2   
  • You're in a shared space, so you need to be mindful of smells. I recommend bringing food that doesn't need to be heated up.

  • If there is a kitchen provided, why should you be forced to change your eating habits to please them? However, I am quite curious about what you are... eating that has everyone complaining. I'd ignore them, and if their complaints persist I'd be inclined to refer to HR. more

Jonathan Carver Moore Is Building the Art World He Wanted to Walk Into


When Jonathan Carver Moore talks about his gallery, he rarely starts with sales figures or artists' résumés. He starts with a feeling. The feeling of walking into a space and not wondering whether you belong there.

That instinct is on display this week at the FOG Design + Art Fair in San Francisco, where Moore is presenting a solo booth of new paintings by Sesse Elangwe, developed during the... artist's recent residency with the gallery. The work is lush and exacting, saturated with color and attention, but what Moore is really staging is an argument. Art should meet people where they are. A gallery should feel like a conversation rather than an exam.

It is an approach shaped less by art world convention than by Moore's own path into it. Before opening his eponymous gallery in 2023, Moore worked in nonprofit communications and institutional development, including roles focused on criminal justice reform and racial equity. He came to San Francisco nearly a decade ago for that work, without plans to open a gallery, but with a habit of collecting, installing, and quietly selling art wherever he landed. Offices became rotating exhibitions. Conversations with donors drifted toward artists and objects.

In retrospect, Moore sees those moments as training. Learning how to read a room. Learning when to talk and when to listen. Learning that people often want permission to ask questions before they want answers.

That sensibility now defines his gallery at 966 Market Street, at the edge of the Tenderloin and within the city's Transgender Cultural District. The address matters to Moore. The block sits near the site of the 1966 Gene Compton's Cafeteria riot, an early flashpoint in the fight for transgender rights, years before Stonewall. For Moore, history is something you live alongside, not something you borrow for atmosphere or cache.

The gallery's program reflects that mentality. Moore works with artists who are Black, queer, Indigenous, women, and others whose practices have often been sidelined. But he resists framing the program as corrective. He focuses on creating situations where artists, collectors, and first-time visitors meet on equal footing. Artists are given time, space, and an audience, often through a residency program housed next door to the gallery, where they live and work for weeks before debuting new bodies of work.

That residency model feeds directly into the FOG presentation. Elangwe, a Cameroonian-born painter now based in San Antonio, spent seven weeks in San Francisco photographing local residents and absorbing the city's rhythms. The resulting paintings place his subjects against recognizable Bay Area backdrops, weaving portraiture into place with a steady hand and an eye for bombastic color that still feels rooted in reality.

For Moore, the goal is not simply to introduce an artist to a fair audience, but to give collectors a reason to care about the art, a personal relationship instead of buying a work because they are following a trend or what the market says is "hot" at any given moment. "People are buying to live with this work," he said during a recent interview. "They're buying something that becomes part of their daily life."

That philosophy shapes how Moore thinks about collecting more broadly. He is open about the importance of welcoming new buyers early, before habits harden and anxieties set in. Pricing is discussed plainly. Conversations begin with what the viewer sees rather than what the artist intended. He aims to treat curiosity as a strength.

The long view matters to him. Moore often talks about collectors who started with modest purchases and grew alongside the gallery. A couple who once hesitated over a $4,500 painting later became among his most consistent supporters. Another first-time buyer went on to support an institutional exhibition. Moore recounts these stories with modesty and a measured tone. For him, it's clear that the only way relationships can develop is over time.

That perspective was sharpened when Moore brought his gallery to the Atlanta Art Fair last fall. Amid a crowd that skewed younger and more local than at many, more established, art fairs, he noticed a shift in the room. The audience felt familiar. Cultural reference points landed quickly. A painting depicting a Black woman doing her hair in a kitchen with a hot comb resonated without explanation. Moore was struck by how rare that ease had felt elsewhere.

Atlanta did not change his thinking so much as confirm it. The next generation of collectors is present. They respond when invited into the conversation with openness and patience.

That forward-looking approach also shapes how Moore thinks about fairs like FOG, which sits at the intersection of art and design. Rather than resisting that overlap, he leans into it. His booth is staged in collaboration with the San Fransico design studio Coup D'Etat, placing furniture and paintings in dialogue without turning the presentation into a lifestyle vignette. The aim is familiarity. Visitors are encouraged to imagine how the work might live with them.

"People should be able to see themselves with the work," Moore said. "That changes how they engage with it."

The clarity of that vision comes, in part, from Moore's position outside traditional gallery pipelines. He did not apprentice in blue-chip spaces or inherit a set of unspoken rules. He learned by asking questions and acting on instinct. When he opened the gallery, he moved quickly to establish a residency program. When he wanted to collaborate, he reached out directly. Momentum followed.

"I didn't know there was a chain of command," he said, laughing. "So I just kept moving."

That instinct places Moore in an interesting position within the Bay Area's art ecosystem. As galleries in Los Angeles contend with consolidation and closures, he speaks less about rivalry than connection. He talks openly about strengthening ties between Northern and Southern California, about sharing artists and audiences, about building networks that feel durable rather than extractive.

For now, Moore's focus remains close to home. FOG offers a chance to show what his gallery has been building over the past three years: a model grounded in access, patience, and sustained attention. It is not a reinvention of the art fair or the gallery system. It is something quieter. A belief that art works best when people feel comfortable enough to stay and look.
 
more

Interactive Tableau Resume Creation


I already have every piece of my career history, education details, and technical skills organised in a single MS Word workbook. What I need now is an eye-catching Tableau dashboard that turns that raw sheet into a living, interactive résumé. The finished product must be delivered as a self-contained Tableau workbook (.twbx). When I open it, I want three clearly defined views -- Work Experience,... Education, and Skills -- tied together with dynamic filters so a viewer can quickly slice the story: * Date range selections to focus on specific periods * Job-title filtering to spotlight particular roles * Skill filters that instantly surface the capabilities most relevant to the audience Smooth navigation and clean visual hierarchy are essential; think timelines, bar or gantt-style visuals, elegant icons -- whatever best communicates the data while keeping the interface professional and intuitive. I should be able to swap in new rows in the source Excel file and see the dashboard refresh with minimal effort, so please build with maintainability in mind and document any calculated fields or parameters you create. Deliverables 1. Tableau workbook (.twbx) connected to the supplied Excel file to be created from word file. 2. Brief step-by-step note on how to update data and publish the dashboard If the interactivity works flawlessly and the design looks polished on Tableau Public and I get used excel file, I'll consider the project complete. So first organise the data into excel file.

Project ID: 40173513

About the project

1 proposal

Open for bidding

Remote project

Active 56 yrs ago

Place your bid

Benefits of bidding on Freelancer
 
more
  • My daughter is a nail tech, I know that it takes a lot of hard work to get your license. I would not allow anyone to jeopardize that. You can take... your license anywhere. You can even use it to get licensed in another state. Contact the CEO of the company and let them know what is going on. Don't allow the manager to ruin your reputation or your license. Make sure that your station is up to code and that you are doing everything by the book because if the state does come to your shop ( a customer can complain) they are going to look at everybody working there. Cover your azz. more

  • Have a talk with the CEO, move as a team with other staff who are sidelined. The other one is just a manager, otherwise if the CEO is not in the know... of all this, his/her business might collapse, customers will keep going and high staff turn over without her consent. more

9 things boomers consider "helping" that their adult children experience as criticism wrapped in a favor


From job advice that worked in 1985 to surprise home makeovers you never asked for, the generation that raised us seems determined to fix lives we don't think are broken.

Ever notice how a simple phone call with your parents can leave you feeling oddly deflated, even when they're trying to help?

Last week, my mom called to tell me about a job opening at her friend's financial firm. "It pays... really well, and you already have the experience," she said, her voice bright with excitement. When I reminded her I'd left finance years ago to pursue writing, she sighed and added, "I just want you to be secure, honey."

Sound familiar? If you're nodding along, you're not alone. Many of us adult children find ourselves caught in this strange dance where our boomer parents genuinely believe they're being supportive, but their help often feels like thinly veiled criticism of our life choices.

After years of navigating this dynamic with my own well-meaning parents, I've identified nine common ways boomers think they're helping that can actually feel like judgment wrapped up with a bow. Understanding these patterns has helped me respond with more grace and less frustration. Maybe it'll help you too.

1) Offering unsolicited career advice based on their era

"Have you tried just walking into their office with your resume?"

If I had a dollar for every time I heard this suggestion, I could probably retire early. Boomer parents often share job-hunting strategies that worked brilliantly in 1985 but feel completely out of touch today. They suggest we're not trying hard enough when we explain that most companies don't even have physical applications anymore.

What they think they're doing: Sharing valuable wisdom from their successful careers.

What we experience: The implication that we don't know how to navigate our own professional world, or worse, that we're doing it wrong.

2) Constantly checking if you're saving enough money

My parents, bless them, ask about my retirement savings every single visit. They share articles about compound interest and remind me about their friend's daughter who bought a house at 25. Their concern comes from love, especially since financial security was how they learned to express care.

But here's what happens: these conversations make many of us feel like we're failing at adulting, especially when we're already stressed about money. We know we should save more. We're doing our best in an economy that looks nothing like the one they navigated.

3) Suggesting you're being too picky about relationships

"Maybe your standards are too high."

"You know, your father wasn't perfect when I met him."

"Have you tried being more flexible?"

These comments sting because they suggest we're somehow sabotaging our own happiness. Our parents got married younger, often to the first or second person they seriously dated. They can't always understand why we're taking our time or why we ended relationships they thought were "perfectly fine."

4) Fixing things in your home without asking

Picture this: You come home to find your dad has rearranged your entire living room because "the feng shui was all wrong." Or your mom has reorganized your kitchen cabinets "to be more efficient."

They see a problem and jump to solve it, just like they did when we were kids. But now? It feels like they don't trust us to manage our own space. It sends the message that our way of doing things isn't good enough.

5) Comparing your lifestyle to your siblings or their friends' kids

"Your brother just got promoted again. Maybe you could ask him for advice?"

"Sarah's daughter just had her second baby. She seems so happy."

These comparisons are meant to motivate or inspire, but they land like judgment. Each mention of someone else's achievements feels like a spotlight on what we haven't accomplished yet. It's exhausting to constantly measure up to a standard we didn't set for ourselves.

6) Offering to pay for things with strings attached

My mother once offered to pay for a financial planning course for me. Sweet gesture, right? Except I'd already been writing about personal finance for two years. The offer came with an unspoken message: what you're doing isn't quite legitimate or stable enough.

When parents offer financial help for specific things they deem important, rather than trusting us to decide what we need, it feels less like generosity and more like gentle steering toward their preferred life path for us.

7) Providing health and diet advice based on outdated information

"You need more protein. Are you sure you're getting enough as a vegan?"

"Walking isn't real exercise. You should join a gym."

"Have you tried the cabbage soup diet? It worked for Aunt Linda."

Our parents grew up with different health information, and many haven't updated their knowledge. When they share these tips, they think they're being helpful. But it often feels like they're questioning our ability to take care of ourselves or make informed choices about our own bodies.

8) Volunteering you for things without asking

"I told the neighbors you'd help them move this weekend. You're so strong!"

"I signed you up for my church's singles mixer. It'll be fun!"

This one really gets me. They assume our time is flexible or that we'll obviously want to do whatever they've committed us to. It shows they still see us as extensions of themselves rather than independent adults with our own schedules and priorities.

9) Dismissing your struggles because "things were harder" in their day

When we share genuine challenges, whether it's about work stress, housing costs, or modern dating, we often hear: "Well, we didn't have all these apps and conveniences. We just figured it out."

This response minimizes our real struggles and suggests we're somehow weaker or less capable than they were. It shuts down conversation rather than opening it up, leaving us feeling unheard and misunderstood.

Final thoughts

Here's what I've learned after years of navigating these dynamics: our boomer parents really are trying to help. They're operating from their own playbook, one that served them well in their time. Their concern, however misguided it might feel, usually comes from genuine love and worry about our wellbeing.

Setting boundaries has been crucial for me. I've learned to say, "Thanks for thinking of me, but I've got this handled" without launching into defensive explanations. I've accepted that my mother might always introduce me as her daughter who worked in finance, and that's okay. Her difficulty accepting my career change doesn't diminish my success as a writer.

If you're struggling with similar dynamics, remember that you can appreciate the intent while declining the help. You can love your parents while choosing your own path. And sometimes, the best response to well-meaning but critical "help" is simply: "I know you care about me, and I'm doing just fine."

After all, being an adult means deciding for yourself what help you actually need, even if your parents haven't quite gotten that memo yet.
 
more

No degree, no job? Tighter labor market leaves many with fewer options


Cheryl Wilson's résumé is near perfect.

She has worked all her life, notching decades of experience at back-to-back corporate jobs that often tapped her to train new hires.

But after a software company laid her off two years ago, Wilson has struggled to land a new job for the first time in her career.

Because for all her experience, there's one missing element from Wilson's résumé: a college... degree.

The labor market slowed this year as economic uncertainty made employers hesitant to hire, a reversal from the worker-friendly Great Resignation period a few years ago. The loss of employee power has hit new college graduates hardest, with their unemployment rate now outpacing overall unemployment for the first time in decades.

Now, with year-end layoffs in full swing and the latest jobs reports showing continued sluggishness, jobseekers are facing even more competition.

"At this point in my life, I'm afraid I'm not going to ever get another job," said Wilson, of Inver Grove Heights, Minn. "I know a lot of people are laid off. Everyone is looking for jobs."

A recent survey found many Americans don't believe a college degree is worth the cost, yet the unemployment rate for college graduates as a whole remains lower than for those without a degree. And as employers tighten up hiring criteria in the loosening labor market, it's becoming even harder for the roughly 60% of Americans without a degree to land a job.

"It feels like the landscape is incredibly competitive. It feels like individuals who have those degrees are applying for a wider variety of positions, including entry-level positions," said Becca Lopez, vice president of career education and employment services at workforce nonprofit Avivo. "And so it can feel to our jobseekers like there maybe isn't room for them in this labor market."

The September jobs report, released Nov. 20 after a delay during the federal government shutdown, showed a 2.8% unemployment rate for degree-holders aged 25 and older. For high school graduates without a degree, that number was 4.2% -- slightly under the national unemployment rate.

Minnesota in September had a lower unemployment rate overall, at 3.7%, and a lower rate for college graduates, at 2.1%, according to data from the state Department of Employment and Economic Development. But high school graduates without degrees had a higher unemployment rate, at 4.8%.

Faced with a historic worker shortage coming out of the COVID-19 pandemic, major employers in Minnesota and across the country shifted to "skills-based hiring" that values experience rather than educational attainment.

Results have been limited: Less than 40% of employers that removed degree requirements in the past decade have significantly changed their hiring practices, according to a report last year from the Burning Glass Institute and Harvard Business School.

Though the college wage premium has stagnated in the past 20 years, according to research from the San Francisco Fed, college-educated workers still earn about 75% more than those without degrees.

"I think that for most higher-paying jobs, it's still the case that a four-year degree is just the cutoff," said Bill Baldus, career center director at Metropolitan State University. "Can people get great jobs without one? Absolutely. But you're going to be a much stronger candidate with a degree."

Students at the St. Paul university are either working or looking for work while pursuing their degree, Baldus said. The school offers resources including a course on navigating the job market in partnership with local employers.

Faculty have started to recognize the need to aid in closing the skills gap for students aiming to become "first-generation professionals," said career counselor Rachel Nihart.

"There's frustrations of, 'I don't have a degree. How do I get into this market?'" she said. "'I don't know what working with Microsoft Teams looks like. I don't know what working with Excel looks like.'"

Nihart said more students are visiting her office as the job market tightens, and more are still in contact six months after their initial visit. Many are applying for jobs and not hearing back, she said.

Kila Seki has worked in retail and other customer-facing roles since she was a teenager. When she pursued higher-paying work, she said, she faced rejection after rejection.

This spring, Seki transferred from a community college to Metropolitan State University in St. Paul, Minn., and expects to graduate in about a year with a bachelor's degree in marketing management.

"The turning point for me was that talent and hard work is not always going to win, so you need credentials," she said. "I knew that I wanted a real opportunity."

As a teenager in Alabama, Wilson was on track to study fashion and design. Then she got pregnant.

Her mother offered to care for the baby while she pursued her degree, but because she had already raised 10 children and one grandchild, Wilson said no.

"I said, 'This is my responsibility, so I won't. I can't let you do that,'" she said.

Decades later, Wilson still wants to work full time. She's taking an online computer skills course through Minneapolis-based nonprofit Hired and plans to seek help brushing up her résumé and practicing interviewing.

She hopes prospective employers can look past what's missing from her résumé, and those of others without degrees, and see what's there -- experience, hard work, an eagerness to learn.

"College is really important, but that wasn't in the cards for me," Wilson said. "But I have worked. I've paid my taxes. Just give us a chance to prove ourselves."
 
more
1   
  • Jobs should be federally provided for everyone. One day we will look back on the state of our system and claim to have always been against it.

  • In Kenya, many graduates are unemployment with reports indicating that about 40% are jobless. Further reports indicates that about 70% of secondary... school leavers do not proceed to post-secondary education hence jeopardizing their chances of gainful employment. The situation is worsen by skills mismatch, a declining rate of work transition from secondary to post-secondary education despite the fact that about 50,000 of the youth graduates form universities annually. Therefore, the key drivers to high rate of unemployment in Kenya is attributed to the absence of practical skills and experience; lack of curriculum alignment with market needs; not integrating practical learning, community service, and research into the overall education system. The way forward is to embrace entrepreneurship, work-integrating learning, internships, and market-relevant skills that emphasis more on skill acquisitions and relevant knowledge on the job market.  more

Why a recruiting veteran says applying online in 2026 no longer works for most job seekers - The Times of India


The job market in 2026 has become increasingly challenging, with online applications no longer guaranteeing interviews or responses, according to recruiting veteran J.T. O'Donnell. "Applying online, if I'm being really honest, has to be one of the most degrading and depressing things people do," O'Donnell said, quoted by CNBC. "I've never seen it this bad," she added, describing the overwhelming... competition and automated filters that often prevent qualified candidates from being noticed.O'Donnell, who has more than 30 years of experience in the hiring industry, said the reliance on online applications has left many job seekers frustrated and demoralised. As companies adopt AI-generated application systems and automated submission tools, the traditional approach of submitting résumés through job boards is becoming increasingly ineffective, CNBC reports.The decline of online applications in 2026According to O'Donnell, employers are posting fewer positions publicly, and many advertised roles are already filled internally or remain ghost jobs. "Positions receive hundreds of applicants within hours because of AI auto-apply tools," she said, as reported by CNBC. This flood of automated applications often means qualified candidates never reach human recruiters, she added.Research supports this trend. Glassdoor data indicates that the proportion of candidates sourced directly by recruiters has increased 72% since 2023, reaching nearly 15% last year. O'Donnell cited this shift as evidence that personal visibility and networking now carry far more weight than submitting multiple online applications, CNBC reports.Building visibility and strategic connectionsO'Donnell also recommends that job seekers aim to get the job through a recruiting process instead of using online job applications as a main way to get a job. To achieve this, one needs to create a presence on online recruiting sites such as LinkedIn, and engage strategically with the companies' content as well as their workers' content. "All of these recruiters that are on those platforms, the way you're going to show up in the recruiting results is by engaging with their company's content," CNBC quoted O'Donnell as saying.She described her approach on how one can use something she termed as documentation streak. In one of the instances, project managers who followed the documentation streak approach ended up receiving a call on the 17th day on an unspecified position from one of their desired companies, although they had not been advertised. The project manager had been actively responding and engaging with posts from the desired companies. He shared some insights and skills in his area of operations. O'Donnell described the outcome as a clear demonstration of how networking and content engagement can bypass traditional online applications, CNBC reports.Five Content Formats that Grab Recruiters' AttentionO'Donnell outlined a few types of content that do well on LinkedIn and can help candidates get noticed:"By creating a space where recruiters can find you and contact you, you start getting interviews in this market," O'Donnell said, as reported by CNBC. She stressed the fact that "Consistency, engagement, and the demonstration of expert skills have now become indispensable requirements for 2026's employment scenario."The new approach to job searchingThe advice from the veteran highlights the fact that there has been a major change in the way that people are selected in jobs, as while "filling out an internet application" remains an option, it "is NOT the way to get an interview these days." O'Donnell's strategy highlights the increased emphasis of recruiter-based recruitment, as well as the importance of "visibility," which has become a part of the contemporary job search process. Individuals aspiring towards a brighter 2026 are encouraged to focus on establishing real relationships, participating in discussions via the internet, and leveraging content sharing in the pursuit of demonstrating expertise. "This is the new networking," she said, talking about the shift in finding the right job in a world filled with AI algorithms that often process applications on their own. more
6   
  • I can honestly say I went to you with the mercy for elementary education and that was never even a question that even popped up ever when I was doing... my teaching methods... But honestly give yourself a break and give yourself some Grace and just better expand yourself and finding out little information I have a client I take care of now that is deaf and blind so he may pose a question like that to you you just do the footwork to make sure next time you don't ever make that mistake I will give an answer... For an abstract mind and then when they ask you do you have any questions at the end I will say now how would you teach a deaf and blind person with the color yellow is and then let me know what's being said or if they take a step back.... You'll be fine girly take this as a a strong lesson to teach yourself to strengthen and areas that you thought people would never even try to test and then come back hard with that last question I just gave you.  more

    -1
  • I'd like to know, what was your answer? Just curious

Job Seekers Wage Legal War Against the "Black Box" of AI Hiring Algorithms - TechStory


Job hunting today is highly frustrating for millions of Americans who lack the chance to even get past the first hurdle of an artificial intelligence that reviews their application before any human ever gets to see them. Now, a revolutionary case raises the question of whether these AI gatekeepers should have to unseal their methods behind rejecting applicants.

This case involves Eightfold AI, a... Silicon Valley-based business that created an enormous database of profiles of workers around the globe totaling more than one billion workers. When people apply to other companies through Eightfold's platform to find other job opportunities, it provides them with a score of one to five based on their skill set and the needs of that company.

The unhappy candidates, whose number didn't make the cut, are often clueless as to where they went wrong or which data was against them.

This is a problem that Erin Kistler is very familiar with. She is a computer science graduate, but like thousands, she has been painstakingly tracking her thousands of job applications over the last year. What is shocking is that only a paltry 0.3 percent have led to follow-up conversations.

Several of those applications went through Eightfold's system, and she never received any feedback about her scores.

"I think I deserve to know what's being collected about me and shared with employers," Kistler said. "And they're not giving me any feedback, so I can't address the issues."

The Landmark Class Action Against AI Gatekeepers

This lawsuit is an innovative approach in the use of the law, as the plaintiffs claim the AI filtering tools need to be subjected to the same level of disclosure as credit reporting agencies.

The Fair Credit Reporting Act, which Congress made into law in 1970, forces credit agencies to disclose the information they have collected on a person and offer the person an opportunity to dispute the information they believe is erroneous. The law actually applies not only to credit but to the "gathering of information on persons. used for employment purposes."

David Seligman, whose nonprofit law firm, Towards Justice, is working to advance the case, agrees that this protection should be granted to A.I.-powered hiring tools as well.

There "is no A.I. exemption to our laws." "Far too often, the business model of these companies is to roll out these new technologies, to wrap them in fancy new language, and ultimately to just violate peoples' rights."

The lawsuit filed in Contra Costa County Superior Court in California seeks to certify a class action and represents one of the first efforts to use consumer protection laws against algorithm-based recruitment systems. The plaintiffs are asking Eightfold to comply with various disclosure obligations and are seeking unspecified financial damages.

This is only the first in a long line of legal challenges to AI hiring technology, according to legal scholars. David Walton, an attorney in Philadelphia who specializes in advising companies about AI, admitted that companies are currently in uncharted legal territory.

When Artificial Intelligence Hiring Crosses the Line from Efficiency to Bias

While the company could say that they are merely providing an assessment that rates applicants as a recruiter would, the mechanisms by which they are doing that are questionable.

"These tools are designed to be biased. I mean, they're designed to find a certain type of person," Walton explained. "So they are designed to be biased, but they're not designed to improperly be biased. And that's a very fine line."

There have been other lawsuits on the discrimination front against AI hiring tools. A high-profile 2023 case against Workday, another major hiring screening tool maker, accuses the company's technology of illegally discriminating against older workers, the disabled, and Blacks.

Federal Judge Rita Lin found the evidence compelling enough to continue the case, as one individual was given an automated "reject message" at 1:50 a.m., less than an hour from when he initially applied, which "plausibly supports an inference of discrimination based on criteria unrelated to qualifications."

The regulatory landscape has shifted dramatically under different administrations. In 2024, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau issued guidance that was unequivocal.

The hiring dossiers and scores were covered under the Fair Credit Reporting Act. Once President Trump took office, acting director Russell Vought rescinded that guidance as part of his broader effort to dismantle the agency.

Jenny Yang, a former chair of the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, now representing plaintiffs, said regulators began studying algorithmic hiring more than a decade ago. "We realized they were fundamentally changing how people were hired. People were getting rejected in the middle of the night and nobody knew why," she said.

While corporate litigation typically drags on for years, the case is emblematic of emerging concerns about transparency and equity in cases where AI controls who receives job opportunities and who does not.
 
more

Ask an Aviation Recruiter: Aviation Career Advice, 2026 Winter Edition


What does "good cultural fit" really mean in aviation recruitment?

In aviation, as in many other industries, every airline and operator has its own set of values, standards, mission statements, and behaviours that shape how they operate. From fast-paced and performance-driven cultures, to people-centric or heritage-rich environments, understanding the spectrum of airline cultures helps you... identify where you're most likely to thrive.

It's important for professionals to understand and airline's overall culture before committing to a contract or new role, ensuring your career goals, strengths, and preferences align.

If you join an airline that has a highly performance-driven culture but prefer a steadier pace, the environment can feel demanding. Equally, those with driven personalities may find this type of culture energising and motivating.

Finding the right cultural fit can be the difference between your career progressing or stalling, and plays a major role in long-term job satisfaction.

Explore the common airline cultures and the impact they have on your career by visiting our article, Evaluating Airline Culture for your Career here.

Highlighting your weaknesses or gaps on your CV or in your interview can benefit you more than many professionals realise.

Explaining these honestly demonstrates self-awareness and transparency, qualities that airlines value. To turn a weakness into a positive, explain how you plan to address it and continue developing professionally.

Only highlighting strengths, can give the impression that you lack self-reflection or ambition to grow, or could come across as inflexible. Being open about weaknesses allows for more honest, productive conversations.

Adding context around gaps in employment can help put concerns at ease, whilst also highlighting your commitment for the future.

A common misconception when job searching is that success requires constant effort and time, which can often lead to burn out. Job hunting often feels like a job in itself, particularly if you're still working at the same time. However, there are many small actions you can take to allow the right opportunities to find you.

You don't need to spend time scrolling every day looking for the right job posting. Turning on post notifications for these pages will keep you informed when a new job goes live, without repeatedly checking feeds.

Our LinkedIn, Facebook, and Instagram pages are updated every day with new and existing aviation job opportunities, clearly highlighting requirements and benefits. Be sure to visit, press follow and turn on post notifications on your chosen channel to stay updated.

Our AeroProfessional LinkedIn page has many dedicated groups for you to join, from B737, to A320, Non-Type-Rated, and more. These groups feature job postings specific to the group.

This is an easy way to refine your search and stay informed.

The most effective strategy for job opportunities to find you is registering with relevant recruitment firms. You'll receive tailored email alerts with new roles, plus expert support and advice.

By registering with AeroProfessional, you'll receive early notification when a new role goes live. You'll also be directly contacted when a role matches your qualifications, hours, Type-Ratings, and licences, ensuring you receive only the most suitable opportunities. Plus, our monthly bulletin enables you to stay updated on the most in-demand roles, as well as providing valuable insights and advice.

Registering is the easiest way to fast-track your job search, just one click of a button, and opportunities will find you.

To get started, register with us here.

Whether you're currently in a job you love, one you don't, or not working at all, assessing your situation and considering your future is an important place to start when you're feeling stuck.

Taking a moment to put this into perspective can help you to further understand your situation and create a plan, ultimately building a healthy and secure future outlook.

Whether you're ready to move on, or you're unsure where your future is headed and how to navigate it, reach out to our expert recruitment team who will provide their specialist advice on your situation and help you get your career moving again. Reach out here.

Every career move in aviation starts with the right information. Whether you're actively searching or simply planning ahead, staying informed puts you in control of your next step. The more clarity you have, the stronger your career becomes.

By understanding what to focus on, you can approach your next move with greater confidence and clarity. Our recruiters are here to offer honest guidance and support whenever you need it.

If you have more questions or would like tailored advice, we're always happy to help. Keep an eye out for the next edition of Ask an Aviation Recruiter, where we'll continue to share insights to support your career progression.
 
more

This One Skill Gets You Hired, And It's Not What You Think


Simply matching a job description isn't enough anymore. The right qualifications will get you considered for a position. But to actually get hired, you must make an impression. Successful candidates communicate their value with clarity and confidence. When you master how you present yourself, interviews stop feeling like interrogations and start feeling like conversations where you're in control.... You walk out knowing you gave them every reason to say yes. That's the difference between hoping for an offer and expecting one.

Another rejection email. Your heart sinks with that familiar feeling of disappointment. Why does this keep happening, especially when you do everything right?

When you apply for a job, you adjust your resume to fit the role. You only apply for positions where you're a top candidate. You write personal cover letters, and you have a strong portfolio. You do get invites to job interviews, but no matter what happens, you just can't seem to land an offer.

If you can relate, just know there isn't something wrong with you! The problem is simple: In interviews, you don't communicate your value clearly. It might be that you feel nervous, or you undersell yourself, or maybe you don't connect with the people in the room.

How you present yourself is the difference between getting interviews and getting job offers. It's how you go from being one of many qualified candidates to being the person they can't stop thinking about after you leave the room.

In this video, Morgane Peng, Head of Product Design & AI Transformation at Societe Generale, reveals why presentations skills are so valuable for every stage of your career.

Why a Good CV Isn't Enough Anymore

If you compare the job market today to a few months ago, it's completely different! LinkedIn job posts that used to attract a couple applicants now get hundreds. Entry-level roles expect years of experience. Mid- and senior-level roles attract over-qualified candidates who compete against others willing to accept much less than they deserve.

Then there's artificial intelligence (AI). It doesn't just help us work; it does the work! Before technology like ChatGPT, humans had to spend months if they wanted to learn to code or understand datasets. Now, AI can do these things, and it can do them fast! Tasks that only a few people could do are now possible for anyone with an internet connection! This means everyone is qualified on paper (especially when AI makes sure you have the perfect resume and cover letter).

To get a job offer, you need to find a way to stand out from the crowd.

Recruiters Are Desperate for One Thing

Imagine you're a recruiter. Every day, you open an inbox full of applications. Everyone has the same skills. Everyone is a "results-driven professional" and "team player". Everyone uses AI to write their applications. Soon, candidates all blur together.

That's why recruiters are desperate for people who stand out (in the right way). You need to set yourself apart from everyone else, or you'll get lost in the stack of resumes.

Think back to your last interview. You probably talked through your resume and spoke about past experience and achievements. You might've spoken about the company and asked a few questions. But when you were asked more detailed questions about your work, your ideas, and your process, how did you feel? Did you communicate as clearly as you wanted to? Afterwards, did you think back and wish you'd said something differently?

A strong resume gets you to the interview, but the choice to hire you happens when you present yourself, your ideas, and your value. When you know how to present, you aren't just saying "I'm good." You're showing potential employers "Here's exactly what I bring and how that'll benefit you when you hire me."

Just as importantly, hiring managers want someone the team will enjoy working with. Beyond your qualifications, they're looking to see if they want to interact with you every day. When you present well, you naturally build that connection. You communicate clearly, read the room, and respond thoughtfully. You become the candidate that's remembered, and most of the time, that's the person who gets the offer.

In this video, Morgane Peng explains the value of building trust in your career, and how you can do it too.

Presentations Aren't Just "Public Speaking"

Let's clear something up right now. When we speak about presenting, most people assume it's public speaking. They imagine standing in front of a room full of people, lightheaded with sweaty palms. While public speaking is part of it, it's not all of it.

When you master presentations, you learn what to say and how to use body language to come across as confident and approachable (even if you feel nervous). You use vocal techniques like pacing, pauses for dramatic effect, and adapt your energy to match the conversation. These are the things that convince someone that you're a good fit for the role.

Let's take Marta as an example. Here's what happened in her last interview. She walked in prepared with her portfolio, ready to talk through her recent projects. The first 10 minutes went smoothly. She explained her background, talked about her achievements, and answered a couple standard questions about her experience.

Then the hiring manager asked her to walk through a case study. Marta knew her work inside and out, but as she tried to explain her process, she got stuck. She jumped between ideas without clear transitions. Her energy dropped as she second-guessed herself mid-sentence. She could see the interviewer losing attention. When they asked follow-up questions, Marta's answers felt scattered. She left that interview disappointed. She knew she hadn't shown them what she was truly capable of.

Marta didn't know it, but she'd been presenting the entire interview. When she introduced herself, walked through her portfolio, and explained her approach to the case study. Every moment required the same skills: clear communication, confident body language, intentional pacing, and the ability to read the room and adjust.

What if Marta had those skills? She would've walked through that case study with a clear structure the hiring manager could follow. She would've paused at the right time to let important points have greater effect. When she noticed the interviewer's attention starting to drift, she would've shifted her energy and brought them back in. Her body language would've shown confidence even when her mind was racing.

Presenting is a skill you use in almost every professional situation. When you pitch an idea to your boss, collaborate with your team, or sit across from a hiring manager, you use the same skills. These moments happen all the time, and how you show up in them matters.

In this video, Morgane Peng describes how to capture and hold people attention, from start to finish.

Why Great Presenting Skills Are the Common Denominator in Job Offers

A job offer depends on many things: the right skills and experience, roles that match your background, good timing, and sometimes networking or referrals. But one factor makes a huge difference in interviews: How you connect with people and communicate your value.

When you present well, you make special moments an algorithm can't copy. You watch the people in the room. You notice small changes in how they sit or look and change your approach. You sense when someone is confused so you explain yourself in a different way. You make people like and trust you with your energy, personality, and because you explain difficult ideas in an understandable way.

Take Sarah, who interviewed for a senior product designer role. When she was asked to present a strategy, she structured it so clearly that everyone in the room could follow her thinking from problem to solution. When they challenged her approach, she didn't get defensive. She acknowledged their concern and showed her reasoning. Two days later, they offered her the role above her asking salary. The hiring manager later told her they were impressed by how she communicated under pressure.

Sarah's story shows how presentation skills make you memorable. You become confident without being arrogant. You become the candidate they can actually see in the role because you've painted that picture for them. When AI can do most of the technical work, the person who can walk into a room and make people feel something is more likely to get noticed and hired.

How to Go From "Thanks for Your Time" to "When Can You Start?"

The good news is that these skills are completely learnable! You don't need a special talent or years of experience to get there. Start with the basics so that when your next interview comes, you're ready.

Look up common interview questions and think back to what you've been asked in past interviews. Which of these are easy to answer, and which need deeper reflection? Don't just think about your answers; say them out loud. This helps you find better words and speak more smoothly.

When you practice your interview questions, stand in front of a mirror or record yourself on your phone. This can seem silly at first, but it helps you see what others see. You might notice that you fidget or use too many filler words like "um." Look for things you want to improve, then try again. The goal is to feel confident without sounding rehearsed.

Talk to friends and family about your work as if they know nothing about your industry. Ask for honest feedback: Did they understand you? Were you clear? Did you sound confident? Use their feedback to guide what you change.

Remember that you don't need to be perfect right away. Everyone goes through this when they start out, but the more you do it, the more natural it becomes.

In this video, Morgane Peng discusses common errors in how people deliver presentations, and how to overcome them.

What Happens After You Get Hired

Strong presentation skills don't lose value once you land the job. It's actually the opposite! When you know how to present, opportunities start coming to you. You become the person your manager turns to when something needs explaining to leadership. You're invited to represent your team in important meetings. Your ideas get heard and acted on because you know how to communicate them clearly.

People who present well get promoted faster. Not always because they're the most technically skilled, but because they can explain complex ideas to anyone, build trust across teams, and make others feel confident in their ideas. These are the skills that turn good employees into leaders.

The Take Away

The old formula where you show up, do good work, and your career will grow naturally doesn't work anymore. Industries have evolved and will continue to evolve. Some jobs will disappear and others will transform.

You can't predict the future or control the job market. You can't stop AI from getting smarter and faster. And you can't stop other people from applying to the same jobs as you. But you can control how you show up.

Imagine how it'll feel when you walk into your next interview and instead of feeling nervous and second-guessing every answer, you're confident. You explain your ideas clearly. You connect with the interviewer. You leave knowing you gave them exactly what they needed to say yes. That's what strong presentation skills give you. Not just a better chance at landing a job, but a skill that keeps opening doors throughout your entire career.So don't wait until your next interview is set to start!

References and Where to Learn More

Ace your next interview using presentation skills from our course Present Like a Pro: Fast-Track Your Career.

Find out How to Find Your Voice: Speak with Confidence and Clarity.

Read about why You're Not Bad at Presenting; You Just Haven't Mastered the Right Way (Yet)

Learn about Presentation Pitfalls and How You Avoid Them.

Hero image: © Interaction Design Foundation, CC BY SA 4.0
 
more

Changing face of the job market: When titles stop explaining work and skills take the driver's seat - The Times of India


A journalist, an engineer, an analyst, that is what our professionals identify with. They told employers what skills to expect and told workers where they stood. The notion seems to fade now.The labour market is reorganising itself at a speed few institutions can match. Roles are mutating faster than titles can keep up. Workflows are being redesigned by technology. Yet hiring systems, résumés, and... classrooms still rely on labels that no longer describe reality.What has emerged is not just a skills gap, but a signalling failure. Large-scale labour market data shows a widening disconnect between how workers describe themselves and what employers are actually willing to reward. The economy is no longer structured around roles. It is structured around skills. And the transition has been messy.Most workers continue to market themselves using broad, familiar language. Communication, leadership, and problem-solving. These traits sound serious, and they feel safe. They once helped candidates stand out.Now they barely register. Employers are inundated with applicants who claim the same strengths. What they struggle to find are people with the specific capabilities required to execute the work in front of them.General skills have not lost their importance. They have lost their scarcity. When everyone signals the same thing, it stops carrying information. In hiring, sameness is the fastest route to invisibility.One of the more uncomfortable realities of today's labour market is that skill value is not universal. A capability that boosts pay in one role can reduce it in another.Strategic thinking may be rewarded in customer-facing roles. In highly technical positions, it can be read as distance from the actual work. In fields driven by precision, employers prioritise those who understand the system over those who want to manage it.This challenges a popular myth. There is no single set of future-proof skills. What matters is fit. The right skill, in the right role, at the right time. The market is no longer impressed by ambition alone. It is focused on execution.This shift has deeper consequences than most organisations acknowledge. Skills are quietly replacing job titles as the real currency of work.Yet many companies still rely on rigid job architecture. Roles are defined by tradition rather than workflow. Pay is tied to hierarchy instead of contribution. This obscures where value is actually created and where it is merely assumed.Moving toward a skill-based model forces difficult questions. What tasks matter most. Which skills drive outcomes. Where humans add value in increasingly automated systems. Few organisations are eager to confront these answers.Workers, too, are being forced to rethink their careers. The ladder model no longer holds. Careers now resemble portfolios, built through the accumulation of scarce and relevant skills. Titles may sound impressive, but they age quickly. Capabilities travel further.The implications for education are unavoidable. Many institutions are still preparing students for a labour market that has already moved on. Broad preparation without application is losing credibility.Employers increasingly expect graduates to contribute from day one. They are less willing to fund long periods of adjustment. This widens the gap between what is taught and what is needed.This does not mean education should become narrow or transactional. It means relevance must be taken seriously. Knowledge that cannot be applied struggles to hold value in a market that rewards output.Technology has accelerated this transition. Artificial intelligence has lowered barriers to learning and shortened the time needed to acquire new skills. Access has expanded and competition has intensified.In this environment, knowing tools is no longer a differentiator. Knowing how to think remains one. The most resilient workers are those who can take complex problems and impose structure. They define assumptions. They work through uncertainty. They adapt knowledge across contexts. These capabilities resist automation because they depend on judgment, not repetition.Though we all feel that the real danger in today's job market is being replaced by machines, but, it is the inability to adapt as signal changes. The current mismatch cannot last. Labour markets eventually correct distorted signals. When they do, the consequences are uneven.Those who cling to titles will struggle. Those who invest in depth will gain leverage. Organisations that align work with skills will move faster. Those who rely on outdated labels will fall behind.The message from the market is already clear. Job titles no longer tell the truth but skills do. The future of work will belong to those who understand that distinction, and act on it before the correction arrives. more

At Tesla, Proof Beats Pedigree as Musk Asks Applicants to Keep Resume and Show Results - Tekedia


Elon Musk has never been sentimental about hiring rituals, but his latest recruitment call strips the process down to its bare essentials. If you want to work on Tesla's Dojo3 AI chip, he does not want your résumé front and center. He wants three bullet points. Specifically, the toughest technical problems you have solved.

The request, posted this week on X, is less a quirky billionaire flourish... than a window into how elite tech hiring is tightening under pressure. Musk's message was blunt: email three bullets describing hard problems conquered. No flowery cover letters. No sprawling résumés polished to perfection. Just outcomes.

For recruiters watching Silicon Valley's recalibration, the subtext is unmistakable. Companies are no longer hiring for potential narratives. They are hiring for demonstrated impact.

"He's basically just trying to cut through the noise of the job market," Business Insider quoted Michelle Volberg, a longtime recruiter and founder of Twill, a startup that pays tech workers to recommend peers for hard-to-fill roles, as saying.

In her view, traditional résumés and LinkedIn profiles often obscure more than they reveal, especially in technical fields where job titles can mean wildly different things from one company to the next.

Asking candidates to spell out a small number of hard-won victories forces clarity. It moves the conversation away from buzzwords and toward evidence. For hiring managers drowning in applications, that matters.

The timing is not accidental, as tech hiring is emerging from a period defined by excess. Pandemic-era overexpansion, followed by mass layoffs and a surge in AI investment, has produced a market where headcount is tightly controlled, and expectations are unforgiving. In that environment, the premium is on people who can show, not tell.

Volberg said she hears growing frustration from hiring managers about résumés that appear engineered for applicant-tracking systems rather than for humans. Some are so tailored that they reveal little about how candidates actually think or solve problems.

"They don't want to see fluffy résumés that have been written by ChatGPT," she said.

Musk's approach fits neatly into a broader shift toward what HR professionals describe as skills-based hiring. Instead of leaning on credentials, pedigree, or years of experience, employers are increasingly probing how candidates arrive at answers, how they navigate ambiguity, and how they perform under pressure.

In Musk's case, the emphasis on outcomes is also consistent with his long-held skepticism of formal qualifications. He has repeatedly said that a college degree is not a prerequisite for working at Tesla, arguing that evidence of exceptional ability matters more than where someone studied or whether they studied at all.

This is not the first time he has used bullets as a filter. BI reports that in 2025, while overseeing recruitment tied to the Department of Government Efficiency, Musk issued a similar call for "world-class" engineers and product managers, asking applicants to submit two or three bullets showcasing exceptional ability, alongside a résumé. The pattern suggests a philosophy rather than a one-off stunt.

From a hiring perspective, the bullet test raises the stakes for candidates. Volberg said it quickly exposes exaggeration. Anyone claiming to have solved complex technical problems must be prepared to unpack them in detail. In interviews, it becomes obvious who actually did the work and who merely inherited the credit.

"If you say you've solved these three things, you'd better be able to talk about them," she said. Candidates who cannot often do not just lose the opportunity; they risk damaging their reputation with recruiters.

Still, the approach is not without its blind spots. David Murray, chief executive of performance management startup Confirm, cautioned that asking applicants to self-select their greatest wins may disadvantage quieter contributors who are less inclined to market themselves. Technical excellence does not always correlate with confidence or self-promotion.

There is also the risk of overconfidence skewing the pool. The Dunning-Kruger effect, where weaker performers overestimate their abilities while stronger ones underplay theirs, could mean that some of the most capable engineers do not shine in a three-bullet self-assessment.

"What he is asking people to do is to market themselves," BI quoted Murray as saying.

Yet even those caveats underline the larger point. Musk is not trying to design a universally fair hiring system. He is optimizing for speed, signal, and intensity in one of the most competitive corners of AI development. Dojo3, Tesla's in-house AI chip effort, sits at the heart of the company's ambitions in autonomy and robotics. The margin for error is slim.

In that sense, the bullets are less about minimalism than about accountability. They force candidates to anchor their claims in reality. They also signal to the market that, at least at Tesla, the era of hiring on credentials alone is fading.

For job seekers, the implication is sobering but clear. The story you tell about yourself matters less than the problems you can prove you have solved. In Musk's world, results are the résumé.
 
more

Woman slams RM1.3k job offer, claims employer was rude


A Malaysian woman turns down a RM1,300 admin cum marketing job in Petaling Jaya, sparking debate over low pay and unfair hiring practices.

JOB hunting is not only daunting but also challenging, not just because of the current job market but also due to certain employers' attitudes towards applicants.

A Malaysian woman recently shared her upsetting encounter with an employer who allegedly not... only offered a low salary but also mocked her current job.

According to a post on Threads, the woman claimed that the company is located in the Petaling Jaya area.

ALSO READ: "Did you only come here for the money?" - M'sian jobseeker called out for asking salary in interview

In terms of salary, the company allegedly offered her a meagre RM1,300 for an "admin cum marketing" role, without EPF or SOCSO contributions.

She also claimed that the employer insulted her for working as a freelancer.

According to a screenshot attached to the post, the woman ultimately rejected the offer, stating that she refused to work for a boss who "looked down on her current job".

In an update, she explained that she did not report the company.

Netizens nevertheless urged the woman to report the company, pointing out that the offered salary does not align with the national minimum wage of RM1,700.

The post also sparked a discussion on recruitment practices among Malaysian companies, with the majority of netizens recommending that jobseekers properly vet employers before submitting their résumés.

"Just report it to the Labour Department and the Public Complaints Bureau. There's no need to follow up. Submit all the evidence. What's important is that these companies are exposed for exploiting the labour system," a user commented.
 
more

You Don't Need a Degree


People love to talk about education in business. Diplomas. MBAs. The right schools. The curated path that makes a résumé glow under fluorescent lights. I get it. I've worked with brilliant people -- strategic, refined, well-credentialed. Some can reverse-engineer a global supply chain with three whiteboards and a decaf latte.

But here's what I've seen: When it hits the fan -- and it always does... -- degrees don't save you. Grit does. And grit doesn't live in classrooms. It lives in the moments that burn.

The outsider's expertise

In 1997, I was running the State of Texas Access Reform program, and the Iowa Children's Health Insurance Program. I was 25. By optics? I shouldn't have been there. By capability? Absolutely. I didn't come from wealth. My story started on the streets at 16. But I had scars. Hunger. A work ethic built from not having another option. That mattered more than anyone knew.

I had just enough experience with a system called Vantive -- a clunky piece of software. I studied it obsessively. I opened it, broke it, and reverse-engineered it because I couldn't afford not to. That curiosity -- and the word Vantive on my résumé -- sent me to Silicon Valley to support a merger between Boole & Babbage and BMC Software. They wanted my "expertise."

"Expertise" was generous.

I packed a suit and flew out. I checked into a Motel 6 behind a Denny's off 101 -- with hallway carpets that smelled like mildew and floor wax. The front desk clerk didn't look up. The vending machine groaned louder than the air conditioner. That night, I ordered a Denver omelet. Overcooked eggs. Rubbery ham. Peppers that tasted like lighter fluid. By midnight, I was curled on the bathroom floor, violently sick, cold sweat on my neck, wondering how I was going to survive the week.

Morning came anyway. The sunrise is relentless that way.

I pulled on a wrinkled shirt, straightened a tie I wasn't sure matched, and walked into a room that smelled like espresso and glass cleaner. The table was surrounded by professionals twice my age, five times as polished. Salt-and-pepper hair. Stainless mugs gripped like trophies. They had presence. They had expectations.

And they turned to me: "So...where do we start?"

I spoke slowly. Carefully. Like I was walking barefoot across broken glass. I gave them just enough to buy time. Time to listen. Time to learn. Inside, I was chaos. Outside, I held still.

Built in the dark

That night, the motel room felt colder than it should've -- the way a place feels when you're far from home and in over your head. I opened my laptop -- a plastic brick that wheezed like it hated me -- and shoved in an AOL CD. That disc was the internet.

The modem shrieked like a dying robot, then finally connected. On the TV, Who Wants to Be a Millionaire played while I sat hunched over a scratchy motel bed, stomach twisted, brain buzzing, trying to decode acronyms I couldn't spell. I flipped through notes -- scrawled, frantic, half-legible.

It was 1997. No YouTube. No Stack Overflow. No ChatGPT. God, what I would've done for that in '97.

Still, I sat there. Tired. Nauseous. Determined. Not because I knew what I was doing, but because I had to know more tomorrow than I did today. I unrolled giant database diagrams across the bed until the sheets disappeared. I traced them with a pen like I was solving a crime scene.

I didn't sleep much. But I learned. Every morning, I walked back into that room a little more dangerous. I started building a plan. Not perfect, but something that could flex. That's all part of leadership: knowing just enough to start, and being relentless enough to adjust.

Consequences educate

Eventually, the room changed. The way they looked at me changed. I wasn't just tolerated; I was trusted. I didn't realize it then, but my value wasn't in what I knew -- it was in how I learned under pressure. It was in my ability to stay still when everything whispered, you don't belong here. I knew how to stay when others ran because I had lived in harder rooms than that one.

Scars don't show up on a résumé, but they show up when it counts. They offer a perspective that comfort cannot provide because they strip away the luxury of pretense. When you've been burned, you stop caring about looking like the smartest person in the room and focus exclusively on being the most effective.

There is a clarity that comes with having struggled; it erases the indulgence of overthinking. You learn to move with a survival instinct that replaces hesitation with action. Most importantly, scars force ownership. You realize, usually in the middle of a long night, that no one is coming to save the project; it is entirely on you.

I've seen polished professionals freeze when a plan breaks. And I've seen the ones with scraped-up stories step in and carry it -- not because they had the right degrees, but because they'd already paid the price somewhere else.

So no, this isn't about dismissing education. It's about telling the truth. You don't need a degree to be ready. You need the kind of pain that teaches you how to act when no one has the answers. You need scars that taught you to move through doubt. You need to have learned -- not from comfort -- but from consequence.

I didn't build a career in spite of chaos. I built my career inside it. Some people are trained for the boardroom. Others are built in the dark. And when everything falls apart, you'll know exactly which one is in the room with you.

The early-rate deadline for the 2026 Inc. 5000 is Friday, January 30, at 11:59 p.m. PT. Apply today.
 
more

The First Impression That Most Homes Overlook


Have you ever stood on a porch in Seattle rain, keys in hand, judging a house before you even step inside? That pause tells a story. This piece looks at the first impression many homes miss, the entry moment that shapes trust, comfort, and value. In a time of remote work, rising energy costs, and porch cameras everywhere, the overlooked details matter more than ever.

The moment before the... welcome

The first impression of a home does not begin in the living room. It begins at the threshold, where visitors decide if a place feels cared for or tired. People notice how easy it is to approach, how the entry looks in poor light, and whether the door feels solid when opened. These details set expectations the same way a firm handshake once did in job interviews. With more people hosting delivery drivers, dog walkers, and neighbors than dinner parties, the entry has become a daily stage.

When curb appeal meets daily life

Curb appeal often focuses on paint and plants, but daily life tests the door itself. In cities where rain, wind, and temperature swings are common, a warped or sticky door quickly becomes an annoyance. Homeowners replacing old doors now look beyond style and ask about insulation, locking systems, and durability. In markets like the Pacific Northwest, many turn to a Seattle door company for options built for wet winters and long gray seasons. That choice reflects a broader trend of buying for performance, not just looks, as people expect their homes to work harder every day.

Sound, weight, and the handshake of a home

When a door closes, the sound it makes sends a message. A hollow rattle suggests shortcuts, while a soft, solid thud signals care and quality. The weight of the door matters too. Heavy does not mean fancy, but it often means better materials and longer life. Simple fixes help. Tighten loose hinges, replace worn weather stripping, and check that the latch lines up cleanly. These changes cost little yet improve how the home feels every single time someone enters or leaves.

Security anxiety in the age of porch cameras

Package theft has become a shared fear, and the front door sits at the center of it. Video doorbells and smart locks are now common because people want peace of mind. Still, technology cannot hide a flimsy frame or outdated lock. Reinforced strike plates, longer screws in hinges, and proper lighting around the entry reduce risk in practical ways. These steps show that security is not about gadgets alone. It is about building trust through solid basics that work even when the power goes out.

Energy bills, weather, and the seal you feel

Rising energy costs have made drafts impossible to ignore. The front door is often a major leak, especially in older homes. You can feel it in winter when cold air creeps in around the edges. A proper seal keeps indoor temperatures steady and lowers heating and cooling bills. Homeowners should check for light around the door when it is closed, test for air movement with a hand, and replace cracked seals. These actions improve comfort and show care in a way guests may not name but will feel.

Accessibility and aging in place

As families plan to stay in their homes longer, accessibility starts at the entry. Steps without railings, narrow doorways, and stiff handles become barriers over time. Wider doors, lever handles, and smooth thresholds help everyone, from kids carrying backpacks to grandparents using walkers. This reflects a social shift toward inclusive design, where homes adapt to people rather than the other way around. Planning for accessibility early avoids rushed changes later and adds quiet value that grows with time.

Smell, light, and the senses people never mention

While paint and hardware get attention, the senses do most of the judging at the door. Natural light spilling through sidelights or frosted glass makes an entry feel safer and more open, especially during shorter winter days. Smell matters just as much, because a musty odor or strong cleaner can create doubt before a coat is even hung up. Simple habits help, such as airing out the entry, using low scent cleaners, and placing a small plant near the door to soften the space. These details shape memory quietly, which is why people remember how a home felt long after forgetting what color the walls were.

Resale reality and the stories buyers tell themselves

When buyers walk up to a home, they begin telling themselves a story about upkeep, cost, and future effort. A worn entry suggests hidden problems, even when the rest of the house is solid. Real estate agents often advise sellers to start at the door because it frames every showing. Fresh hardware, aligned doors, and clear house numbers signal readiness and care. In competitive markets, this can shorten selling time and support stronger offers. Beyond resale, the same logic applies to renters, guests, and even repair professionals. The entry becomes a promise that the rest of the home will respect their time and attention.

Culture, color, and neighborhood signals

The front door also speaks to culture and community. Bright colors may signal warmth and creativity, while classic tones suggest tradition. During times of social tension, small signals of welcome matter. A clean, well lit entry says neighbors are paying attention and invested. In walkable areas, this shared care builds trust street by street. Choosing a color that complements nearby homes while still feeling personal strikes a balance between standing out and belonging, which many people crave today.

Small fixes that change everything

Improving the first impression does not require a full renovation. Start with lighting that turns on reliably at dusk. Add a sturdy mat that stays in place. Clean and oil hardware so it works smoothly. Check that the door opens easily and closes without effort. These concrete steps take an afternoon but reshape daily experience. In a world where first impressions often happen through screens, the physical moment of entering a home remains powerful. Getting it right pays off every single day.
 
more

The One Thing That Can Hurt Your Security Clearance or Career More Than Almost Anything Else


If you are pursuing a job that requires a security clearance, nothing matters more than honesty. That is not just a best practice. It is the foundation of how the clearance system and cleared hiring decisions work.

Stories regularly surface in the security clearance community about candidates who inflated job experience, stretched employment dates, or spoke in present tense about roles they no... longer held. The intent is usually understandable. People want to look competitive. But the outcome is often the same. What starts as a résumé adjustment becomes a career-limiting mistake that is extremely difficult to undo.

Why Lying About Job Experience Is So Dangerous

Security clearances are built on self-reported information that is later verified. When you complete an SF-86, you are not simply submitting background information. You are establishing a record of how accurately and honestly you report facts about your life and work history.

When an applicant lies or deliberately misrepresents job experience, the issue could be evaluated under Adjudicative Guideline E: Personal Conduct. This guideline addresses behavior that reflects poor judgment, unreliability, or untrustworthiness, including falsification or omission of relevant facts.

The key issue is not whether the job experience itself was impressive or insufficient. Once dishonesty enters the picture, the investigation shifts away from qualifications and toward whether the individual can be trusted. From an adjudicative standpoint, that question carries far more weight than a résumé gap or limited experience.

What Happens When the Truth Comes Out

When investigators uncover inconsistencies between what an applicant reported and what employers or references confirm, several things can happen.

A clearance can be denied or revoked, even if the original issue was relatively minor. Adjudicators view deliberate falsification as a serious concern because it suggests a willingness to deceive when there is something at stake.

Even if the clearance is not immediately denied, the issue becomes part of the individual's clearance history. That record can complicate future reinvestigations, upgrades to higher clearance levels, or assignments requiring polygraph examinations.

At that point, the person is no longer explaining a résumé decision. They are explaining a pattern of behavior.

How Lying About Experience Affects Getting the Job in the First Place

The damage often starts well before a clearance investigator ever gets involved.

Hiring managers and recruiters routinely verify employment history through reference checks. This is where small misrepresentations become obvious. A candidate may describe themselves as currently working in a role, while references speak about them in the past tense. Dates may not line up. Responsibilities may sound more senior than what the employer recalls.

Sometimes the candidate still gets the job, particularly in a competitive hiring market. But that does not mean the issue disappears.

Instead, it creates quiet doubt.

Hiring managers begin to question whether the inconsistency was intentional. That doubt often lingers. It can affect how much responsibility the person is given, how quickly they are promoted, and whether leadership is willing to advocate for them later.

Trust, once damaged, rarely resets completely.

When Employment Lies Collide With the Clearance Process

The situation becomes even more complicated when someone who lied to get hired is later required to complete an SF-86.

At that point, there are only two options. Tell the truth and admit the earlier misrepresentation, or continue the lie on a federal form.

Admitting the truth can raise concerns because it confirms deliberate falsification for personal gain. Continuing the lie makes the situation worse by extending it into official government documentation.

Either way, the issue is no longer about experience. It is about judgment and willingness to be truthful under scrutiny.

This becomes especially problematic for anyone who later seeks a higher clearance level or must undergo a polygraph. Those processes require disclosure of past dishonesty. When an individual has to admit that they lied to get a job and then lied again on official paperwork, the damage is often irreversible.

A Common Mistake With Long-Term Consequences

Many candidates pad experience because they believe everyone does it or because they fear being screened out. But in cleared work, honesty is not optional. Investigators expect imperfect careers. They do not expect deception.

Employment gaps, short tenures, or junior roles can often be explained. Being caught lying about them almost always becomes the bigger problem. The safer path is also the simpler one.

Be accurate about dates, titles, and responsibilities. Explain gaps directly. If your experience is limited, let your skills, training, and willingness to learn speak for you.

Most importantly, remember that in national security work, trust is cumulative. Every interaction builds or erodes it. A résumé may help you get noticed, but integrity is what allows you to stay, advance, and grow.

You can recover from being underqualified. You can recover from a non-linear career path. You rarely recover from being caught lying.
 
more
6   
  • Hello Kate,
    Great to meet you. Always especially if you are attractive problems that a nanny will have will be with parents especially of money who... are accustomed to controlling. Three things never to discuss is religion, politics and sex. A person of money will cripple you with any answer you give to any of those three.
    Give a closed end response and do not argue or debate and if its a problem seek another job before you give notice and give notice that you cant be beat out of pay.
    Victor
    contact me via email if needed
     more

  • Ask gpt

Deputy / Home Manager - Preston, Lancashire


Job Title: Deputy Manager - Supported Accommodation (16-18)

Location: Preston PR2

Contract: Full-time, Permanent

Hours: 42 hours per week (hybrid rota: 2 daytime shifts + 2 sleep-in shifts)

Salary: £41,500 - £45,000 per year + on-call allowances

Benefits:

* Fully funded Level 5 qualification

* NEST pension scheme

* 5.6 weeks' annual leave

* Comprehensive induction and ongoing training

*... Career development opportunities

* Monthly recognition awards

* Casual dress code

* Health & wellbeing programme

Role Overview

We are seeking an enthusiastic and dedicated Deputy Manager to oversee a supported accommodation service for young people aged 16-18. This role is responsible for ensuring high-quality, child-centred care, compliance with regulatory standards, and effective staff management, while fostering strong relationships with external agencies and promoting positive outcomes for young people.

Key Responsibilities

Leadership & Staff Support

* Lead and support staff teams to deliver high standards of care.

* Promote a positive team culture through reflective supervision and professional development.

* Manage staff performance, including supervisions, appraisals, and development plans.

Young People's Outcomes

* Oversee personalised support plans to help young people achieve educational, emotional, and practical goals.

* Ensure staff actively support young people's progress in education, health, life skills, and employability.

* Encourage independence and prepare young people for independent living.

* Maintain robust safeguarding practices to ensure a safe environment.

External Relationships & Partnerships

* Build and maintain effective relationships with social workers, education providers, mental health services, and housing authorities.

* Attend multi-disciplinary meetings to represent the service and advocate for young people's needs.

* Support referral matching to ensure placements align with young people's needs.

Quality Assurance & Compliance

* Ensure compliance with Ofsted standards, safeguarding, health and safety, and other regulatory requirements.

* Monitor service quality through audits and assessments, identifying areas for improvement.

* Escalate risks or concerns to the Registered Manager as required.

Administration & Reporting

* Maintain accurate and timely records for each young person.

* Ensure staff adhere to documentation standards.

* Support the preparation of reports, reviews, and other administrative tasks.

Essential Experience & Qualifications

* Managerial or supervisory experience in supported accommodation, residential care, or similar social care setting (ideally with young people aged 16-18).

* Relevant qualification (e.g., Level 4 Diploma in Health and Social Care or equivalent).

* Knowledge of safeguarding practices, Ofsted regulatory requirements, and quality standards.

* Experience supporting young people with diverse emotional, behavioural, or mental health needs.

* Strong interpersonal skills with the ability to build relationships with young people, staff, and external partners.

Additional Requirements

* Level 4 qualification with children and young people (or equivalent).

* Enhanced DBS on the Update Service.

* Experience working with children (2 years preferred).

* Supervisory experience (1 year preferred).
 
more

ZipRecruiter Now Lets Job Seekers Jump to the Top of the Resume


ZipRecruiter® (NYSE: ZIP), a leading online employment marketplace, unveiled Be Seen First today, a new product that helps job seekers break through the "application black hole" and get their job application to the top of the resume pile.

This press release features multimedia. View the full release here: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20260122811841/en/

Job seekers can now add a short... note to their application detailing why they're excited about the role and why they're a great fit to get moved to the top of the employer's applicant list.

For millions of people, job searching feels like hitting "submit" and hoping for the best. You apply, you wait, and you're left wondering if anyone ever saw your name. The reality is that hiring has become increasingly automated, and many employers are inundated with hundreds of applicants for open positions, which means great candidates are often buried from the start.

Be Seen First is designed to change that.

"Something as simple as telling a veterinary clinic, 'I've been in pet care for 5+ years, and I'm the person who remembers every dog's favorite scratch spot. I'm local and could get started right away!' can make all the difference," said Megan Allen, Chief Product Officer at ZipRecruiter. "Those few words put your best foot forward and help an employer instantly see who you are. Be Seen First gives job seekers a way to rise to the top instead of starting at the bottom of the pile."

Some of the most important things about a candidate -- communication, effort, enthusiasm -- are hard to show in a traditional application. Be Seen First gives job seekers a way to bring those qualities to life. People who use Be Seen First are nearly 2x more likely to start a conversation with an employer, turning one-way applications into real conversations and opportunities.

For employers, Be Seen First helps cut through overwhelming application volume by prioritizing candidates who are not only qualified but genuinely interested in the role. A dedicated dashboard shows these high-intent applicants first, helping recruiters screen and hire faster. Employers hear directly from candidates, in their own words, why they're excited about the role, adding valuable context beyond a resume.

"In a sea of applications, a short, optional note becomes a powerful signal of intent, communication skills, and fit," said Scott Steinberg, VP of Job Seeker Product at ZipRecruiter. "Hiring teams want to move quickly from scanning applications to having real conversations, and they're eager to prioritize candidates who take extra effort to show their enthusiasm."

How Be Seen First Works:

* Eligible jobs will now display a purple Be Seen First badge

* After applying to one of these jobs, job seekers can tell the employer why they're interested

* Applications with these personalized messages are then boosted to the top of the employer's list

Be Seen First is now available on tens of thousands of job listings across ZipRecruiter. For more details on how this changes the game for job seekers, read our blog post. To learn more about the new product, visit ZipRecruiter.com/be-seen-first.

About ZipRecruiter

ZipRecruiter® (NYSE: ZIP) is a leading online employment marketplace that actively connects people to their next great opportunity. ZipRecruiter's powerful matching technology improves the job search experience for job seekers and helps businesses of all sizes find and hire the right candidates quickly. ZipRecruiter has been the #1 rated job search app on iOS & Android for the past nine years and is rated the #1 job site by G2. For more information, visitwww.ziprecruiter.com.

ZipRecruiter internal data from 09-29-2025 to 11-17-2025

Based on job seeker app ratings, during the period of January 2017 to January 2026 from AppFollow for ZipRecruiter, Glassdoor, Indeed, LinkedIn, and Monster.

Based on G2 satisfaction ratings in N. America as of January 12, 2026.

View source version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20260122811841/en/
 
more