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  • Strongly recommend both of you discuss today or your boyfriend may find someone that is ambitious. It seems like your dreams and life outcomes don’t... align and this misalignment will be a sticking point.  more

  • Please your boss? WTF??? Are you looking at him with a tilted head and squinted eyes when he says that? You truly need to give him "the look" so that... he never says soemthing as stupid as that again! more

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  • It would only look ugly if you would be reporting to him or vice versa. Just operate professionally and assume no relationship ever exited.

  • Bear with the situation.

5 red flags to look for during a job search


Property is Power! Buy the block! What it means for the Black community

WHEN IT COMES TO JOB INTERVIEWS, a lot has been said about spotting warning signs in candidates -- but it's equally important for this scrutiny to go the other way. (Credit: Getty Images)

by Laura Onyeneho

It's a brutal time to be on the job hunt. Layoffs are making headlines almost daily; entire departments are being... eliminated, and competition for openings has become fierce.

When bills need paying, it's tempting to jump at the first offer that comes your way. But desperation can cloud judgment, and the wrong job can drain you faster than unemployment ever could.

That's why it's critical to recognize the red flags before you sign that offer letter. Some of them might look harmless in a job description, but once you're inside, they can translate into burnout, chaos and regret. Here are five warning signs you should never ignore.

Lack of salary information

A role that hides or vaguely hints at pay usually signals one of two things: They're underpaying and don't want to scare you off, or they want to keep things ambiguous to lowball you later.

This isn't just an inconvenience. A lack of salary transparency puts candidates at a disadvantage from the start. You invest time applying, interviewing and completing test assignments without knowing if the compensation meets your basic needs. It also makes it harder to negotiate, because the company holds all the cards until the end of the process.

With many states passing laws requiring salary ranges to be included on job postings, companies that still hide pay are waving a neon warning sign. If they're already skirting fairness and clarity during the hiring stage, what does that say about how they'll handle raises, promotions or performance reviews once you're inside?

A healthy employer knows pay is part of the conversation from day one. They're upfront about salary ranges, benefits and perks because they value your time as much as their own. Proceed with caution if you're met with silence, evasive answers, or phrases like "competitive pay" without numbers. Ambiguity around money almost always means you'll end up undervalued.

Everything sounds urgent

When a job posting emphasizes urgency, "immediate start," "must fill quickly," or "urgent need," it's worth asking why. Fast hiring is sometimes legitimate, but more often it signals high turnover. If people leave roles so quickly that managers are desperate to backfill, it points to deeper issues like poor leadership, unreasonable demands, or a toxic workplace culture.

This red flag is crucial in today's economy. Many companies are cutting staff and are not rushing to expand. So, if a posting stresses an immediate need, it's likely you're not walking into growth, but instead into damage control. You may inherit the unfinished work, strained relationships, or unresolved problems left by the person who went before you and there's a good chance you'll understand exactly why they left within a few months.

Urgency also sets the tone for your working relationship. If you're pressured to join quickly, you may be pressured just as heavily once in the role. A healthy company respects your timeline, gives space for thoughtful onboarding and sees hiring as a strategic investment. When urgency is their leading pitch, don't ignore the signal; it often means you'll be filling more than just a position. You'll be stepping into a cycle of churn.

The "Fast-paced" environment

"Fast-paced workplace" might be dressed up to sound exciting, but too often it's code for a company that lacks direction.

Inside these environments, you'll find shifting goals, last-minute pivots and projects abandoned before gaining traction. Leadership often doesn't have a clear roadmap, so employees are left scrambling to adapt to whatever the "new direction" happens to be that day. This creates frustration because the target constantly moves, no matter how hard you work. Wins are rarely celebrated because leadership has already moved on by the time you achieve them.

This lack of consistency takes a toll. It can make it hard to feel proud of your work or even know where you stand. It also signals high turnover, because people quickly burn out from the constant instability. A truly dynamic workplace provides structure while embracing change strategically. If all you see in the description are buzzwords about speed and adaptability, you're likely walking into chaos disguised as opportunity.

Overemphasis on "Family Culture"

At first glance, it appears supportive. Who doesn't want to be part of a workplace where people care about each other? But it's often shorthand for a culture with weak boundaries. Families blur the lines between personal and professional life. In a job setting, that can mean late-night messages and unspoken pressure to put the company's needs before yours.

Actual healthy workplaces don't need to rely on family metaphors. They respect your time, your off-hours, and your need for balance. They offer flexibility when life happens, but they don't manipulate you into sacrificing your well-being in the name of togetherness. If a job pitch relies too heavily on family language, prepare for an environment where boundaries are often overlooked and overwork is normalized.

Unrealistic job expectations

Have you seen these postings that tell you that you need 5 years of experience for an entry-level salary, three advanced certifications, mastery of six software platforms and the ability to lead, manage, and execute all at once? It's a bit of an exaggeration, but you get it.

A laundry list of impossible qualifications usually means it's a warning that expectations inside the job will be just as unreasonable. You'll constantly be asked to do more than what's possible within your role, and deadlines will always be crushing. You'll be expected to do many tasks outside your primary role and usually the explanation would be that it's supposed to help build your skillset for the future. But it really means that when that performance evaluation hits, they will find enough faults in your work not to give you that promotion or raise.
 
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  • This guy has talked about all the descriptions in current jobs

2   
  • That 'friend' is only helping with your character development.

  • It means exactly what it states, be friends, not partners, not lovers.

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  • Hello Dear,
    At this point, it’s clear to every professional that the issue isn’t about individual performance or a lack of understanding of how to... apply effectively. Rather, it stems from the current unfair recruitment practices. In many cases, having personal connections or relationships with influential individuals within an organization has become the main factor determining opportunities . This is a reality that many recruiters seem to follow nowadays. more

  • It's not the right time yet. Hold on in time you'll be hired

How To Make More Money As a Freelancer: 5 Simple Strategies


Growing your income can feel even harder, especially when you're a one-person business with a limited number of hours each week. The good news is you don't need to double your workload to earn more.

You need clearer positioning, a stronger presence in the places clients already look, and offers that reward your expertise rather than your time.

With a few practical changes, how you present... yourself, how you follow up, how you price, and what you sell, you can raise your average project value, smooth out feast-and-famine cycles, and build income that doesn't rely only on client hours.

Think of your LinkedIn profile as a landing page, not an online résumé. In your headline and about section, say plainly who you help, the problem you solve, and the outcomes you deliver. Replace vague claims with proof, brief case notes, measurable results, or recognisable client names if you're allowed to share them.

Post short, helpful content several times a week that shows your expertise: quick how-to tips, a before-and-after from a recent project, or a short thread explaining your process.

Then connect intentionally with decision-makers in your target industry and send friendly, concise messages that focus on their goals rather than your services. Consistency here matters more than perfection; steady visibility turns into steady inquiries.

Many freelancers overlook the warm opportunities right around them. Tell friends, former coworkers, local business groups, online communities, and your social audiences that you have capacity for new projects and briefly describe the type of client you serve best.

Revisit old leads and proposals that went quiet; timing changes, budgets free up, and a polite follow-up often revives a good conversation. After you finish a successful project, ask the client if they know one person who might benefit from the same result.

Make that referral easy with a short blurb they can forward and, if it fits your model, offer a simple thank-you such as a discount on their next engagement or a small referral fee. Word-of-mouth leads tend to close faster and at better rates because trust is already present.

It is usually easier and cheaper to sell more to a happy client than to win a brand-new one. Look at your current accounts and ask where you can add strategic value. If you mainly deliver implementation work, offer a roadmap session, audit, or quarterly strategy review.

If you build once-off assets, add ongoing optimisation or maintenance. Package your services in clear tiers, good, better, best,so clients can graduate to a level that matches their goals. Position upsells around outcomes rather than tasks:

"Increase qualified leads by 25% in 90 days" is more compelling than "five extra landing pages." When clients see a path to bigger results, they see a reason to invest more with you.

Rates should reflect demand, skill, and the value you create, not just the hours you spend. If your calendar is full or your expertise has grown, it's time to review pricing. Consider moving from hourly billing to project-based or retainer pricing so you capture the value of efficiency and avoid the ceiling that hourly creates.

Roll out new rates first for new inquiries, then, with clear advance notice, for existing clients at renewal or the start of a new scope. Anchor price changes to tangible improvements: faster delivery, better results, wider capabilities, or expanded support.

A confident, transparent explanation paired with options helps good clients stay while aligning your income with the impact you deliver.

Client work pays well, but it ties income to your availability. Turn a repeatable slice of your expertise into a small digital product: a practical template pack, a short video workshop, a step-by-step playbook, or a mini-course that solves a focused problem.

Start narrow and specific, with one pain point, one promise, and one clear outcome. Then, sell it through your website, email list, and LinkedIn. A simple funnel works: teach something useful in public, invite people to a deeper resource, and offer an optional upgrade such as a live Q&A or a one-hour consult.

Over time, products can become a reliable second income stream, smoothing cash flow and giving you the freedom to be choosier with client projects.
 
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Introvert Marketers: Turn Your Job Hunting into a Campaign


Job hunting can feel like a full-time job, and an awkward one at that. Especially if you are an introvert marketer.

But here's the thing: you already know how to market something. You have done it for brands, products, and SaaS platforms. You understand funnels, CTAs, and positioning.

So why not apply what you're already good at for your own good?

If job hunting is your campaign, your audience... is everything. But unlike an ad campaign, your audience is not defined by demographics or interests.

Let's break down your potential segments.

Recruiters are your top-of-funnel awareness stage. They do not have final say, but they control visibility. Their goal is simple: filter, shortlist, and move fast.

They skim profiles in seconds, so you need clarity, not poetry. Think of recruiters as your SEO algorithm. They do not read for nuance; they scan for relevance.

Pro tip: Mirror their language. If a job post says "growth strategy," not "marketing innovation," you say "growth strategy." Optimize like you would for Google, because in their inbox, you are one of a hundred results.

Hiring managers are your middle-of-funnel audience. They are not looking for buzzwords; they are looking for competence. They ask, "Can this person solve my problem?"

They care about outcomes, not adjectives. Focus on results over roles.

Introverts tend to shine here because data talks louder than self-promotion.

These are your bottom-of-funnel decision-makers. They think long-term and look for alignment. They want to know if you understand brand narrative, retention, and customer lifecycle.

For them, storytelling is your differentiator. Use your portfolio, blog, or case study to show how you think, not just what you have done.

Agencies thrive on speed and adaptability. They want marketers who can juggle campaigns, clients, and caffeine without losing focus.

Show range, from SEO to PPC, from strategy to execution, but keep it grounded in measurable impact.

Startups do not want employees; they want co-conspirators. They value initiative and scrappiness over polish. Show that you have built things, not just managed them.

Prove that you can think like an owner - someone who spots problems, builds solutions fast, and doesn't wait for permission to make things better.

Sometimes your next opportunity does not come from HR. It comes from a DM.

Peers notice your thought leadership, not your cover letter. Contribute insights, comment thoughtfully, and let quiet credibility do the rest.

Your CV is not a biography. It is a conversion tool. Think of it as a landing page that sells one thing: you.

Recruiters spend an average of six seconds scanning a CV. That is literally shorter than a TikTok ad. So you need structure and clarity, not fluff.

Instead of saying:

"Responsible for social media content."

Say:

"Created multi-channel content that increased engagement by 60 percent and lowered CPC by 22 percent."

Numbers are your testimonials, and every marketer knows they convert better than adjectives.

Design matters too. White space beats gimmicks. Readability beats creativity. If your CV looks like a dense email from 2012 (or worse, a homepage from 2002), you are already losing traffic.

Everyone hates writing cover letters. They feel awkward, repetitive, and often sound robotic. But skipping them is a mistake. The cover letter is the only part of your funnel where you can sound human.

Think of it as ad copy: short, emotional, and designed to move one person, the hiring manager, to click reply.

Use the simple structure marketers already know. Hook, Value, CTA.

You can create tailored letters in minutes by matching your resume, the job description, and your tone of voice.

You probably already use dashboards and track numbers for each of your marketing campaigns. So why not do that for your whole career?

Every job application is a campaign touchpoint. Your LinkedIn visibility is awareness, your interviews are consideration, and your offers are conversions.

Track them like you would a marketing funnel:

When you measure, you improve. The data shows you where to double down and where your funnel is leaking.

You do not need to manually follow up or drown in spreadsheets. Use tools you already know.

Even better, automate follow-ups with personalized templates. Think of it as lead nurturing: polite, consistent, and on-brand.

If you are getting profile views but no callbacks, your messaging (CV) needs optimization. If interviews go well but offers stall, your conversion copy (cover letter or presentation) might need a tweak.

Use the same mindset you would bring to a campaign post-mortem. Ask yourself:

Job hunting is not about sending 100 resumes. It is about identifying what works and scaling that.

In marketing, customer retention is key: the best ROI comes from repeat customers. The same is true for your career.

Therefore, you need to nurture your network like an email list. Stay top-of-mind with thoughtful follow-ups, shared insights, and real conversations. Be the name people remember when an opportunity opens.

Keep creating, even when you are not job hunting. Share insights, post case studies, write about what you have learned. Each post is a brand touchpoint. Each interaction is another impression in your long-term awareness game.

Re-engage old contacts, too. That recruiter who ghosted you? Follow up months later, not to ask for a job but to share what you have been working on. That is retention marketing in action.

You do not need to network louder; you need to stay in the game.

Introverts are wired for precision, not noise.

Define your audience. Craft your message. Build your funnel. Measure your results. Then play the long game.

Like you would do for any other marketing aspect, so why not for your marketing career per se?
 
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  • I think the student should always come first no exceptions. How old are these students?
    Unless this teacher is an expert at teaching discipline,... students should come first. more

  • Actually if the teacher is good you can do one thing. You can split her lesson into 30 minutes to have a break. Another person will over look the... class for 10 minutes break to eat her food in staff room to avoid the children to understand her health problem. At the same time you can advise her to seek medical care . more

Inquiry Unveils Hidden Racism in Aussie Workplaces


A national inquiry into racism in Australian workplaces would provide a long-overdue opportunity to expose systemic discrimination and drive meaningful reform across industries, according to national non-profit SSI.

CEO Violet Roumeliotis said SSI welcomed calls today from the Australian Human Rights Commission (AHRC) for a first-of-its-kind inquiry specifically focused on workplace... racism.

"Racism has no place in Australia, including in Australian workplaces. Employees from all backgrounds should feel safe and welcome in workplaces across the country. Every worker should be able to pursue their careers without confronting racist barriers and attitudes," she said.

"We commend the AHRC for this important initiative and stand ready to contribute to the inquiry to ensure the voices of our communities are heard," she said.

SSI has spent 25 years working alongside migrant and refugee communities, and its frontline experience -- backed by research from its Billion Dollar Benefit campaign -- shows that workplace racism remains a daily reality for many.

"We know that racism is not just an interpersonal issue -- it is embedded in the systems and structures that shape employment outcomes," said Ms Roumeliotis.

"Almost half of permanent migrants in Australia work below their skill level. We know racism is a key factor, with migrants from non-OECD countries facing significantly higher underutilisation rates -- 50 per cent -- compared to 39 per cent for those from OECD countries and 35 per cent for Australian-born workers. Applicants from 'ethnic' backgrounds are also 57 per cent less likely to be considered for leadership roles, even when submitting identical résumés."

Ms Roumeliotis said recruitment processes in Australia continue to discriminate against job seekers based on name and language, with identical résumés often producing different outcomes.

"Even when Australian-born workers have low English proficiency, they are still less likely to be underutilised than migrants with the same proficiency. This disparity makes it clear that language alone does not explain the gap," she said.

"There is a weight of evidence pointing to a crisis bubbling beneath the surface of Australian workplaces. The best way to bring these issues to light -- and to the forefront of national attention -- is through an inquiry, as proposed by the AHRC."

Ms Roumeliotis highlighted that addressing racism in Australian workplaces was first and foremost about fairness and equity, but that it also made sense for businesses seeking to improve their performance.

"Time and time again research has shown that workforce diversity is important for business innovation and performance, and addressing workplace racism is key to unlocking these benefits.

"At the economy-wide level, our research has shown there is a billion-dollar benefit at stake, with Australia missing out on $9 billion each year because we fail to fully harness the skills of migrants."

The AHRC's proposed inquiry aligns with the goals of the National Anti-Racism Framework, which SSI strongly supports. A national inquiry would help uncover racism not only in interpersonal interactions but also at institutional, structural, and systemic levels -- improving Australia's understanding of racism and informing more effective anti-racism policies and programs.

"An inquiry of this nature sends a powerful message about who we are as a nation. It affirms our commitment to respect, fairness, and opportunity for all -- values that should be reflected in every Australian workplace," said Ms Roumeliotis.

SSI looks forward to working with the AHRC and other stakeholders to advance this critical conversation and help shape a more equitable future for all Australians.

About us:

SSI delivers a range of human services that connect individuals, families, and children from diverse backgrounds with opportunities - including settlement support, disability programs, community engagement initiatives and training and employment pathways. At the heart of everything we do is a drive for equality, empathy, and celebration of every individual.

/Public Release. This material from the originating organization/author(s) might be of the point-in-time nature, and edited for clarity, style and length. Mirage.News does not take institutional positions or sides, and all views, positions, and conclusions expressed herein are solely those of the author(s).
 
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FFWD | The Next Wave of News


Opinion piece by Nikoletta Constantinou, Senior Talent Acquisition Specialist at Exness

When you've listened to people talk about their careers, one thing stands out: behind every title and résumé is a person still figuring out what success really means. Because careers aren't built once. They evolve, just like the people who live them.

If you had told me 10 years ago that I'd build a career in... recruitment, I probably wouldn't have believed you. I studied finance, started out as an auditor, and thought my career path was set. But somewhere early along the way, I realized that the part of my work I loved most wasn't the numbers, it was the people. That realization led me to make a change, and it has been one of the best decisions I've ever made.

Eight years later, I've interviewed over 1,000 people across industries, roles, and career stages, and I've discovered something important: careers don't follow a script. They're messy, surprising, and very personal.

Here are four lessons that stand out most clearly:

For years, we were told careers should look like ladders: one step after another, climbing ever upward. But in reality? Most careers look more like zigzag paths.

Mine certainly did, from finance to auditing to talent acquisition. And many of the most inspiring people I've spoken to had similar twists in their careers: engineers who became founders, marketers who became teachers, professionals who took sabbaticals and came back stronger.

The common thread isn't a straight path; it's the ability to connect the dots and own the journey.

Tip: Embrace the twists. They can reveal new opportunities you could not plan for.

Over hundreds of interviews, it became obvious that the candidates who stand out aren't necessarily the ones with the longest list of achievements. They're the ones who demonstrate self-awareness.

They can talk honestly about their strengths, but also about their blind spots. They know what motivates them and what environments bring out their best. That kind of clarity is magnetic. It shows honesty, humility, and confidence.

As a Senior Talent Acquisition Specialist at Exness, I see every day how self-awareness fuels not only better careers but also stronger teams.

Tip: A great interview starts with understanding and embracing who you are.

When people talk about success, the usual points that come up are: salary, job titles, or reputable companies on the CV. However, after 1,000+ conversations, I've learned that true fulfillment looks very different from person to person.

For some, success means the flexibility to spend more time with family. For others, it's more about the freedom to innovate or the satisfaction of continuous learning. I've also noticed how definitions change over time. Early-career professionals often focus on prestige. Later, many value impact, autonomy, and working with good people the most.

In any case, success that's defined on your own terms is likely to be more sustainable and meaningful.

Tip: Redefine "success" every few years to reflect who you are becoming.

If I had to bet on one trait that predicts long-term success, it would be curiosity. The professionals who thrive are the ones who ask questions, explore new ideas, and adapt when circumstances change. Curiosity makes people bold enough to take risks, open to feedback, and resilient in the face of uncertainty.

Being bold is a value we live by at Exness, and curiosity is the fuel behind being bold. It drives us to step outside comfort zones and embrace change.

In a world that evolves faster than ever, curiosity isn't optional. It's everything.

Tip: Stay curious. Every question you ask moves your career in the right direction.

After more than 1,000 career conversations, I've realized that we are probably all searching for the same thing: a path that feels like ours.

And I say this not just as someone who's listened, but as someone who's been there too. I've been in the same seat myself, as a candidate, a learner, and a person trying to find the right fit, unsure of what to say next or which exact direction to take.

So, when it comes down to it, just remember that interviewing and career planning work both ways. It's not just about securing the next role, but about building a life and career that align with who you are and who you want to become.

If you want to find out where your next step could take you, maybe start by asking the same questions you'd expect in an interview.
 
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  • I had an incident where I interviewed Thursday agency set that up and was offered the job. The agency told me if I had any questions to email the... person I interviewed with. I sent her an email yesterday thinking she would see it today. I asked a question about holidays and the hours are they flexible it was work from home. I was totally floored when she said they were retracting my offer? I am sure that was my answered prayer that door shut. Employers now are ridiculous  more

  • This is a common theme my clients ask me. It depends on several factors. If you would like email me or in box me I would be happy to give you... 15-minutes to discuss more

Never eat the candy on your pillow: Freedom demands


While I may feel like I'm stumbling through life on the outside, I know my commitment to growth makes all the difference -- especially now that I feel more free to be myself

Few things are more unsettling than uncertainty, especially when being released from prison after many years of incarceration, with no job or serious prospects.

I found myself facing freedom without a clear path forward, and... my mind constantly raced with questions: Where will I live? How will I support myself? Where do I start?

These questions don't just reflect my own personal fears; they reveal a much larger societal need to provide support and assistance to those reentering society after incarceration. Without help, uncertainty can quickly turn into frustration or even desperation -- and we don't always act rationally when we feel desperate.

Preparation can make a significant difference. I saw men come back to my prison after being released, and I vowed that would never be me. Well before I even knew I'd be released, I gathered information about housing, employment opportunities, and community resources. I sought out mentors, counselors, and others who could offer advice on successfully reintegrating. Before my release, I knew it was crucial to seek out information and build a network so I wouldn't have to face these challenges alone.

I thought I had everything figured out.

What if I told you that I submitted over 60 employment applications and had more than 30 interviews? Would you be surprised to learn that I was rejected by every single employer after they took a look at my background check?

Most interviewers weren't rude or malicious. Some even apologized for passing me over for the job. Apparently for most companies, there was no good way to hire someone with my criminal convictions. Business is business, right?

Still, even after a steady stream of disappointments, I refused to let rejection define me. Instead, I looked for less conventional employment by exploring temp agencies and looking into gigs as a day laborer. More broadly, I leaned on support groups and stayed connected with others who understood my struggle. Each setback, though frustrating, made me more resilient and pushed me to keep searching for a place where my past wouldn't automatically disqualify me from having a future.

The road was far from easy, but I learned that persistence and a willingness to adapt could open doors I'd never expected.

It's been a humbling experience, jumping from dirty job to dirty job. I've cleaned people's houses, mowed lawns, gardened, assembled furniture, and even shoveled mounds of horse manure, just to pay my parole supervision fees and provide for myself. Though certainly not ideal, I saw these jobs as gifts given to me by people who recognized my willingness to work. While this work was hard, it paled in comparison to the emotional work I was doing to adjust to life outside. In case you didn't know: Being free is a tremendous amount of work.

I'm not a saint. I certainly have bad days. I feel frustrated that I cannot earn a living as a writer, the way that I'd hoped. But every day, I remind myself that each task -- no matter how small or strenuous -- is a step toward something greater.

But reader, sometimes I feel like the little bit of good I have is robbing someone else of work, support, or care. I know this is a scarcity mindset, but the city I live in is filled with unhoused, jobless, seemingly broken people -- many of whom have a criminal background, the same as me. This lends to the feeling that any meager side job I get somehow takes an opportunity away from someone else. Then one day at church while serving breakfast, I got some helpful advice from an unhoused man we'll call Mitch.

It was one of those days when I was feeling less than stellar about my circumstances. Though grateful for the small jobs I picked up here and there, I obsessed over finding steady employment. Sensing my mood, Mitch struck up a conversation with me, making a joke about his unemployment being the "vacation" he never intended to take.

He explained that he once worked on an assembly line, and when he was laid off, he sought respite in the bottle. I mentioned that I was feeling dejected about my own prospects, explaining all the recent job interviews and rejections. Mitch said something I initially thought was a joke: He told me to look at each job interview as if it were merely "an opportunity to meet new people." I shouldn't get so worked up about whether I'd get the job, he said. Instead, I should just be transparent about my situation and see what happens.

The inevitable background check always felt like the ax about to fall on an otherwise good interview. It never occurred to me that I could tell my story on my own terms, in my own words. I thanked Mitch for the advice and offered him what little money I had. He declined, making another joke about how he's terrible with money because he has so little of it. What he did accept was my promise that I'd be myself at my next job interview.

Putting Mitch's advice into practice felt like a turning point. It also made me realize that when I worried about taking opportunities from others, the reason was that I didn't believe I was deserving of the blessings I received. That's what incarceration does to people; it makes them feel unworthy of life outside.

As I walked into my next interview, I carried Mitch's words with me, and I reminded myself that the interview process was a chance to connect. Letting go of my anxiety and embracing authenticity, I found myself speaking with genuine openness about my experiences and aspirations. The interviewers responded with curiosity rather than judgment, and for the first time, I felt seen -- not only for my past but for my potential.

This newfound perspective shifted my approach entirely, helping me realize that each encounter, whether in a church kitchen or a professional office, could be a step toward building trust and discovering new opportunities. For the first time, I left an interview with hope, grateful for the lessons learned from both the struggle and the kindness of others. For once, I really felt OK with whatever came next.

I am proud to say that I finally received a job offer!

While I know our value isn't measured by whether we work, the sense of validation I felt was overwhelming. It was as if all of the effort I poured into proving my reliability and determination was finally paying off. Accepting the position marked the beginning of a new chapter, one where hope replaced uncertainty. With gratitude, I am doing my best to embrace whatever challenges lie ahead, knowing that freedom demands continuous effort and a commitment to growth.

I also understand that the path to rebuilding life outside isn't just about securing employment; it's about learning, adapting, and building trust each day with the people I'm now in community with.

Several weeks later, I saw Mitch again. He was standing in the breakfast line, drunk and belligerent. Once he had his food, he kept to himself, sitting as far from others as possible.

When he finished eating, Mitch caught me by the arm and asked whether I had gotten a job yet. I nodded, and he gave me a big grin. We sat outside the church together, him smoking cheap cigarettes and me nursing a glass of orange juice. I told him all about the interview. Mitch congratulated me and shared his own big news: He planned to quit drinking. His liver was failing, and he wanted to put his past assembly line experience to use long enough to get health insurance.

I didn't know how to take Mitch's revelation; it was both heavy and heartening. I went inside and fixed him a to-go plate. Mitch took the food and smiled. He looked hopeful.
 
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  • I served as an instructor at a Canadian agricultural college where I taught a career development course to our agribusiness students. Our advice to... students was "the interview is always on". In other words all observable behaviours on the part of the job candidate could be taken into account by a prospective employer. This included how the candidate drove in the parking lot at the interview location, how he or she interacted with reception or administrative staff and so on. The corollary is the employer is interested in the entire package the candidate presents. Dress, speech, resume and so forth. It also includes one's social media identity and content. In short, the prospective employer has a vested interest in knowing what kind of "ambassador" the job candidate would make for the company. Yes, with some employers, that little coffee stain on the tie, the popular profanity used in the reception area, along with the other matters discussed in this thread are noted.
    Faced with a decision between two seemingly equivalent candidates, I once opted for the individual who noticed a file cabinet drawer at floor level had been carelessly been left open posing a hazard. She quietly reached down and closed the drawer in the course of our office tour following her interview. Guess who got the job?
     more

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  • I'm curious. Let's pretend you're the HR recruiter. What if the job required a relatively higher level of organization and presentation skills and... attention to detail was considered essential to job success. You have three applicants with equivalent credentials and experience. Would you take the relative quality of their resumes into account?  more

I'm in my 40s and on my third career change. I got rejected from 83 jobs last month but I'm not losing hope.


In September I applied to over 80 jobs and didn't get any job offers.

In September, I applied to 83 jobs -- and got ghosted or rejected by every single one.

While I've been working since 2000 in different industries, I'm starting a new career following my passion in design. I have an internship, but need a full time job to cover the bills.

Job hunting at 43 has become a full-time hustle -- and... a brutal reminder that starting over never gets easier, no matter how many times you do it.

I was a bartender for 15 years before becoming a doula around 2015, diving into birth, postpartum, and end-of-life work and education. That work was deeply fulfilling. I supported people through life's most vulnerable moments, but the financial instability and long overnight shifts took their toll after nearly a decade.

When the pandemic hit New York City in 2020, doulas were temporarily banned from hospitals. Suddenly, I had time to reimagine what I wanted next. I'd always loved technology and computer science but figured that without a bachelor's degree, that dream wasn't for me.

But something shifted during the pandemic. My mindset changed from "Maybe someday" to "it's now or never."

I started doing things that scared me: trying pole dancing, saying no without guilt, and pursuing a career that many would say I wasn't "qualified" for.

Fast forward to November 2022, I enrolled in Springboard's UX/UI Design Career Track. I felt it in my gut, this was the right move. But I also knew I needed to make a financial shift from being an independent contractor (as a doula) to earning steady hourly pay. I transitioned into studio management and slowly began planning my exit from birth work.

By 2024, I had fully retired from my doula career. Working hourly jobs brought new challenges, but I learned how to advocate for myself, negotiate raises, and apply both soft and technical skills to every new role. I've now changed paid positions three times not because I'm inconsistent, but because I've fought for growth, for better pay, and for opportunities to use my design and management skills.

In September 2025, I made it my mission to apply to at least three companies every night. My résumé looked strong, my portfolio was solid for my level of experience, and my determination was unshakable.

Still, the rejections piled up. Eighty-three applications later, I hadn't received a single interview. Not one.

What I find most disturbing about this product design job-hunting saga is that I've applied to nearly a hundred positions and have nothing to show for it.

Making a career change in 2025 shouldn't feel this impossible.

I have close friends in tech, engineers and product designers, who remind me that breaking in takes time, persistence, and resilience. I've experienced this wave of disappointment before: when I became a bartender, when I transitioned to being a doula, and now as a product designer. Each time, I started from scratch, built new skills, and found my footing.

Right now, I'm working as an executive assistant, a role that combines many of the skills I've developed over the years: empathy, organization, communication, and creative problem-solving. And I'm still designing part-time at 5wins, staying connected to the craft and community that remind me why I chose this path in the first place.

The truth is, rejection still stings. But I've learned that every "no" brings me closer to the right "yes." Reinvention isn't easy, it takes courage, grit, and the ability to rebuild your sense of worth again and again. I may be on my third career change, but I'm far from done.
 
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Confessions of a job hugger: Still at my desk, still in denial


"Welcome to Job Huggers Anonymous," chirps the facilitator, clutching her clipboard like it contains the secret to joy. "We're here because we can't stop holding jobs that no longer love us back. Let's start with introductions."

Lila leans forward as if she planned to leak state secrets. "I hate my job so much I fantasize about being fired. Not brutally fired -- just gently escorted out with a... box and some dignity."

"I'm Pete." The man's T-shirt once had a logo; now it's just ambition washed out of cotton. He exhales hard enough to make the fern tremble. "I keep telling myself I'm staying for the pension. But at this point, I think the pension's staying for me."

Then a woman in a wrinkled blazer slumps forward. "I'm Ellen. Eight years since I updated my résumé. My boss calls me 'reliable'; that's HR for 'too tired to quit.'"

The group nods in weary communion. Their mantra rolls out in unison: One day at a time. One pointless staff meeting at a time.

The room's imaginary, but the epidemic's real. Job huggers -- employees clinging to roles long past their expiration date -- lurk in cubicles in many workplaces. According to Monster's 2025 Job Hugging Report, 48% of surveyed employees say they stay in their current role for comfort, security or stability.

For these employees, job hugging is the workplace version of comfort food: familiar, filling and guaranteed to leave you sluggish. They don't love their jobs but don't see anything better on the horizon. They stay because the devil they know offers dental coverage, even though the spark that once made them excited about their jobs wheezes for oxygen.

Behind many "grateful to have a job" smiles sits quiet dread. Sunday nights hit like sentencing hearings. Job huggers run mental marathons of justification: Maybe my boss will retire. Maybe next quarter will improve. Maybe leadership will finally hire that extra person they promised back when TikTok was new.

Spoiler: They won't.

The truth: Job huggers don't cling to jobs; they cling to security, identity and even social connection. Letting go of a problem job before an employee finds a new landing spot feels like jumping from a plane without a functioning parachute.

What employers need to know

Job hugging isn't just an employee issue. When a once-bright performer morphs into a chair-shaped life form, productivity nosedives. Caffeine and sighing can't replace engagement.

Smart employers treat job huggers as early warning sensors. When employees stop growing, it's often because:

* Employees don't see a future -- but can see a flabby job market.

* Recognition trails behind workload like an unpaid intern.

* Management drifted off somewhere between "budget cuts" and "we'll circle back."

If your employees feel like they're surviving a job instead of living a career, your culture isn't stable -- it's stagnant, and the cure isn't motivational posters or forced karaoke. Ask yourself: What can you offer that makes your employees want to re-engage? People rarely stop striving when they feel challenged, trusted and valued.

What job huggers need to hear

If you spotted yourself in that support group, no one's telling you to torch your career. Just loosen your grip before the job suffocates both of you.

Ask yourself:

* Would I hire myself for this job today?

* Am I staying in my position because it fits -- or because fear does?

* What would I chase if I trusted my skills could land somewhere else?

Even if you're not ready to leap, move an inch. Update your résumé -- not to quit, but to remember your own story. Ask your manager for stretch work. Find a mentor who tells you the truth instead of handing you a mug that says "Team Player."

The act of looking outward can rekindle something inward. You stand taller when you remember you could walk.

The final confession

At the end of every Job Huggers Anonymous meeting, the facilitator leads the closing affirmation: "We celebrate the jobs we stay in after we've left."

Everyone claps politely, gathers their coats and trudges back to the same jobs tomorrow -- but maybe not forever.

If you're at that meeting, you don't have to quit today, without a viable job on the horizon. You do have to shake off inertia. Sometimes the healthiest way to hold on to yourself is to finally let go of what no longer fits.
 
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Principal Financial Group: Leadership and Development


Originally published in Principal Financial Group 2024 Sustainability Report

Leadership and development

We encourage employees to expand their knowledge, build new skills, and continuously develop by providing a variety of opportunities that best suit their needs. This includes formal development opportunities, experiential and on-the-go education, and professional relationship building.

Our... approach

We offer employees a wide array of development opportunities including new hire onboarding and ongoing role-specific training that includes asynchronous and synchronous learning opportunities, simulation and role-play, videos, and e-learning courses.

New leaders in the U.S. experience 20 hours of onboarding related to being an effective and inclusive leader, and we offer numerous ways for leaders to continue to refine their leadership skills over the course of their career.

Employees can engage in learning within a broad range of topics, such as growing technical skills, enabling high-performing teams, and building inclusion and career development capabilities. Employees have access to sessions focused on life skills through our EAP provider.

Short-term growth assignments are also available to learn and apply skills outside their formal role. Additional opportunities exist for role rotations, job shadowing, mentoring, and pursuing further education or skills training.

We also offer a collegiate internship program and a variety of rotational programs for recent graduates.

Leaders provide feedback to employees and engage them in reflection and development planning annually. We promote a culture that encourages employees to reflect on their performance, provide feedback to their peers, and share development recommendations to their managers.

We continue to find ways to expand access to and engagement in the core development programs we offer.

By the end of 2025, we aim to:

In 2024, we made significant progress toward these goals.

We are continuing to market our programs and align them with business and employee priorities to help increase participation in these programs. Additionally, as we enhance our engagement tracking capabilities, we will also refine our targets to ensure they are aligned with the realities of our business and employee needs.

Learning and growth opportunities

In 2024, our employees participated in 92,924 hours of voluntary learning and development, which is equal to about 4.7 hours per employee. Leaders specifically engaged in 13,382 hours of voluntary learning and development in 2024.

In 2024, approximately 162 employees participated in our educational assistance program that offers employees financial assistance with their job-related educational pursuits. In 2024, this totaled over $993,799 in investment by the organization.

We hired 219 interns in 2024 and continued our focus on early and mid-level career opportunities. Our conversion rate for interns to full-time roles was 69%.

We have partnerships with a wide range of organizations, including Jobs for America's Graduates (iJAG), Girls Who Invest, Sponsors for Educational Opportunity, the Organization of Latino Actuaries (OLA), the Association of Latino Professionals for America (ALPFA), and the International Association of Black Actuaries. These partnerships help us build relationships and educate potential job candidates on the career opportunities available at Principal®.

In 2024, we also piloted a 12-month immersive apprentice program for early career roles, broadening our talent investment among individuals without four-year degrees or experience in financial services. We're excited by the first few months of the program and look forward to sharing the outcomes after the first cohort completes the program.

In 2024, 96.1% of global employees received a rating as part of an annual performance review process which allows employees and their leaders to reflect on the prior year's performance, and setting goals for the year ahead.

To learn more, read the Principal Financial Group 2024 Sustainability Report.

Insurance products issued by Principal National Life Insurance Co (except in NY) and Principal Life Insurance Company®. Plan administrative services offered by Principal Life. Principal Funds, Inc. is distributed by Principal Funds Distributor, Inc. Securities offered through Principal Securities, Inc., member SIPC and/or independent broker/dealers. Referenced companies are members of the Principal Financial Group®, Des Moines, IA 50392.

Based on full-time eligibility and offers extended and accepted
 
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North Korean APT Utilizes AI Deepfakes in Remote Job Interview Infiltrations - Cyberwarzone


North Korean state-sponsored threat actors, identified as the Famous Chollima APT group, are reportedly employing real-time AI-powered facial filters during video job interviews to conceal their identities. These sophisticated tactics aim to infiltrate Western cryptocurrency and Web3 companies for corporate espionage and illicit fund acquisition. This development marks an evolving method within... the group's established pattern of targeting sensitive industries through social engineering.

The campaign involves operatives using stolen legitimate identities and résumés of engineers to apply for software engineering roles. During video interviews, AI-powered facial filters are deployed to disguise their appearance while impersonating their victims. Threat intelligence analysts from the Quetzal Team documented two such infiltration attempts targeting a cryptocurrency company, highlighting a persistent effort by these actors to breach secure organizations through human-element vulnerabilities.

Famous Chollima, a recognized division of the Lazarus Group, primarily targets software engineering positions in the Crypto, Web3, and Fintech sectors, with recent reports indicating an expansion into civil engineering and architecture. In the documented instances, the threat actors impersonated Mexican engineers named Mateo and Alfredo. Both claimed to have studied at Mexican universities and resided in specific Mexican states but were unable to speak Spanish when questioned, according to the Quetzal Team's investigation.

During the interviews, the deepfake technology exhibited noticeable failures. One candidate's face appeared heavily filtered, with their mouth remaining shut while speaking and teeth not accompanying lip movements. Another operative displayed nervous behavior, including constant rocking and exaggerated facial gestures. Both individuals' LinkedIn profiles vanished immediately after their interviews were terminated, a pattern consistent with previous Chollima infiltration attempts documented by the Quetzal Team.

Further investigation revealed that the operatives connected through Astrill VPN, a service frequently used by Chinese users to bypass internet restrictions and increasingly favored by DPRK IT workers for fraudulent activities. Their connections were routed through European IP addresses before terminating on US-based residential IPs. These residential IPs were likely sourced from laptop farms accessed via remote desktop tools, a method designed to mask their North Korean origin and appear as US-based candidates.

This advanced social engineering technique underscores the ongoing challenges for organizations engaged in remote hiring. Previous incidents illustrate the financial and legal ramifications of such schemes; in July, an Arizona woman received an 8.5-year prison sentence for assisting North Korean hackers in a $17 million IT job fraud involving over 300 US companies. A May 2025 report also indicated that North Korean hackers had previously stolen over $88 million by impersonating US IT professionals using fake identities. Implementing stringent background checks, national ID verification, and, where permissible, recorded interviews are measures organizations can take to confirm candidate authenticity and mitigate risks.
 
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