Life Coach
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A month after failing to quit smoking I'm quitting smoking again. It's been a good ride
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Smoking was never difficult for me to quit. I smoked a pack day for years. One day I decided no more and that was it. Keep at it Mega your mind is stronger than you think.
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life coach its easy .
grow another leg then when you need some sense kick yourself up the arse that will work -
I'm actually all good this time, promised myself something nice with the saved funds at Christmas time
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If something goes something is replaced, and so the vow is kept
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This seems like the right thread for a few pointers about useful tools to manage personal admin and plan tasks and projects.
I expect everyone has some sort of organisational system, be it a paper calendar, Google Docs, a white board on the fridge, or whatever.
I do a lot of project management stuff and I have found that there are two cloud based applications that I rate. Both can be used for personal usage but they each have their strengths:
Trello - https://trello.com/, this probably has the most applicability for home/personal users. It’s free (but of course you can pay for extra features), it’s modern with a clean and intuitive interface and there is a great mobile app.
Basically it supports “swim lanes” – To Do, Doing, Done, on “Boards” that you can create for different projects/needs:JIRA by Atlassian – https://www.atlassian.com/ this is a paid product but it’s very low cost - $10 per month for up to 10 users (it gets much pricier though). It is beefier and more serious than Trello but has a harder learning curve and might put off the casual user. There are a number of third party apps that work well. I like Wings for JIRA personally: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.strintec.jiramini&hl=en.
JIRA supports multiple projects and issues creation and tracking. In basic JIRA usage (I won’t go into JIRA Agile unless anyone asks) the issue process is handled by “Workflows” that can be configured extensively. -
Is running the @Madame Buttonfly app in such a wine filled location a good idea?
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Resurrection…
On Friday of this week I have an "informal" interview for a senior management position in a local engineering company, and I am shitting myself.
I have been with my current employer for 17 years and never really considered leaving, but this new position is with a smaller firm, pays £10'000 a year more than I currently earn, and is literally 2 minutes walk from my front door.
So do I go for it? it has been described to me as an informal chat to see the working environment so how smartly should I dress? How do I not fuck it up?
First interview in 17 years, I'm a little rusty on such things :-\
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10k more per year buys a lot of comics. Cont beat that commute, either. Sounds like a great opportunity.
So my advice is as follows-
- Learn all you can about the company before the interview. I expect you know quite a bit already, but brush up on product lines, management structure, any current events for them. Google is your friend. Which assists on my next point-
- Prepare some questions ahead of time. Is there a particular product you're interested in? Do you have specific concerns about issues in the industry? What are the opportunities for growth, improvement and advancement, for both you and the company? Asking questions shows you've put some thought into things and that you care about the job.
- Wear a suit. No one will ever fault you for dressing better than necessary, but they will definitely fault you for under dressing.
- Relax. I know it's hard, but try. Interviews are about more than just if a person is qualified, it's also about whether they're going to be pleasant to work with. A friend once told me that his firm only cared about the latter when they brought people in for interviews. Resumes were enough to determine competence, but if they were going to be spending 60+ hours a week with a new hire, they wanted to be sure that person wasn't an asshole. You're an asshole, but you're a likeable one.
I have confidence in you, Gav.