• Just remain calm and professional for the sake of work and once training is done part ways.

6   
  • Sounds like harassment! Ignore her, stop discussing with others. Go through HR and request a joint mtg with a supervisor or mediator. Explain the... facts, not hear / say. This should end her behavior. If not, it will at least cause it to be entered in her employee record more

  • Oh, my god!

10   
  • Hello every one and Happy New year.
    The company I was working for as an Accountant for the last 8 years unfortunately relocated to another country... in October last year and most of us in the company were affected by losing our jobs. Currently I am looking for an opening, if anyone knows of any available opportunity not limited to my profession kindly let me know where I can apply I will really appreciate.  more

  • I'm currently looking for the position of Human Resources Manager in an Hospitality Industry. Thank you

Exclusive | LI teen starts 'career closet' for students, locals to dress for...


A Long Island teen has established a one-stop shop offering her female classmates a free professional clothing wardrobe and is getting local women to look sharp during job interviews, all out of the goodness of her heart.

"I love helping people, and it's nice to see how they feel once they are being helped, and how confident they get," Smithtown West senior Alexandra DeDonato told The Post.

"I... realized that it was like a lot of work to help others, but it's worth it."

DeDonato brought the concept of loaning out free clothes to those in need to her school after working over the summer at Brookhaven's chapter of Dress For Success, which provides unemployed women with proper attire as they prepare to re-enter the workforce.

"It actually felt like I was helping people, especially seeing it in person," she said, adding, "so many women came up to say thank you."

DeDonato, a Girl Scout since first grade, then brought the idea of a "career closet" to her school for her Gold Award project, the Scouts' highest achievable honor.

Troop 2479's standout approached friends, family, and locals to donate their professional garments and ran a clothing drive a few weeks ago.

She acquired over 100 items, including nice blouses, suit jackets, and blazers for girls at her school.

"People were very eager to help," said DeDonato, a varsity volleyball player who is also involved in the National Honor Society.

They are kept neatly hanging in a closet near administrative offices in the middle of the campus and have been used by students who need something sophisticated on short notice, such as for a sudden job interview or academic function.

It's getting regular use from students in DECA, a nationwide entrepreneurship club of which DeDonato is involved. Fellow DECA teens who are rehearsing for job interviews after school hours commonly borrow suits or blazers for their mock interviews to practice dressing the part.

The Girl Scouts require 85 hours of public service for the Gold Award, but DeDonato happily put in over 100 hours throughout the fall semester for her personal project runway.

She ended up taking away something invaluable from the experience.

"I think it definitely boosted my confidence," she said. "That's from seeing others get their confidence levels up because it made them happy. So that made me happy."

The most rewarding moment came when DeDonato saw first hand the impact she made by inspiring change.

A close friend ended up joining the Girl Scouts -- solely to launch her own community-oriented project.

"It felt good that other people were noticing what was happening," said DeDonato, who will be given the Gold Award in May.

"Hopefully, that will influence them to do something that helps others, too."

DeDonato wrote about the project, which she titled "Empowering Women From The Inside Out," in her college essay and said running the donations "made me figure out what I want to do in life."

"I want to be a teacher and help elementary students start to figure out what they want to do in life," she said,
 
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Former HR Rep Says 'I'm Not Trying To Create Paranoia' -- But If You See These Red Flags, It's Probably Time To Update Your Résumé


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Some layoffs arrive with a bang. Most don't. Instead, they creep in quietly -- through canceled offsites, stiff messaging, and a strange shift in your manager's tone. One former HR rep says those early signs are rarely imagined -- and often arrive months before anyone hears the word "restructure."

In a... post on Reddit, the ex-HR professional shared a detailed breakdown of how layoffs unfold behind the scenes. After experiencing three rounds -- twice in HR, once as the person laid off -- they laid out what they called a "pattern" that companies follow long before the pink slips go out.

"I'm not trying to create paranoia," they wrote. "But if you're seeing multiple signs on this list, it might be time to update your résumé."

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Their breakdown starts with early warning signs, typically three to six months ahead of layoffs. A sudden hiring freeze with a vague explanation? Classic. "When companies say 'we're being strategic about growth' out of nowhere, that's HR-speak for 'we're about to cut costs aggressively.'" Other clues include shifts in language during company meetings. Once executives start using terms like "efficiency," "operational excellence," or "rightsizing," they're preparing employees mentally before any real announcements are made.

But perhaps the biggest indicator? When outside consultants show up. "Specifically McKinsey, Bain, Deloitte, or similar firms," the post said. "They're not there to make things better for employees -- they're there to identify 'redundancies' and provide cover for cuts leadership already wants to make."

Employees might also start seeing cuts to training budgets, canceled perks, reduced bonuses, and unexplained delays in conference approvals. "When companies stop investing in employee development, they're not planning long-term with current staff," they wrote.

As the post moves into the one- to three-month timeline, the warning signs become more personal. Managers start canceling one-on-one meetings. Cross-functional projects get paused or shelved. Quiet reorganizations pop up that don't make operational sense. "The reorg is the setup," the former HR rep wrote. "The layoff is the follow-through."

Trending: Americans With a Financial Plan Can 4X Their Wealth -- Get Your Personalized Plan from a CFP Pro

High performers begin getting nitpicked. Performance Improvement Plans increase. Expectations rise. All of it -- on paper -- builds the kind of documentation that legally protects the company later.

Then come the signals that layoffs are imminent -- two to four weeks out. Employees are asked to document their workflows, create runbooks, or "share knowledge" with someone being cross-trained, supposedly for vacation coverage. HR suddenly blocks off calendars across the company. IT starts reviewing access privileges. Leadership, usually remote, shows up in the office en masse. One line from the post put it plainly:

"They're planning it. You just don't know yet."

The final 48 hours follow a familiar cadence: early-morning "quick sync" invites with no context, coworkers vanishing into closed-door meetings, access issues with email or internal systems, and managers suddenly hard to reach. If it's happening, it's already happening to someone.

But the Reddit post didn't stop at red flags -- it also laid out a playbook for what to do if you suspect something's coming. First up: quietly update your LinkedIn and résumé. Save your work (legally), screenshot recommendations, and gather metrics on what you've accomplished. Reach out to your network now -- not after you've been let go.

Financially, the post urged readers to build emergency savings if possible, know their benefits, and pause major expenses. "Even an extra month of expenses helps," they noted. And for anyone carrying a loan against their 401(k) or other employment-tied obligations? Understand the consequences of termination.

See Also: An EA Co-Founder Shapes This VC Backed Marketplace -- Now You Can Invest in Gaming's Next Big Platform Before the Raise Ends 1/19

The former HR pro also warned against reacting emotionally. Don't post rants on social media. Don't start skipping work. And don't burn bridges with your manager -- "Even if they're delivering bad news, they're probably just doing what they were told."

If a layoff does happen, they advise not signing anything right away. Review your severance package carefully, negotiate where possible, and apply for unemployment even if severance is offered. Get references before you lose access to your email -- and don't walk out without contact info for colleagues you want to stay in touch with.

For those who survive a layoff? The advice is straightforward: set boundaries, prepare for heavier workloads, and quietly consider your next move. "Companies that do one round of layoffs often do more," the post warns.

In short: if something feels off, it might not be in your head. It might be the beginning of a carefully choreographed process that ends with fewer chairs around the table -- and fewer people in the building.

And if that's the case, best to be the one who saw it coming and had a plan.

Read Next: Have $100k+ to invest? Charlie Munger says that's the toughest milestone -- don't stall now. Get matched with a fiduciary advisor and keep building

Image: Shutterstock

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Roll Call: Before the badge. A cop faces an intensive screening process before joining the force


One of the most surprising things I hear from the public - and even from elected officials - is how little they know about what it takes to become a police officer in Illinois.

There is a persistent myth that police departments hand out badges and guns after a brief interview and a cursory background check. Nothing could be further from the truth.

In reality, the hiring process for a police... officer is among the most exhaustive, intrusive and professionally demanding screening processes in any field of public service.

Over the course of my career, I often was struck by how deeply departments go before trusting someone with the authority to detain, arrest and, when necessary, use force on behalf of the public. Equally important, I learned which red flags indicated that a candidate should never wear the badge.

The process begins with a detailed written application. This is not a résumé but a full disclosure document. Applicants must account for their employment history, education, criminal background, traffic citations, drug use, military service and fiscal responsibility.

In Illinois, even minor omissions can be disqualifying. A forgotten ticket or a skipped employer is not treated as a simple mistake but as a question of honesty. Integrity is the foundation of policing, and without it, the process ends quickly.

Candidates who advance must pass a written examination that measures reading comprehension, memory, judgment and decision-making. Police work is documentation-heavy and detail-driven. An officer who cannot clearly read, write and process information becomes a liability to the public and the department.

Applicants then take a physical agility test to confirm they can meet the job's basic demands. Illinois officers must be able to pursue suspects, restrain violent individuals and respond to emergencies while carrying heavy equipment. Failure at this stage ends consideration.

Those who remain are invited to oral board interviews conducted by command staff, supervisors and, at times, outside professionals. These interviews assess judgment, communication skills, emotional control and ethical reasoning. This is where immaturity, arrogance or poor decision-making often surface. Candidates who blame others for past failures or speak casually about the use of force rarely advance.

Polygraph examinations are another critical step (not every department uses polygraphs). Although not infallible, they serve as an investigative tool for assessing consistency and credibility. Candidates are questioned about criminal behavior, drug use, theft, domestic violence and dishonesty. Many applicants self-eliminate at this stage by admitting or contradicting themselves, which requires deeper review.

Every candidate also must pass a psychological evaluation administered by a licensed psychologist experienced in law enforcement screening. The assessment evaluates impulse control, emotional stability, anger management, stress tolerance and suitability for authority.

Chiefs cannot override a failed psychological evaluation, and they should not. This safeguard alone has prevented countless poor hires.

Medical examinations and drug screening follow, ensuring that candidates meet the job's health standards. Vision, hearing, cardiovascular health and overall fitness are evaluated.

Then comes the most revealing phase: the background investigation. This is where the real work happens. Investigators conduct exhaustive checks, including interviews with former employers, supervisors, coworkers, teachers and neighbors. Social media activity is reviewed, credit history is examined and every claim by the candidate is verified.

I have seen strong-looking applicants removed from consideration after neighbors described repeated police calls, volatile behavior or chronic instability that, though never resulting in arrest, spoke volumes about character.

Only after completing all these steps is a candidate invited to meet with the chief for a final interview. By then, few surprises remain. A conditional offer may follow, pending academy placement and final approvals. Even so, the process is not over.

In Illinois, new officers must complete the police academy and months of closely supervised field training. Probationary officers can and do lose their jobs if problems arise. The system is designed to identify bad fits early.

Despite these safeguards, failures still can occur. A tragic example came in 2024, when Sonya Massey was killed in Sangamon County. The deputy involved had worked for multiple agencies for a brief period and had a troubled history that, in hindsight, should have raised serious concerns.

The case exposed gaps in how prior employment records were reviewed and shared. It also prompted Illinois lawmakers to strengthen background-check requirements for police hiring. That reform was necessary, but it also acknowledged that warning signs had been missed.

Over the years, certain red flags have consistently led departments to pass on candidates. Dishonesty, even about small matters, is chief among them. Patterns of poor decision-making, uncontrolled anger or ego, chronic blaming of others, domestic instability, repeated police contacts, financial irresponsibility tied to integrity concerns and reckless social-media behavior all signaled trouble. The most dangerous candidates are rarely the obvious ones. They often are polished on the surface but collapse under scrutiny.

If Illinois policymakers are serious about public safety and police accountability, this is where their attention must remain. Not on slogans or reactionary legislation, nor on scapegoating officers after tragedy strikes, but on ensuring that hiring standards are consistent, thorough and protected from political pressure.

You cannot demand perfection from police while tolerating incomplete background checks or quietly encouraging departments to lower standards to fill vacancies. You cannot undermine chiefs who reject questionable candidates and then be surprised when ignored red flags become headlines.

The solutions are straightforward. Illinois must require full disclosure of prior law-enforcement employment records, protect chiefs who disqualify candidates for integrity and judgment, resist lowering standards during staffing shortages and hold police executives to professional certification and accountability standards - not just the officers they supervise.

Public safety does not improve by rushing people through the front door. It improves by having the courage to close that door to the wrong people, even when doing so is inconvenient or politically uncomfortable.

Illinois already has paid too high a price for ignored warning signs. The subsequent failure will not be blamed on the process. It will be blamed on leadership. Leadership begins before the badge is ever issued.
 
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2   
  • Take intro classes to both and determine which one you want to spend the next 20+ years doing.

  • finance is a broader option because it captures basic accounting concepts so you kill 2 birds with one stone unlike accounting

4   
  • Good advice. You have negotiating power when you are employed. Being unemployed in a competitive market is rather stressful. Good luck.

    2
  • Secure your next job before you leave.

    1

Rethinking career development with intelligent mentorship - Talented Ladies Club


Career development is no longer a linear journey. Traditional approaches, such as rigid training programmes or annual performance reviews, often fail to address the unique aspirations and challenges of individual employees. Increasingly, organisations are recognising that effective mentorship can play a pivotal role in helping professionals navigate their careers while fostering both personal... growth and organisational success.

Intelligent mentorship goes beyond pairing employees with senior colleagues at random. It uses data-driven insights and structured frameworks to match mentees with mentors who complement their goals, skills, and learning preferences. This approach ensures that mentorship is purposeful and impactful rather than a box-ticking exercise.

For example, an employee seeking to develop leadership skills can be paired with a mentor who has relevant experience and a track record of successful team management. Similarly, emerging professionals looking to break into niche sectors can be guided by mentors with insider knowledge and strategic networks. The precision of these pairings increases the likelihood of meaningful engagement, encourages consistent progress, and leads to measurable outcomes for both mentees and organisations.

Intelligent mentorship also helps individuals identify blind spots and explore career paths they may not have considered. Many employees are unaware of the full range of opportunities available to them or may lack the confidence to pursue new challenges. A mentor who understands their strengths and goals can provide perspective, motivation, and practical advice to navigate these decisions effectively.

For individuals, intelligent mentorship provides tailored guidance, constructive feedback, and access to professional networks that may otherwise be difficult to reach. Mentees gain clarity on career trajectories, build confidence, and accelerate skill acquisition. They are also more likely to stay motivated, engaged, and committed to their organisations.

Organisations benefit from mentorship programmes by fostering a culture of continuous learning and talent retention. By investing in employee development, companies nurture a workforce capable of adapting to evolving business needs. Additionally, mentorship can enhance diversity and inclusion efforts by giving underrepresented groups the support and visibility required to thrive in competitive environments.

Technology plays a crucial role in scaling intelligent mentorship. Platforms designed for mentor matching use sophisticated algorithms to analyse skills, career objectives, and learning styles, connecting mentees with the most suitable mentors. This level of sophistication ensures that every mentorship pairing is optimised for success and maximises the return on investment for both employees and organisations.

One notable platform leading this transformation is PushFar, which enables companies to create structured mentorship programmes while giving individuals the flexibility to find mentors who align with their ambitions. Tools like this not only streamline the administrative process but also provide analytics to monitor engagement and outcomes, allowing programmes to evolve based on real data rather than assumptions.

Ultimately, intelligent mentorship is not just about career advancement. It is about creating a culture where learning, guidance, and support are embedded into the workplace ethos. Organisations that embrace this approach enable employees to unlock their full potential, leading to higher satisfaction, retention, and innovation.

As the nature of work continues to evolve, rethinking career development through intelligent mentorship is no longer optional. It is a strategic imperative for organisations seeking to develop talent, foster resilience, and remain competitive in an increasingly complex professional world.
 
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QCDC launches region's first Arabic-led postgraduate diploma in career development


DOHA: Qatar Career Development Center (QCDC), founded by Qatar Foundation (QF), announced the launch of the Post-Graduate Diploma in Career Development during a joint press conference in QF's Education City, with representatives from the Ministry of Education and Higher Education (MoEHE), EduCluster Finland, and Community College Qatar (CCQ) addressing the media.

Marking a significant step in... advancing the professionalization of career guidance and career development services in Qatar, the diploma was developed by QCDC in collaboration with EduCluster Finland, licensed by Qatar's Ministry of Education and Higher Education (MoEHE), and will be delivered locally in partnership with Community College Qatar (CCQ). The program aims to build a sustainable national pipeline of specialized practitioners and strengthen the quality, consistency, and measurable impact of career development services across education and workplace settings.

The diploma responds to a growing need for structured, evidence-based career guidance as education and labor market pathways become more complex and as institutions sharpen their focus on readiness, transitions, and lifelong employability skills. Built around applied learning that connects directly to day-to-day practice, the program emphasizes real-world application, reflection, and continuous improvement across settings including schools, higher education, and working life.

Arabic-led delivery also positions the diploma as a region-first milestone for the discipline, positioning it as a localized postgraduate pathway designed around Qatar's professional realities while remaining aligned with internationally informed standards and terminology.

The 12-month diploma carries an overall workload equivalent to around 30 credits and includes approximately 1,500 total learning hours across theory, applied training, individual and group learning activities, and field-based practice. Participants will be able to pursue specialization pathways aligned with their practice context, including K-12, higher education and training, and workplace environments. The first cohort is expected to prepare 20 to 40 specialized national practitioners.

"Career guidance has never been a marginal service in societies determined to develop and elevate their human potential," said Executive Director of QCDC, Saad Abdulla Al Kharji.

"It is a specialist discipline that directly affects education outcomes, workforce readiness, and individual life decisions. This diploma represents a national investment in the quality of career guidance, delivered in Arabic for the first time in Qatar and the region, and grounded in global, evidence-based best practice. It raises professional standards and strengthens practitioners' ability to empower students and jobseekers to make more informed, confident decisions."

Assistant Undersecretary for Higher Education at MoEHE, Dr Hareb Mohammed Al Jabri said: "This diploma sits at the heart of one of the Ministry's strategic priorities under the Third National Development Strategy; aligning education outcomes with labor market needs. Achieving that goal requires highly capable career guidance practitioners with a comprehensive understanding of both the education ecosystem and the labor market, so students are guided toward pathways that match their abilities and talents. We believe this program will be a major addition, not only to the education system, but also to the labor market."

In turn, President of CCQ, Dr Khalid Mohamed Al-Horr said: "The launch of the Post-Graduate Diploma in Career Development reflects CCQ's commitment to offering high-quality, practice-based academic programs that develop specialized cadres to support individuals in planning their career pathways and strengthen the alignment between education outcomes and labor market needs, in line with the country's human development priorities."

Coordination Lead of the Academic Advisory Council at EduCluster Finland, Dr David Marsh said the diploma reflects "what can be achieved when partners unite their efforts and strengths," emphasizing that meaningful innovation in education and training "rarely happens in isolation." He added that "professionalization and common standards make a tangible difference," noting that the program is a step toward strengthening quality and consistency, and shifting from fragmented, reactive models driven by labor market needs to a comprehensive, modern, systems-based approach designed specifically for the Qatari context.

The launch of the Post-Graduate Diploma in Career Development reinforces QCDC's broader mandate to establish an integrative career development ecosystem to deliver coherent, high-impact services. Through this partnership model and the program's practice-based design, the diploma is expected to contribute to more consistent career guidance offer across the country, ensuring long-term workforce readiness in alignment with Qatar's human development priorities.
 
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  • Ignore it because for now there's nothing maybe you took it too far

    1
  • Hopefully you have a strong human resource department and everyone has signed a code of conduct and ethics. This is because what you are asking for... support online is a serious grievance that can amount to sexual harassment at the work place. Report the matter anonymously through your work place whistle blower mechanisms provided. It is your human right to feel safe, work freely with job security without intimidation at all times. Hopefully this helps.  more

How to Customize Your Facebook Profile With Hidden Text


Facebook isn't the hottest new platform, but it's still one of the most revealing ones. People don't just scroll it, they investigate it. They click through your profile after you leave a sharp comment in a music group, after they watch a Reel you posted, or after a friend tags you in something that makes you look interesting. And in that moment, your profile becomes your intro.

Not your life... story. Not your résumé. Your intro.

That's why How to Customize Your Facebook Profile With Hidden Text is such a useful move when you want to look more intentional without doing anything loud or cheesy. A clean profile signals taste. It signals confidence. It tells people you actually care how you present yourself, which matters if you're an artist, a creative professional, or anyone building a name in public.

Hidden text sounds mysterious, but the reality is simple. It's just formatting. It's spacing. It's the online equivalent of setting the stage lights before the band plays. Nobody applauds the setup, but everyone feels the difference.

What "hidden text" means on Facebook

When people say "hidden text," they usually mean invisible characters or Unicode whitespace. These are real characters that exist in the text, but you can't see them the way you see letters. They're often used to create blank lines, subtle spacing, or separators in places where Facebook normally collapses regular spaces.

This is not a hack in the shady sense. You're not installing anything. You're not breaking rules. You're basically copy-pasting a special character that behaves like a space or a blank line, even when Facebook tries to compress your formatting.

You'll also hear people mention zero-width space, which is a Unicode character that can help with formatting in certain situations because it technically exists, but it doesn't show as visible width. In practice, some fields on Facebook accept it and some don't. That's why testing matters. A great handy tool for copying blank invisible text is invisibletext.ink.

Why Unicode is the reason this works

Facebook doesn't let you pick fonts for your bio the way you would in a design app. So when you see someone with bold serif letters or a typewriter vibe, they didn't "change their font." They swapped normal letters for Unicode variants that look stylized.

Unicode is a global text standard that supports characters across languages and symbol sets. It includes letter-like characters that resemble bold, italic, monospace, or small caps styles. That's why "font generators" work. They convert your text into Unicode versions that still copy and paste as text like fancyfonts.co.

Hidden text lives in the same world. It's also Unicode. It's just characters that create spacing rather than style.

Why this matters for Skope readers

Skope has always been about culture, artists, and the ecosystem around the music. If you're an indie musician, producer, photographer, promoter, or writer, you already know the value of presentation. The sound matters most, but presentation opens the door. Cover art matters. A press kit matters. The way a show flyer looks matters.

Your Facebook profile matters for the same reason. It's still a first-stop identity page. People use it to decide if they want to follow you, message you, invite you into something, or ignore you.

Hidden text and subtle profile formatting can help you look more established without looking like you're trying to be "a brand." It creates breathing room and visual hierarchy. It makes the important line pop. And it keeps people reading long enough to understand what you do.

Where hidden text works best on Facebook

For the creators and musicians who frequent Skope, you know that your "vibe" is everything. If your profile says "Alternative Rock Artist" in standard text, it feels like a data point. If you use a subtle monospaced font or a clean serif bold, it feels like a brand. It creates a sense of intentionality. It tells the visitor that you care about the details.

Step-by-Step: How to Customize Your Facebook Profile With Hidden Text

If you are ready to give your profile a facelift, do not just start pasting random symbols everywhere. That is the fastest way to look like a spam bot. Follow this structured approach to ensure your profile stays sleek and effective.

Step 1: Audit Your Current Bio

Before touching any tools, look at your current Facebook "Intro" or "About" section. Is it cluttered? Does it have a clear goal? A great profile should tell people who you are, what you do, and what they should do next (your Call to Action). Write this out in plain text first. Keep it punchy. On Facebook, brevity is your best friend.

Step 2: Identify Your Anchor Point

The "less is more" rule is the golden rule here. Do not stylize your entire bio. If everything is bold, nothing is bold. Pick one specific element to highlight. This could be your job title, your band name, or the specific phrase "Click below for my latest track." This is where you will apply your special characters for Facebook to create that visual "pop."

Step 3: Use a Reliable Generator

There are dozens of free tools online that can convert your plain text into various Unicode styles. Look for one that offers a "preview" feature. You want to see how the text looks before you commit. When choosing a style, lean toward "Small Caps," "Bold Serif," or "Typewriter" (Monospace). Avoid the overly "glitchy" or "circle" fonts for professional use, as they can be difficult to read and may not render correctly on all operating systems.

Step 4: The "Hidden Text" Technique

One of the coolest tricks for a minimalist profile is using "hidden" or "invisible" characters to create custom spacing. Standard Facebook bios often collapse multiple spaces into one, making it hard to create a clean, vertical layout. By using invisible Unicode characters, you can force line breaks or create wide margins that give your text room to breathe. This "whitespace" makes your profile look significantly more expensive and modern.

Step 5: Test for Accessibility and Devices

This is the part everyone forgets. Some older devices or screen readers for the visually impaired struggle with complex Unicode characters. After you update your profile, ask a friend to look at it on a different phone. If they see a bunch of "X" boxes instead of your cool new text, you have picked a character set that isn't widely supported. Stick to the more standard "mathematical alphanumeric symbols" for the best compatibility.

How this connects to your content, especially video

A clean profile matters most when your content is pulling people in, and facebook reel videos are often what brings new people to your page first.. Facebook still leans into short-form video, and Reels are often the entry point. When someone watches your clip and clicks your name, you want the profile to match the vibe of the content they just enjoyed.

If your profile looks polished but your posts look random, the experience breaks. If your profile looks messy but your content is strong, you're losing momentum on the follow decision.

The best approach is consistency. Use the same tone in your bio that you use in your captions. Keep your CTA aligned with what you're promoting right now. If you have a new track, your profile should make that obvious. If you're booking studio sessions, your profile should point to the right contact method without forcing people to dig.

Bottom line

How to Customize Your Facebook Profile With Hidden Text is really about creating space. Space to read. Space to understand. Space for your identity to land properly.

Write your bio like a human first. Stylize one anchor line if you want it. Use invisible characters only to add breathing room. Then test it like a stranger would. If you're looking for more ways to stand out make sure you check out r/onlinemarketing.

That's how you end up with a profile that looks intentional, modern, and credible, without looking like you're trying to force attention.
 
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How To Get the Right Job with A Job Agency


Finding a job is not that simple a task, especially in a competitive job market. If you are a new graduate or want to change profession or get a better job, joining a job agency will boost your job search. These agencies pair job hunters with the most appropriate employers, offer exclusive job opportunities, provide career guidance, and streamline the employer-employee recruitment process.

In... contrast to the conventional way of job hunting, employment agencies offer tailored services, where they assist job seekers in the process of identifying the appropriate job depending on their expertise, experience, and the objectives of their career. This article discusses the advantages of working with https://jobssite.ca/ and the best way to use their services.

1. Availability of Unadvertised Vacancies

Numerous employers would rather use agencies to do the hiring as opposed to placing the job publicly. Hiring managers are directly linked to an employment agency, and this provides job seekers with exclusive opportunities that are non-existent on traditional job boards. Employment agencies have a huge pool of potential employers seeking qualified candidates, regardless of whether you are seeking temporary, permanent, or contract jobs.

2. Faster Hiring Process

Job searching is tedious and stressful when applying to individual jobs. Hiring happens to be much quicker with a job agency. Agencies do the screening of the candidates, pair them with a vacancy that suits them, and assist them to hold job interviews with employers, thus minimizing the time they spend to find a job. A recruiter can also easily find a match for you with other employers who are currently seeking talent instead of applying to various firms and waiting.

3. Career Advising and Resume.

The customized career advice is one of the largest benefits of hiring an agency to do the staffing. Resume review, interview coaching, and job strategies are offered by recruiters to make you shine in the crowd. Having a well-constructed resume can go a long way in influencing your chances of landing a job, and agencies can make sure that your resume reflects the right skills and experience.

4. No Cost to Job Seekers

In most cases, there is no fee to use an employment agency among the job seekers. Recruitment services are free to the candidates as they are paid by employers. This implies that you can enjoy a professional job placement, career guidance, and interview preparation services without having to spend a dime.

1. Identify Industry-Specific Agencies

Specific employment agencies are agencies that serve one field, e.g. IT, healthcare, manufacturing or finance. The more chances you have to find the right job opportunities, the more likely you are to succeed in choosing the job agency that would suit your career goals. In the logistics sector, you might consider engaging driver recruitment agencies that specialise in recruiting commercial drivers.

2. Audit the Reputation of the Agency

Staffing agencies cannot be compared in terms of services. The reputation of a job agency should be researched before enrolling in it. Examine online reviews, testimonials, and ratings so as to determine how they have helped job seekers in the past.

3. Understand Their Process

An exemplary job agency near me will be one that has a transparent way of hiring. Enquire about their job matching system, application procedures, and anticipated hiring periods before they are registered. The most effective agencies offer constant assistance, which helps them to fill out the first application to find a job.

4. Confirm their Work-Related Associations.

The staffing agencies that are reliable must maintain strong relationships with reputable employers. Connected agency will provide you with numerous job opportunities in various fields, so you have a choice and a high probability of finding the top recruitment.

1. Register With the Agency

The first method is enlisting yourself in the job organization. This normally involves submitting your resume, filling the application form and sometimes even taking skill tests. This data will be utilized by the job agency to match you against their employment opportunities that will be in line with your career and experience goals.

2. Work With a Recruiter

On registration, you will be assigned a recruiter who will take you through your job search. They will bargain your skills, work experience, salary as well as employment preferences. The recruiters play a critical role in the selection of the best opportunities basing on your occupation history.

3. Board Interviewing and Recruiter Advice.

Your recruiter will bring employers in to interview and provide you with tips on how to prepare. They are able to give details on general interview questions, the company culture, and negotiating salaries.

4. Offer of Job and Onboarding.

As soon as you are offered a job, you will be provided with the services of your agency to negotiate a contract and deal with paperwork and other onboarding. There are positions that can be temporary or contract-based and then become permanent, thus a good opportunity to gain experience and improve your career.
 
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"She said I'm too rich for the job": Woman comes forward about humiliating interview, SA relates


A young woman from Pretoria went viral after claiming that job interviews can sometimes feel like a humiliation ritual for candidates.

The video was shared on TikTok by @bontle.bjoy on January 6, 2026, and garnered 79K views along with 7.2K likes as she recounted her experience with a specific panel.

The video begins with the woman at home. She explains that she was asked during the interview if... she had been introduced to finance software, to which she confirmed her experience with Sage. When asked for the specific certificate of completion, she mentioned that only students who scored 80% or higher received one. TikTok user @bontle. bjoy said the interviewer then insinuated that she had failed the module, causing a second female interviewer to intervene and ask how she could have graduated if she had failed.

The woman shared that the line of questioning immediately lowered her confidence as she wondered if the interviewer was implying her qualifications were fake. She questioned why she had been called for the interview at all if her credentials were doubted and thanked the woman who defended her.

The clip garnered massive views and 1.1K comments from an online community that was deeply moved by the story, and discussed their own hiring nightmares. Many viewers agreed with the view that interviews can be humiliating and noted their preferred interviewers. Some users argued that being unprepared can also make a person feel humiliated during the process. One commenter shared a story where a female interviewer asked about her husband's employment and told her she was too rich for the job.

User @Survivor shared:

"You will feel humiliated if you do not prepare for the interview."

"But if you need 80% to get the certificate, that means 80% is the passing percentage and anything below that is a fail, but it was rude of her to point that out."

User @Flwrs10912873465564378 commented:

"I was interviewed in Menlyn by a lady who wasn't even HR and asked me questions like what my husband does, etc. She said I'm too rich for the job 🙄."

User @Divana asked:

"Have you ever been laughed at during an interview?😭Like people laughing uncontrollably at your answers to the extent they had to pause and apologise? Bro, let's leave this topic."

User @Mohumagadi Basetsana said:

"Internal interviews are worse. I had four this year, and they broke my confidence. I told myself that I am never doing internal interviews ever again because 9/10, they already know who they want."
 
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Sault court hears emotional testimony from murder victim's boyfriend, father


Editor's note: This story includes graphic details of a murder scene and may be disturbing to some readers.

The boyfriend of murder victim Taylor Marshall took the stand on Wednesday to describe how two years ago he discovered her lifeless body on the floor of the apartment they shared.

Steven Jones is facing charges of second-degree murder in the killing of Taylor, as well as an attempted... murder charge for the stabbing attack on Liam Frenette. Both events occurred on Sept. 7, 2023.

On Monday, the first day of the trial, Jones entered pleas of not guilty to both charges. After initially requesting a jury trial, Jones' defence re-elected for a trial by judge alone, in this case in front of Justice Michael Varpio.

Four weeks have been set aside for the trial.

Dawson Mattila took the stand on Wednesday afternoon, the third day of the trial. At the time of the murder, he lived together with Taylor as a couple in the 185 John St. apartment where her body was found.

Mattila testified that he last saw Taylor on the morning of Sept. 7 -- the day she was killed -- when he left for work at a construction site near Echo Bay.

He said Taylor had a job interview scheduled that morning and the two were texting back and forth that day, before he stopped receiving messages from her.

At 10:26 a.m., Mattila received his final Snapchat message from Taylor, despite several attempts by him throughout the day to reach her. He said it was very unusual for him to not hear back from her by text message or Snapchat, the two most common forms of communication they would use.

At 2:36 p.m., Mattila sent a message asking Taylor: "Still alive?"

If the timeline proposed by Sault Police is correct, she was not alive at the time he sent that message.

The 911 call made from the Sault Ste. Marie boardwalk was made at 1:10 p.m. on that same day, and Taylor is believed to have been killed before that time. By 1:14 p.m., her suspected killer Jones was in police custody as a result of the boardwalk stabbing.

Mattila was picked up from work by his mother and stepfather, who dropped him home at about 5:10 p.m. He walked in through an unlocked front door, expecting Taylor to be home.

He said he stood in the mudroom and attempted to gain entry into the inside door to the apartment, which he found to be blocked from the inside by the couch. It had been propped against the door.

Mattila said he thought Taylor had maybe moved furniture in the living room to clean and called out to ask if she was home and possibly asleep.

He was able to force the door open enough to see inside and noticed Taylor motionless on the floor in the kitchen, just past the living room.

Pushing his way inside, Mattila said he noticed the apartment was in disarray, with blood everywhere, including on the walls and TV. As he approached Taylor, he said there was blood on her hair -- some dried and some wet.

He said he asked her to wake up and unsuccessfully attempted to find a pulse on her wrist. She was lifeless, stiff and cold to the touch, he testified.

Assistant Crown Attorney Trent Wilson directed Mattila to look at a photo in an exhibit book.

"That's how I found her," responded Mattila, his voice cracking with emotion while looking at the crime scene photo.

Mattila said he called his parents, who were still nearby after dropping him off earlier, and phoned 911. Paramedics were first to arrive and asked him and his parents to leave the apartment.

Wilson asked where he went from there.

"On the curb, I puked and cried," replied Mattila.

Wilson showed Mattila a dark blue hooded sweatshirt, size large, with a white Champion logo. The prosecutor asked the witness if he recognized it.

"You can handle it," said Wilson, offering to hand the witness the hoodie.

"I don't want to," Mattila replied.

Mattila confirmed that he owned a similar sweatshirt, but hadn't seen it since Sept. 7, 2023.

Wilson also asked Mattila to view a photo of a screwdriver set police found in the apartment with three screwdrivers missing.

Mattila noted that he lost two of the screwdrivers at work.

On day one of the trial, Assistant Crown Attorney Andrew Allen said at least some of the more than 100 wounds suffered by Taylor were consistent with being made by an item, possibly a Phillips-head screwdriver.

Earlier on Wednesday, Sgt. Greg Vallee testified that he arrived on the scene at Station Mall that day at about 1:20 p.m., just a few minutes after four of his colleagues took Jones into custody at the loading ramp behind the former Wal-Mart and Zellers in the southwest corner of the building.

Vallee said he took possession of a thumb drive of surveillance video footage that was handed to him by mall security. He was asked by the Crown to take the court through a number of videos tracking Jones' movements along the boardwalk and in the mall parking lot that day.

In one of the videos, taken shortly after the boardwalk assault, Jones is seen taking off a black hooded sweatshirt and depositing it in a garbage bin outside the southwest entrance to the mall, adjacent to the former U-Betcha restaurant.

Jones was then seen on video briefly entering the mall, before running out followed by a security guard.

Taylor's father, Ron Marshall, took the stand to testify about the last time he saw his daughter. It was shortly after the time she stopped responding to Mattila's text messages.

Ron gave Taylor a lift to and from her job interview on that morning, dropping her off at her apartment sometime between 10:30 and 10:40 a.m.

"I pulled in her driveway and we said our goodbyes, she grabbed keys in one hand and two grocery bags in the other," said Ron.

He said he watched from his vehicle as the front door closed behind her.

"That was my last interaction with her," Ron testified.

He said he was optimistic that day about his daughter's job interview. Then sometime between 5 and 6 o'clock that evening, he received a text message from someone saying they were sorry about what happened to Taylor.

"I didn't believe her, I had just dropped her off five or six hours ago," he said of the text message.

Continuing his testimony that began Tuesday, Staff-Sgt. Rodney Burrows told the court that he was the officer who booked Jones in at the Police Headquarters on the afternoon of his arrest.

An almost 50-minute video of the booking procedure was played, while Burrows narrated what was happening in the footage.

The video shows Jones standing in front of the booking desk at the station, shirtless, without pants and with his long hair in his face for much of the duration.

Burrows said in his examination-in-chief on Tuesday that he could not find Jones in the police database, but built a profile based on the details given to him.

Although the audio was muffled, Burrows said at the time of the booking he was able to understand much of what Jones was saying and the responses he made assisted in determining his identity.

Continuing on Wednesday, Burrows told Allen that, based on questions he asked Jones, he was able to link the man to his mother in Garden River.

Burrows asked Jones in the video if he had been taking drugs or alcohol, to which he said the man replied: "It has been a long time." The officer asked him a second time later in the booking process, at which time Jones gave a similar answer.

Jones said he was not taking any medications and that he believes he has ADHD (Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder).

When Burrows asked if Jones knew what he had been arrested for, the man replied: "Swimming."

At that time, Burrows corrected him. "No, for assault with a weapon," he said.

Cst. Mark Prophet was seen removing the handcuffs in the video to allow Jones to go into an adjacent room off-camera, where he eventually was able to telephone a local defence attorney.

Paramedics arrived to assess a wound on Jones' right hand. He was given an orange shirt and pants to wear before being taken to hospital.

On Tuesday, during the second day of the trial, Prophet told the court about his experiences in the arrest of Jones, taking the man to hospital, then later arriving at the homicide scene at 185 John Street.

In cross examination on Wednesday, defence lawyer Andrew Furgiuele pressed Burrows on whether he really believed Jones was not under the influence of drugs.

"You asked twice because you didn't believe him the first time," Furgiuele suggested.

"I don't agree," responded Burrows.

Furgiuele noted over the course of the video, Jones was seen looking up and down, moving from side to side and at one point put his head down on the booking desk.

"He moved a lot," said Burrows in response.

Furgiuele asked Burrows what he thought when Jones told him he was arrested for swimming.

"That he was potentially being untruthful," replied Burrows.

"Was that an odd answer?" asked Furgiuele.

"Yes," Burrows replied.

In reexamination, Allen referenced the swimming comment Jones made during booking, asking Burrows if he had any knowledge of the suspect's whereabouts on the day previous to his arrest.

"Not at that time I didn't," the staff-sergeant replied.

The trial continues on Thursday.
 
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From perk to strategy: Rethinking tuition programs for supply chain success


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Supply chain executives know all about problems related to employee turnover; but now it is especially critical. Consequences in operational effectiveness, competitive advantage, and business development are dramatic. Companies counteroffer with tuition aid programs... (TAPs) as the "golden ticket" to increase retention and workforce development. On paper, the formula is simple: invest in educating your people, and they will stick around. But reality is another matter.

What's going wrong? For most supply chain professionals, the actual chasm is not availability but accessibility and equity. Upfront expenses, process barriers, and managerial judgment keep career development out of reach for exactly the frontline talent supply chains need most. Leaders too frequently miss structural barriers that render a potentially appealing perk a lost cause. Suppose the supply chain career realm is to thrive amidst current volatility. In that case, tuition assistance has to shift, from a one-size-fits-all benefit to a powerful, equitable talent strategy.

Organizations today struggle to bridge a growing gap between business expectations and workforce realities. A recent summary of Gartner research via Supply Chain Digest reports that 31% of supply chain professionals indicate they intend to leave firms within a year. Yet, chief supply chain officers identify only 40% ranking talent attraction and retention as a near-term priority this year, versus 56% in the past year's survey (Kim & Variyam, 2024), an alarming drop in a time of existing disruptions, a shortage of workers, and growing demand for frontline logistics professionals.

On the surface, many companies tout tuition benefit programs (TAPs) as a solution to turnover. Such programs are known to work against declining employee attrition rates even during crisis periods like the COVID-19 pandemic (Little et al., 2024). However, TAPs' effectiveness is actually relatively narrow: less than 10% of the eligible workforce make use of TAPs, and only about 2% utilize such programs to continue studies despite the working population's strong interest (Hundrev, 2024; InStride, 2024).

These gaps are not just theoretical; they have daily operational consequences. With lagging retention, companies pay ongoing training costs, operational losses, and the possibility of losing institutional knowledge. Frontline staff point to dissatisfaction and disengagement: In 2022, more than 60% of logistics staff viewed their jobs as long-term employment, but 40% considered resigning that same year because they were poorly paid and didn't feel valued enough (Mizell-Pleasant, 2024).

Instead of being strategic tools, most tuition programs become lost opportunities handicapped by barriers, making them accessible to only a few advantaged individuals. Talent's greatest challenge is not a paucity of programs but an inability on the part of those who need them most to participate and progress.

Despite the universal presence of TAPs in supply chain organizations, participation rates remain exceedingly low due to a plethora of convoluted, permanent barriers. Such barriers are no minor issue; instead, they widen inequalities between roles and divisions, thus hampering career growth of frontline personnel upon whom supply chains draw most heavily. These barriers include:

Financial barrier. Most TAPs ask workers to pay out-of-pocket tuition expenses and apply for reimbursement upon completion of courses. This is often too expensive for many (37% of American adults reported not having any savings to cover a $400 emergency, according to a 2022 Federal Reserve report). In logistics and frontline work, where pay is often low and personnel already feel underpaid, advancing via education becomes a financially unreachable goal (Mizell-Pleasant, 2024).

Procedural ambiguity and managerial bias. Gaining approval for tuition reimbursement is often subjectively rather than objectively evaluated. Employees have to navigate a rugged terrain of managerial discretion where considerations such as "business alignment" or "readiness for promotion" shape ultimate decisions. Commenting upon Krieger's (2023) views, a lack of transparent and consistent evaluation criteria creates a "hoops mentality" and leads to a lot of dissatisfaction. Application processes often entail numerous levels of managerial approval and thus reinforce consequences of bias or favoritism. In many institutions, higher-level personnel receive approval for MBA studies while equally qualified frontliners hit roadblocks to entry-level certifications (Bramoullé & Huremović, 2020).

Awareness gaps. TAPs within the company are often tucked away in HR portals and only cursorily mentioned during onboarding. Though 80% of workers report interest in ongoing education, a paltry 40% even know that their employer has tuition benefits available, according to InStride's 2024 research. Through failing to aggressively promote and physically walk individuals through these TAPs, least of all within shift or work-from-home workforces, frontliners rarely even know these life-changing opportunities exist (InStride, 2024).

Organizational justice and trust. The cumulative effect of these barriers goes beyond abstract statistics; it erodes trust and diminishes a culture of inclusion. Disparities in access and non-transparency around decision-making make professional development appear hyper-exclusive, viewed as a privilege granted only to those already within networks of management. By Gallani and colleagues' (2020) account, the apparent shallow impact of reward systems is often overtaken by the "opportunity effect," wherein those prevented from gaining these benefits face declines in engagement and performance.

Without a major redesign, tuition assistance programs risk doing more harm than good. Financial obstacles keep frontline workers out, subjective approval processes invite discrimination, inept communication leaves a large section of employees unaware of available opportunities, and transparent decision-making erodes trust. What's supposed to level playing fields ends up entrenching existing inequalities, locking out those same workers whose supply chains require them most. The ultimate impact is lost potential, disengagement, and avoidable turnover that acts against retention at its core.

Some organizations have gone beyond traditional limits inherent in tuition aid programs by designing programs that are easily accessible, financially equitable, and consistent with organizational missions. Rather than treating educational benefits as simple symbolic rewards, these firms have eliminated financial obstacles, streamlined eligibility, and focused on supporting frontline staff who often fall outside mainstream designs. The results are impressive: improved employee retention rates, fast-tracked promotion counts, and tangible gains in mobility in the workforce. Table 1 compares three leading programs: Target, Amazon, and Chipotle exemplify how immediate grants, quick eligibility, and a focus on frontline personnel can generate tangible business benefits.

Target: Democratizing opportunity from day one. Target's "Dream to Be" program offers 100% upfront tuition at more than 40 accredited colleges and universities, and eligibility begins on the employee's first day of employment for part-time and full-time employees (Target, 2023). This inclusive model eliminates financial and accessibility constraints, without out-of-pocket costs or prior tenure requirements. Remarkable outcomes ensue: Target reduced turnover among involved hourly team members by 70% and tripled promotion rates. Interestingly, an impressive 90% of participants in the program have been frontline team members, demonstrating a rarity in accessing often-overlooked talent within conventional TAP designs (Loeb, 2023).

Amazon: Prepaying for progress and retention. According to researcher Connie Chen (2025), Amazon's Career Choice covers 95% of tuition and related fees upfront for logistics, IT, and in-demand skills degrees and certifications. It's eligible after 90 days of employment, a notable extension beyond traditional reimbursement methodologies. Over 250,000 Amazon staff around the globe have benefited since it launched in 2012. This method calls out both retention and mobility explicitly, enabling professional development beyond leaders to include lower-wage and hourly staff.

Chipotle: Immediate access with no-strings funding. Chipotle's Cultivate Education program partners with Guild Education to offer 100% upfront tuition for more than 75 degree programs, some of which become accessible to workers after having worked part-time for only 120 days (Sanborn, 2022). It covers a wide range of institutions and disciplines, eliminating the financial hurdle while facilitating development on any scale. What's notable about it is that it helps in excess of 80 master's programs with partial reimbursement. Its overall impact is a happier employee base, higher internal mobility, and a stronger employer brand (Gerut, 2025).

Major players such as Walmart, Liberty Mutual, and TEL Education have embraced comparable strategies, underscoring that equity and accessibility in tuition efforts foster retention, progress, and innovation (Lobell, 2021).

To transform tuition assistance from a missed opportunity into a source of supply chain resilience and equity, companies need to reconsider structure and delivery rather than grant blanket benefits. Most successful designs speak directly to frontliners' and lead leaders' barriers to five proven actions.

By converting TAPs into business-oriented talent strategies, supply chain companies can attract, build, and keep the people they require while maintaining opportunity accessible to all. These steps can be taken and tested, and they have already been tested by industry leaders who have reaped rewards.

When organizations move from beyond selective and siloed investment in tuition to fair-based performance-oriented programs, rewards extend beyond those considered in conventional return on investment (ROI) analysis. Organizations that reimagine tuition aid within broader-based overall talent management notice phenomenal increases in employee retention rates, flexibility, and brand strength.

Stronger retention and internal mobility. Companies such as Target, Amazon, and Chipotle have substantiated the business case: Target's program reduced hourly turnover by 70% and tripled promotion rates within frontline workers (Loeb, 2023). Amazon's Career Choice has allowed more than 250,000 operations workers to develop skills for promotion and growth within and across the firm (Chen, 2025). These outcomes indicate that fair TAPs can significantly mitigate churn that is draining supply chain performance.

Beyond traditional ROI: Measuring what matters. While some institutions have reported astonishing returns on investment in tuition programs, such as Accenture's 353% and Cigna's 129%, both analysts and researchers in business caution against focusing solely on financial gain (Nicastro, 2020). Actual value is reflected in indicators such as workforce stability and growth, including participation rates, retention figures, and promotion outcomes. A skilled and dependable supply chain workforce offers a long-term competitive advantage, enabling a company to pursue strategic initiatives and withstand ongoing disruptions, a point highlighted by Birou and Hoek (2022) and Tenpas et al (2023).

Agility and innovation through learning. TAPs reinforce concepts in Adaptive Learning Theory such that workers can perform optimally in changing contexts upon gaining flexible mindsets and desirable competencies (Ihichr et al., 2024; Mmom, 2022). Workgroups with readily available continued education exhibit higher flexibility levels, improved process improvement, and better adaptation to technology changes, compared to those where only a few are efficiently upgraded.

Employer brand magnetism. Tuition programs are also great attractors of talent. A recent survey carried out by InStride, as reported by Hundrev (2024), reported that 84% of workers at Fortune 500 companies regard tuition help as a deciding factor in selecting a workplace, and 71% cite it, right after healthcare, as a highly valuable benefit. Such education support has become table stakes in attracting and keeping supply chain professionals. Organizations such as Chipotle have reshaped not only turnover but also their image, generating enthusiasm among job hunters and boosting intracompany movement (Gerut, 2025). Amazon, too, positions Career Choice as a stepping stone to long-term career development internally or externally (Chen, 2025).

Ultimately, organizations that design tuition benefit programs that are equitable, communicated well, and tied to performance position themselves as true employers of choice. By minimizing obstacles and expanding access, they not only build trust and commitment but also enhance retention, mobility, and brand equity. The payoff is greater than short-term ROI: these plans future-proof talent streams, create a more adaptive workforce, and imbue supply chains with resiliency and flexibility to thrive within a more disrupted global environment.

For supply chain leaders, equal tuition aid is not only an HR policy but a business imperative of corporate strategy that demands transparent, evidence-driven, and multi-functional initiatives. To make TAPs a reality as true accelerators of talents, leaders and managers need to:

Lead from the top with transparency and example. Senior leaders must promote open eligibility, openly discuss their own career development histories, and make attendance at TAP a transparent component of corporate culture. Open expressions of executive approval suggest that growth and development are valued highly throughout all levels, not only for those within promotion range.

Break down silos with cross-functional teams. Implementation success relies on energetic collaboration between operations, HR, and finance to keep TAPs current and relevant to frontlines' needs. With this mutual monitoring, gatekeeping is averted and programs are aligned with shifting organizational strategy.

Focus on metrics that matter. Go beyond minimal return-on-investment metrics. Measure TAP participation, retention rates, and upward mobility across departments, functions, and demographic groups. Use data to uncover and address gaps in access and celebrate those departments that excel in inclusive development.

Over-communicate policies and pathways. Clear and frequent communication, through onboarding, mobile technology, and team meetings, ensures that all associates know what is available and how to begin. Highlighting success stories about frontline associates can create broader use and reinforce faith in leaders' commitment.

Confront bias and hold leaders accountable. Regularly running analytics will be necessary to identify denial rates or imbalances in any demographic region that are disproportionate. Tie part of executive and manager compensation to verifiable progress toward equity and use of TAP, ensuring permanent accountability for change.

By instilling these values in day-to-day leadership and program management, supply chain organizations can transform tuition assistance from an exchange-based benefit to a growth-oriented strategic driver. Leaders who espouse equity, track meaningful results, and take ownership of responsibility ensure that TAPs become drivers for innovation, engagement, and lasting workforce stability that emboldens both the people who power supply chains and the institutions that serve them.

Treating education benefits as merely a perk or checkbox is no longer an advantage, especially when talent unpredictability can both snap and craft the supply chain. Access to education on a fair basis is no longer a nicety; it's a strategic resilience switch for innovation and future-proofed growth. The proof is in the pudding: transparent, performance-based, accessible programs drive retention, productivity, and employer brand.

Leaders must move swiftly to break down entrenched barriers, reorient eligibility and approval, and incorporate education benefits into the fabric of their culture. This entails leading by example, monitoring outcomes rigidly, and holding supervisors, executives, and everyone in between accountable for equitable access and development outcomes. Now is the moment to turn tuition assistance into a true differentiator. By doing so, supply chain executives will not only reduce turnover but also unleash hidden potential, toughen their people, and gain a powerful advantage in a world where disruption is unforgiving.

Corrine Chen is an educator, researcher, and former industry executive with over a decade of hands-on experience in supply chain management, procurement, and innovation. She teaches supply chain management courses at the University of Nebraska Omaha. Chen's work bridges academia and practice, with published research, applied projects, and a passion for empowering the next generation of supply chain professionals. She can be reached at [email protected]

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2. Bramoullé, Y., & Huremović, K. (2020). Promotion through connections:

Favors or information? arXiv. https://arxiv.org/abs/1708.07723

3. Chen, C. (2025, April 7). Everything you need to know about Career Choice, Amazon's education benefit that pre-pays tuition for degrees and skills development. About Amazon. https://www.aboutamazon.com/news/workplace/career-choice-free-

education-for-amazon-employees

4. Colquitt, J. A. (2001). On the dimensionality of organizational justice: A construct validation of a measure. Journal of Applied Psychology, 86(3), 386-400. https://doi.org/10.1037/0021-9010.86.3.386

5. Federal Reserve. (2023). Report on the Economic Well-Being of U.S. Households in 2022. https://www.federalreserve.gov/publications/files/2022-report-economic-well-being-us-households-202305.pdf

6. Gallani, S., Cai, W., & Shin, J. E. (2020). Nominal and opportunity effects of managerial discretion [Working paper]. Harvard Business School. https://www.hbs.edu/faculty/Shared%20Documents/conferences/2020%20-%20IMO/

Susanna%20Gallani%20Paper.pdf

7. Gerut, A. (2025, May 21). Chipotle employees are rising through the ranks and making 6 figures after Guild suggested a simple switch that transformed the workforce. Fortune. https://fortune.com/2025/05/21/chipotle-crew-member-tuition-assistance-reimbursement-program-guild-workforce/

8. Hundrev, I. (2024, January 18). Must-know tuition reimbursement statistics for 2025. InStride. https://www.instride.com/insights/tuition-reimbursement-statistics/

9. Ihichr, A., Oustous, O., El Idrissi, Y. E. B., & Lahcen, A. A. (2024). A Systematic Review on Assessment in Adaptive Learning: Theories, Algorithms and Techniques. International Journal of Advanced Computer Science & Applications, 15(7).

10. InStride. (2024). Why employees want more than tuition assistance: Trends, insights and statistics from InStride's survey of employees from Fortune 500 companies [White paper]. https://get.instride.com/rs/988-ADG-844/images/ebook-what-employees-think-about-traditional-education-programs.pdf

11. Krieger, J. T. (2023). Employer tuition assistance: Current approaches and the application of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing. Northwestern University Law Review, 117(6), 1661-1673. https://scholarlycommons.law.northwestern.edu/nulr/vol117/iss6/5/

12. Le, H., Palmer Johnson, C., & Fujimoto, Y. (2021). Organizational justice and climate for inclusion. Personnel Review, 50(1), 1-20. https://doi.org/10.1108/PR-10-2019-0546

13. Little, B. M., Arik, M., & Geho, P. (2024). Exploring the impact of tuition

reimbursement programs on actual turnover in manufacturing: Pre- and post-COVID insights. Global Journal of Management & Marketing, 8(1), 1-18.

14. Loeb, W. (2023, November 8). Target's education assistance program is great engagement for associates. Forbes. https://www.forbes.com/sites/walterloeb/2023/11/08/targets-education-assistance-program-is-great-engagement-for-associates

15. Lobell, K. O. (2021, October 11). Why more employers are leveraging tuition assistance to attract and retain employees. SHRM. https://www.shrm.org/topics-tools/news/benefits-compensation/employers-leveraging-tuition-assistance-

to-attract-retain-employees

16. Mizell-Pleasant, A. (2024, April 24). Report finds frontline logistics employees feel undervalued. Supply & Demand Chain Executive. https://www.sdcexec.com/professional-development/retention/news/22894043/quinyx-report-finds-logistics-employees-feel-undervalued

17. Mmom, C. P. C. (2022). Staff development programmes for faculty performance. International Journal of Economics, Environmental

Development and Society, 3(3), 346-358.

18. Nicastro, D. (2020, November 13). No, ROI isn't the best performance metric for L&D. Reworked. https://www.reworked.co/learning-development/is-roi-a-dead-metric-for-learning-development/

19. Sanborn, A. (2022, December 1). New Chipotle benefit puts employees through college. Work It Daily. https://www.workitdaily.com/chipotle-education-benefits

20. Supply Chain Digest. (2024, September 10). Companies need to be careful in backing off supply chain talent management, Gartner says. Retrieved from https://www.scdigest.com/ontarget/24-0910_gartner_supply_chain_tapent_management.php

21. Target. (2023, November 6). Shine on: Two years in, Target's tuition-free education benefit is helping team members reach their career goals. Target Corporate. https://corporate.target.com/news-features/article/2023/11/dream-to-be-update

22. Tenpas, A., Dietrich, E., Fitzgerald, B., & DeRemer, C. (2023). Financial reimbursement and productivity metrics for pharmacist-led chronic care management services in rural practice settings. Research in Social and Administrative Pharmacy, 19(5), 778-782. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.sapharm.2023.01.004
 
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