What type of work should i get




















Baristas need to have attention to detail when taking orders and provide friendly customer service. Read more: Learn About Being a Barista.

Primary duties: Servers greet diners, explain menu items, take orders and bring food to their customers. They use time management skills to serve multiple tables at once and must be detail-oriented to deliver the correct orders. Servers also handle payments, stock supplies, clean tables and regularly check in with customers to ensure they are having a positive experience.

Read more: Learn About Being a Server. Primary duties: Lifeguards make sure that guests at a pool, water park or other body of water are safe. They oversee an assigned area and remind swimmers to follow safety regulations. They lookout for signs of distress and rescue struggling swimmers from the water when necessary. Lifeguards can teach swim camps and organize other activities, depending on where they work.

Lifeguards also assess weather conditions and decide if it becomes unsafe for people to swim. Read more: Learn About Being a Lifeguard. Primary duties: Caregivers help clients with their daily routines in their homes or at a care facility. They assist people of any age with basic personal care like bathing, going to the bathroom, getting dressed and taking medication.

Caregivers are often in charge of housekeeping, shopping for groceries, scheduling appointments and arranging transportation for their clients. They also provide companionship and social connection by talking with their client, playing games and doing other activities together. Read more: Learn About Being a Caregiver. Primary duties: Delivery drivers transport food packages and other goods to different destinations. They review orders, load delivery trucks, plan delivery routes, record drop-offs, accept payment from customers and update their delivery log to produce accurate reports.

Delivery drivers can drive their own car or operate a company vehicle. Primary duties: Assistant store managers help retail managers with day-to-day operations at their store. They are often key holders, which means they are in charge of opening the store each day and securely closing at night.

Assistant store managers provide employee supervision, oversee stock shipments and orders, assist customers, help manage employee schedules and ensure the store is clean and organized with attractive displays. Primary duties: Customer service representatives directly interact with customers to solve problems and provide assistance. Depending on the type of company they work for, they can place orders, process refunds, respond to complaints and explain how to use a product or service.

Customer service representatives need to remain calm under pressure and communicate clearly over the phone, in person and over email. Primary duties: Tellers work behind the counter at a bank or other financial institution and process financial transactions.

They deposit funds, cash checks, make withdrawals, transfer money between accounts and answer customer questions. Bank tellers carefully record any account changes, keep contact information up-to-date and document all transactions. This will help you learn much faster. Do You Learn with Others? If you tend to work in groups, you learn with other people at your side. Have your friends or colleagues take the test so you can assess their learning styles, as well. This will make it much easier for you to succeed as a group.

Then, you can either pair up with people who share a learning style with you or you can make sure that everyone in your group learns in the proper way. This test will help you learn a lot more about yourself. Take the test and then pass it along to your friends. If you have a bad day, you know a little retail therapy will put a smile on your face.

A trip to your favorite retailer can ease the pain and make it all better. Then, when you have a good day, a shopping trip can make it even better. If you get a promotion, you might as well celebrate by buying a new outfit and some makeup. If the kids do well in school, you deserve a new pair of shoes. OK, maybe it works like that to a point, but are your shopping habits getting out of control?

Before you become the subject of an intervention, take this quiz. Plus, your relationships will be better once you find that balance. Is it too late for you? You can always make changes, but you have to be willing to make the effort. Start saying no to some shopping trips. Cut them in half and then go from there. Taking little steps here and there will make a huge difference in overcoming your shopping addiction.

No one wants to be a shopping addict, but you can get control back. Take the quiz and find out where you stand in the retail world. You don't need to be fancy, you don't need to be perfect. Just be yourself and smile! It's completely ridiculous that it's easier to find a job when you have one People out of jobs are most needy and have skills employees are missing out on What's the deal?

I've been a professional for years and can't get work It's beyond my comprehension. I need to work and pay my bills. Keep getting looked over when I'm completely competent. It makes me sick Like FS, my heart goes out to Mel. I am senior management, with lots of apparently "amazing" experience and a quality education, but I'm still looking for a job.

It can really affect you emotionally and intrude on your home life. Mel, I just want to tell you a brief story. A few years ago as my wife was divorcing me and my business's were disappearing, I found myself unemployed. My father generously stepped in to pay my child support so that I wouldn't end up in jail. I was 42 and I found it deeply, deeply shameful.

I had sent over 1, resumes to various companies without any result. I was not in a good place. Out of the blue, I was contacted by a company that I did not know, that had seen my profile. It was a Fortune company and after 3 long and complicated interviews, they flew me out for training and off to Asia to work. It meant that I had to be away from everything I knew and my mother died while I was away, but it got me back on track.

You just never know. Just keep hanging in there. I have no idea how Just survive until you can turn the corner. You are not alone. Do not give up. Thank-you for posting my comment, it actually made me feel good to see it posted. I hope it makes someone's day a little brighter. If you are reading this then you are in need of a little break, like me. Think of the last time someone gave you a big hug! Smile and remember how good it felt. You may not have a job but you can go and give someone else a hug.

I bet they need one too! If you can do this every day for two minutes, you will bring some sunshine to someone's heart. If you have to force yourself then do it, and watch "Monty Pythons - Life of Brian" Good therapy for all.

Lets sing it together Always look on the bright side of life! Just noticed this site.. Today like most I just feel defeated, confidence at an all time low like many I'm sure. If I'm honest I just feel useless.. I'm a fifty something with so much left to offer at work. What I have experienced though is younger managers appear to be threatened by my skill set I just don't understand this..

I just wish you all well! Mel read your comment, so sorry - things will turn a corner when you least expect it. My thoughts are with you! If you can't find a job or don't know what type of job you would like to do you don't have to force yourself, it can be stressful to find a job.

The best bet would be to stop trying to hard take breaks and not focusing on it too much! I wanted to find a job I did everything applied online, went to angecies and even dropped cv's at my local stores, and nothing. Not to mention I was very polite on asking if I could lend them my CV in case they would be hiring.

Now the only way I am living is by student loan and being a student at university. Best bet would be for you to become a student and live off the student loan, and once you finish your education at the time you should be introduced to popular brands. I've tried all these and still cannot find a work from home IT job to save my life.

I'd imagine any WFH job posting results in a deluge of applications since this is what so many people want. However few employers offer WFH. My theory is they are afraid to give up control. They enjoy having employees play their inane -ss in Chair game.

What they don't get is that those with the privilege of WFH reward their employers with extra effort, loyalty, and increased job tenure. Plus it results in lower costs of office space, as well as having environmental benefits and employees not stressed out after a tough commute. The same is all over the World. Smth is always wrong age, overqualified or underqualified etc etc What if you've tried all 12 steps?

Also, I dont think whoever wrote this article considered the fact that no job means no money, which means no moving, no transportation etc. Never believed in ageism until now. Being a 50 year old female is a bad combo when it comes to employment. So what do those people do? Been looking for a permanent job for 8 years!!!! Its the most demoralizing experience especially since I was once employed as a Supervisor helping disadvantaged children.

I changed my career because for about 5 years I looked for something in my field to no avail. Waste of a Masters degree! Now, even with certificates, I cant find any job! Been homeless, borrowed money and tried different cities, but I have 0 resources now and if I cant find a job in the next month, Im homeless again Start with the temp agencies and try to get in a job nobody wants such as night receptionist. In the meantime just temporarily take retail but never consider it anything other than a quick stepping point.

Desk jobs are more secure or warehouse jobs. You need to have something recent to catch their eye so start working at McDonald's and then grab something as soon as you can before you quit the McDonald's job? The key is keeping the ball rolling and up-to-date with how active you are. They like people that will take anything they don't like people that sit around waiting for the perfect job!!

I have been unemployed for over 5 years with some volunteer work in between and my last temp care job was I was on JSA but now on universal credit where I am struggling each month.

I have been on UC for two years and thought it was a great idea at first but since no sign of a part time job has come through I am feeling very defeated. I live alone, am 37 and cant even get a cleaning job! I have therapy for my anxiety of returning to work as my job centre work coach does not exactly help much. I just find it hard living on this uc as granted benefits were never meant to be luxury but get real.

I pay my rent in full and now adding the council tax and other bills there isnt much left. I am hating doing daily 5 hour job search where I am lucky to have internet at home where I pay monthly so don't have to go out and find a working computer.

I never thought I would be feeling so down being 37, I am giving up the hope I may never get a job. Nice to read I am not alone. I am 45 and having a hard time finding employment as well. I have had some great companies call me in for interviews, only to be interviewed by younger females who could seem to care less about the job and want to talk about "the culture".



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