employers trust the platform because it gets results fast.

Whether it's a rider waiting for the next delivery, a cleaner booking their next shift, or a warehouse worker finding a new role -- on-demand services and blue-collar recruitment share the same need: instant, reliable communication.

While Kupu's idea was brilliant, making it work perfectly across 17,000 islands was a technical nightmare. In a recruitment app, a lost message is a lost life-changing opportunity. Kupu faced several "hard truths" when building their communication system.

The Network Gap and Weak Signals

In a big city like Jakarta, 4G is everywhere. Lots of users are in warehouses or far-off islands where the net is highly unstable. Job hunting needs a rock-solid chat. If the signal drops for hours, the Chat SDK must automatically reconnect as soon as network availability is restored. No messages can just vanish. Trust me, losing a job invite because of a shaky signal is a total nightmare.

The "Silent Killer" of Job Opportunities: Push Delivery

In Indonesia, there is a "Silent Killer": Push Delivery. Most workers use cheap Android phones. These phones close apps in the background to save battery life. Honestly, without a 99.9% push rate, the whole app becomes unreliable.

Trust and Security in the Chat Window

Recruitment is a sensitive business. It involves phone numbers, home addresses, and personal history. In the blue-collar market, scammers often try to use chat to trick workers. Kupu needed a way to keep their users safe without slowing down the conversation. They required a system that could handle encrypted messaging and support content moderation tools to flag suspicious links or fake job offers in real-time.

To overcome these hurdles, Kupu turned to Nexconn. With over ten years of experience in the global communication market, Nexconn provided an Enterprise Messaging API and a specialized Chat SDK designed specifically for high-stakes business communication.

Global Network, Local Speed

Nexconn's SD-CAN network (Software Defined Communication Accelerate Network) is the backbone of this solution. While Nexconn operates 8 major data centers around the world, they placed a heavy focus on Southeast Asia PoPs (Points of Presence). By keeping the servers close to Indonesian users, Nexconn ensured "Zero-Feel Lag".

Guaranteed Delivery on Any Device

Nexconn solved Kupu's biggest headache -- message delivery on cheap phones. The Nexconn In-app Chat API is built to work with all major phone manufacturers. Even when the Kupu app is not actively running, Nexconn's smart delivery system ensures the message reaches the user through the best possible channel. Furthermore, for the weak internet areas of Indonesia, Nexconn used its specialized protocols to recover lost data packets. Even on a shaky 3G connection, the chat stays connected.

Smart Business Features

Beyond just sending text, Nexconn enabled Kupu to use "Custom Card Messages." This allows employers to send official interview invites or job offers as interactive cards within the chat. By using the Nexconn Enterprise Messaging API, Kupu can track exactly when a message was "Delivered" and "Read," giving employers the data they need to manage their hiring funnel.

Nexconn understands that every app has different needs. To help Kupu stay light, Nexconn offers its Chat SDK in two different "flavors."

First, there is the Chat SDK. This is the "pure" version of the tech. It only contains the heavy-duty engine needed for communication -- like sending messages, managing chat lists, and organizing data. It has zero UI elements, making it incredibly tiny. For a professional app like Kupu, which has its own unique design, Chat SDK is the perfect choice. It lets their designers create their own "look" while using Nexconn's powerful In-app Chat API under the hood. It's all the power without any extra weight.

Second, for apps that want to launch fast, Nexconn offers Chat UI. This version comes with pre-made chat windows, contact lists, and message bubbles. It's like a "ready-to-go" chat room that you can drop into your app in a day. While it's a bit larger than Chat SDK, it saves developers hundreds of hours of design work. Honestly, this kind of choice is rare. It means whether you are a giant like Kupu or a small startup, Nexconn's Enterprise Messaging API scales perfectly with your goals. By offering this "pick-and-choose" style, Nexconn ensures the app stays as lean as possible for the millions of workers in Indonesia.

Trust is Everything: Nexconn's Smart Content Moderation

Nexconn offers a powerful layer of safety through its global Content Moderation services. This is a must-have for any serious Enterprise Messaging API. Nexconn's Content Moderation services can automatically scan for fake job links, rude language, or suspicious phone numbers in real-time. By filtering out bad content before it even reaches the user, Nexconn helps platforms build a "Circle of Trust." Honestly, in a market as big as Indonesia, you can't just hope users stay safe; you need a smart, automated system to guard the gate 24/7. This ensures that every In-app Chat remains a professional and secure space for real job seekers.
 
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AI Agents Won't Replace Your Job -- But Ignoring Them Might


By early 2026, the pitch has become unavoidable: build an AI agent, hand it your job, collect the output. Creators on every platform are packaging this idea as a survival strategy -- automate your role before someone else automates you out of it. The tools feeding this narrative are real. n8n, Make, and a growing stack of LLM APIs have made it genuinely possible for a non-engineer to wire together... a multi-step reasoning pipeline in an afternoon. That accessibility is new, and it matters.

The problem isn't the tools. It's the framing. "Replace your job with an agent" conflates two very different things: automating the tasks inside a job versus automating the judgment that makes those tasks worth doing. Those are not the same thing, and treating them as equivalent leads to expensive, embarrassing failures. McKinsey's research on the future of work makes this distinction clearly -- organizations that invest in AI capabilities while reskilling their workforce outcompete those that treat automation as a headcount substitution strategy (McKinsey, Future of Work). The word "while" is doing a lot of work in that sentence.

The strongest version of this argument goes like this: most knowledge work is pattern-matching dressed up as expertise. A sales rep qualifies leads by checking a list of criteria. A recruiter screens résumés against a job description. A content writer produces variations on proven formats. If the task is pattern-matching, a well-prompted reasoning model can do it faster, at higher volume, and without sick days.

This is not wrong. I've watched pipelines built in n8n handle lead research, scoring, and first-draft outreach in a single automated chain -- work that previously occupied hours of a junior SDR's week. The throughput gains are real. When we built our first Autonomous SDR pipeline, a flat three-component architecture -- research, scoring, and writing all reporting to a single orchestrator -- worked fine at five leads. At fifty, the scoring module sat idle waiting on research that had nothing to do with scoring. Splitting into discrete components with explicit handoff contracts between them cut end-to-end processing time and made each stage independently testable. That architectural lesson applies whether you're building for yourself or for a client.

So yes: if your job is mostly execution of repeatable, well-defined tasks, a well-built automation chain can absorb a meaningful portion of it. That's not hype. That's just what these tools do.

The limit appears the moment the task requires something the pipeline can't define in advance. Negotiating a contract renewal when the client is upset. Deciding which of two technically correct answers is politically safe to give. Recognizing that a prospect's question means something different than what they literally asked. These aren't edge cases -- they're the core of most senior roles. No current LLM handles them reliably, and pretending otherwise is how you ship a customer-facing system that embarrasses your company.

The augmentation argument is less viral but more defensible. Instead of asking "what tasks can I remove from my job," it asks "what tasks are consuming time I should be spending on higher-judgment work?" The pipeline handles the former. The person handles the latter.

This reframing changes what you build. An agent that drafts ten cold email variations for a human to review and select is a different system than one that sends them autonomously. The first one makes the human faster. The second one removes the human -- and with them, the judgment about which variation fits the specific relationship context that no CRM field captures.

Practically, augmentation pipelines are also more maintainable. Autonomous systems require monitoring, error handling, fallback logic, and someone who notices when the output quality degrades. That's not passive income -- it's a second job. I've seen founders build elaborate n8n workflows to automate their outreach, then spend more time debugging the automation than the original task took. The maintenance burden is real, and it scales with complexity. Our post on cold email automation system design goes into the specific failure modes that catch people off guard.

Augmentation also preserves the accountability structure that clients and employers actually care about. When an autonomous pipeline makes a mistake -- and it will -- the question "who approved this?" has no good answer. When a human uses a pipeline to do their work faster, the answer is obvious. That accountability matters more than most automation advocates acknowledge.

The practical question isn't philosophical. It comes down to three variables: task definition clarity, error cost, and output reviewability.

Automate fully when: the task has a clear, stable definition (the inputs and acceptable outputs don't change week to week); the cost of a wrong output is low or easily caught downstream; and you can review a sample of outputs without it taking longer than the task itself. Data enrichment, calendar scheduling, invoice parsing, and first-draft content generation often meet all three criteria.

Keep a human in the loop when: the task definition shifts based on context you can't encode in a prompt; a wrong output damages a relationship, triggers a legal issue, or ships to a customer; or the review process requires the same judgment as the original task. Client communication, contract decisions, and anything touching regulated data typically fail at least one of these tests.

There's a third category worth naming: tasks that look automatable but aren't yet. Competitive analysis, for instance. A reasoning model can summarize a competitor's pricing page. It cannot tell you whether that pricing change signals a strategic pivot or a desperate response to churn. That distinction requires market context, relationship knowledge, and pattern recognition built over years. Automating the summary is useful. Automating the interpretation is dangerous.

We explored this tension directly when comparing manual research processes to AI-assisted ones -- the grant research automation analysis is a good case study in where the line actually sits in practice.

The viral framing skips the maintenance math. Building a working automation pipeline in n8n or a similar orchestration tool takes real time -- not because the tools are hard, but because the edge cases are endless. What happens when an API returns a malformed response? When a lead's LinkedIn profile is private? When the LLM produces output that's technically valid but contextually wrong?

Every one of those scenarios needs a handler. And the handlers need testing. And the tests need updating when the upstream API changes its schema. This is engineering work, not content creation. Treating it as a passive asset that runs indefinitely without attention is how you end up with a pipeline that's been silently failing for three weeks.

The honest version of "build agents to replace your job" is: build agents to handle the parts of your job that don't require your judgment, then use the recovered time to do more of the work that does. That's a real productivity gain. It's just not as shareable as "I automated my entire income stream."

For a grounded look at what building eighty automations without a traditional engineering background actually produces -- including what breaks -- our post on building automations without code covers the real results, not the highlight reel.

Start with a task audit, not a tool selection. Before touching n8n, Make, or any LLM API, I'd spend a week logging every task I do and tagging each one: "stable definition / low error cost / reviewable output" or not. Most people skip this and build pipelines for tasks that feel automatable but fail the error-cost test in production. The audit takes a few hours. Rebuilding a broken autonomous system takes weeks.

Build the human-in-the-loop version first, always. Even if the goal is full automation, ship the version where a person reviews outputs before they go anywhere. Run it for two weeks. The failure modes you discover in that period will reshape the architecture entirely -- and you'll catch them before they reach a customer or a client. We've never regretted this sequencing. We've regretted skipping it.

Price the maintenance before you celebrate the build. The next thing I'd do differently is attach a recurring time estimate to every pipeline before calling it done. If keeping this system accurate and functional requires four hours a month, that's the real cost of ownership. Sometimes that math still favors automation. Sometimes it doesn't. Knowing in advance is the difference between a productivity tool and a liability.
 
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One-On-One Coaching Explained: A Complete Guide For Managers


What Is One-On-One Coaching? Definition, Benefits, And Best Practices For Managers

In recent years, one of the most popular trends in employee training has been personalized learning. The main reason for that is that in a highly volatile and competitive business environment, there really isn't much time for one-size-fits-all training programs. What employees truly need is individualized growth... pathways that align with their unique strengths, needs, and ambitions. This is where one-on-one coaching comes in.

But what is one-on-one coaching, and how can managers use it effectively in the workplace? This guide breaks down everything you need to know, from core principles and benefits to best practices and must-know steps for successful implementation, equipping you with the necessary knowledge to create meaningful coaching experiences that drive engagement and organizational success.

One-on-one coaching is a highly effective approach to employee development that provides tailored support and individualized attention. Specifically, it is a structured process where a manager (or coach) works directly with an employee to help them improve their performance, build skills, and support their professional growth. Unlike traditional training programs, which offer generic content, this method focuses on the unique needs, challenges, and goals of each employee. Coaches engage in dynamic conversations that combine instruction, active listening, and feedback, fostering an atmosphere where employees feel valued and motivated.

Such personalized coaching enables the creation of action plans that align with the employee's career goals, allowing for regular progress assessment and strategy adaptation. Additionally, it addresses immediate performance issues while promoting long-term career development. Finally, one-on-one coaching helps build essential soft skills such as communication and leadership, enhancing team dynamics and organizational performance.

These characteristics make one-on-one coaching a powerful tool for fostering personal and professional growth in employees.

The main reasons managers leverage one-on-one coaching in the workplace include driving employee engagement, improving performance, and fostering a culture of continuous learning. Rather than relying solely on formal training sessions, organizations are integrating coaching into everyday workflows. Managers act as coaches, helping employees navigate challenges, develop new competencies, and stay aligned with organizational goals.

The main use cases for this training approach usually include:

Although one-on-one coaching and training are often used interchangeably, these terms don't refer to the same learning approach. In this table, we have accumulated their main differentiating factors in terms of focus, approach, role of the manager, flexibility, and outcome.

In practice, the two approaches can complement each other. For example, a manager might use one-on-one training to teach a specific tool, then follow up with coaching sessions to reinforce application and growth.

We have already briefly mentioned the benefits of leveraging one-on-one coaching, but let's take a closer look at some of the most important ones.

One-on-one coaching provides personalized feedback tailored to each employee's unique strengths and weaknesses. This individualized approach helps employees clearly understand their performance metrics and pinpoint specific areas for improvement. By addressing these areas with constructive feedback and guidance, employees can enhance their skills and consistently achieve better results. This not only fosters a culture of accountability but also drives overall organizational effectiveness.

When employees feel that their voices are heard and their contributions are valued, their motivation and commitment to their work naturally increase. One-on-one coaching allows managers to actively listen to their employees' concerns and aspirations, which can lead to a stronger emotional connection to the workplace. Engaged employees are more likely to go above and beyond in their roles, resulting in higher productivity levels and a positive work environment.

One-on-one coaching sessions provide focused attention, allowing employees to engage in skill development much more effectively compared to traditional group learning formats. This is due to the fact that, in these sessions, employees can receive tailored training that addresses their specific learning styles and needs. This customized approach accelerates their ability to grasp new concepts, apply them in real-world situations, and retain the information effectively, leading to quicker mastery of essential skills.

Another significant benefit of one-on-one coaching is that they significantly improve rapport between managers and their employees. This is achieved through regular one-on-one meetings that foster an environment of trust, transparency, and open communication. These interactions allow managers to understand their team members on a deeper level, leading to more meaningful relationships. As managers demonstrate consistent support and recognition, employees will feel valued and appreciated, strengthening their loyalty and commitment to the team and the organization as a whole.

Organizations that invest in the development of their employees through one-on-one coaching essentially focus on creating pathways for career advancement. Employees are more likely to remain with an organization that demonstrates a commitment to their professional growth. By facilitating ongoing development opportunities, managers showcase their dedication to the success of their employees, leading to reduced turnover rates and a more stable workforce. As a result, this investment not only benefits individual employees but also enhances the organization's reputation as a supportive and nurturing workplace.

Now that we understand why managers would want to leverage one-on-one coaching in the workplace, it is time to explore how they can do it best. Let's discuss the 7 must-know steps to effectively implement one-on-one coaching sessions.

Before each session, it's vital to establish clear and specific objectives. This could involve identifying key focus areas such as solving a specific problem, enhancing a skill set, or evaluating progress towards individual and team goals. Having defined objectives creates a framework for the conversation and helps ensure that both you and your employee stay on track. Communicate your intentions clearly and invite your team member to share their own goals for the session.

Preparation is key to running a successful coaching session. Review notes from previous discussions and analyze any available performance data. Understanding where your employee currently stands will enable you to tailor your coaching approach to their specific needs. Encourage your employees to come prepared as well, suggesting they bring topics they wish to discuss, challenges they face, or feedback their peers may have given. This collaborative preparation fosters engagement and ownership of their development.

One of the most critical aspects of effective coaching is ensuring a psychologically safe space. Employees should feel comfortable and secure to express their thoughts, share any challenges they are facing, or ask questions, without fearing any consequences from peers or supervisors. For this to happen, managers and leadership must engage in actively listening, show empathy, and respond without judgment. Fostering these leadership skills will help you establish a work environment that encourages open dialogue and builds trust, which are essential for fostering transparency and facilitating growth.

Utilizing open-ended questions is a powerful technique during coaching sessions. Questions such as "What challenges are you currently facing?" or "What support do you need from me?" promote deeper reflection and critical thinking, instead of giving employees a few stock answers to choose from. Encourage your employees to think about what success looks like to them in various situations. This will not only help them clarify their thoughts but also allow you to guide them effectively towards solutions.

Constructive feedback is essential for employee growth. When delivering feedback, be specific about the behaviors and outcomes you're addressing to promote clarity rather than confusion. Use examples and present observations in a way that emphasizes the desired direction instead of merely pointing out mistakes. Remember that the ultimate goal is to balance constructive criticism with positive reinforcement, which is why you must highlight achievements and strengths in addition to discussing challenges. This balanced approach boosts morale and encourages a growth mindset.

It is important for one-on-one coaching sessions to feel like a two-way interaction. For this reason, it is essential that you collaborate on a clear action plan at the end of each meeting. This should include specific next steps, timelines, and expected outcomes. It's important that both you and your employee agree on these action items to ensure accountability and commitment. Outline how progress will be monitored and when you'll follow up, creating a roadmap for their development.

While it might seem like a lot of progress was made during a coaching session, for results to be long-lasting, employees need additional support afterward. In fact, consistency is crucial in maintaining the momentum created during your sessions. Schedule regular one-on-one meetings, whether weekly or biweekly, so that you can follow up on action items, address new challenges, and provide ongoing support. Regular check-ins reinforce accountability and allow you to adjust coaching approaches as necessary based on the employee's evolving needs.

By following these guidelines, you can facilitate effective one-on-one coaching sessions that not only enhance individual performance but also strengthen team dynamics and contribute positively to the workplace culture.

Following the steps will only get you so far, as you also need to keep in mind a set of best practices that will make success that much easier to achieve. Let's see what those are:

To ensure your coaching efforts are delivering results, consider tracking the following key metrics:

Combining qualitative insights with quantitative data provides a clear picture of impact, enabling you to make informed decisions and adjustments to your coaching strategies.

One-on-one coaching is a strategic approach that managers must learn to utilize so that they can maximize individual and organizational success. By shifting their focus from one-size-fits-all training programs to personalized support, managers can truly unlock their team members' full potential. When implemented correctly, one-on-one coaching can foster stronger workplace relationships, improve engagement, accelerate skill development, and help create a culture of continuous learning.

If you want to make the most of one-on-one coaching initiatives, it is essential to approach them with intention. Put your employees' needs and aspirations first, engage in active listening, ask meaningful questions, and focus on long-term results rather than short-term fixes. This way, you will eventually be able to help your employees become more confident, knowledgeable, and productive in their roles.
 
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A Gilded Lounge Singer's Many Day Jobs


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Adapting your résumé into a book is not the most advisable art project. But then most of us haven't had Rex Marshall's life. If you've ever sat at Keys Lounge and... wondered how the man onstage in the gold lamé suit, the one singing into an Elvis microphone like an Oscar statue come to life -- if you've ever sat back and wondered how that dude, who sings under the nom de scène Mattress, got there, have I got a book for you. All the Work I Never Wanted is Marshall's account of shitty jobs, a slim and punchy "memoirella" from Portland small press Banana Pitch. The launch party is of course at Keys, Friday, May 1, at 7pm.

The book's chapters come like stories told in smoky green rooms and the backs of band vans. Marshall is a raconteur. But he's uninterested in packaging his CV into instructive fables. Stories of working at McDonald's (twice), at Michaels Arts and Crafts, and at the Convention Center Holiday Inn ("Hotels are really all about sex and it was the horniest job I've ever had") leave the reader to draw their own larger picture. Instead, Marshall's work tales achieve the texture of one job leading to another, aggregating to a statement about how little say we often have in how we spend our time.

The book's first and longest vignette tells of a newspaper hustle Marshall helped his dad with during high school summers. They lived in Vegas and worked overnight delivering the Las Vegas Review-Journal, which sounds like the most fantastically make-believe publication. His dad was cruel. Marshall bled into the newsprint most nights, loading 1,000 papers into the car, then folding, rubber-banding, and throwing them out the window -- hopefully before the sun came up. One night, another of the delivery guys fails to show. They curse him, having to pick up his route. He no-shows the next day. And again until, as they're delivering the Saturday paper, Marshall and his dad see a photo of the guy's exploded gold Toyota melted into the Blue Diamond Highway.
 
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