Wednesday, April 29, 2020
Check it out-Special Holiday Half-Price Sale with a Free Coaching Session - Hallie Crawford
Check it out-Special Holiday Half-Price Sale with a Free Coaching Session Im getting into the holiday spirit and I wanted to offer some end of the year bonuses to my readers. Thank you for subscribing to my blog and my Creating Your Own Path newsletter. Until December 15, 2006, you can purchase any of my products or services for 50% off. Heres the goods: Career Teleclass Audio Recording: Love Your Job! Finding a Career that FITS teleclass recording only $6.99 Click here to purchase the audio recording. Career Seekers Live Teleclass, starting February 6, 2007: 50% off the first month of the class; only $100 for your first month. Read more and sign up here. Individual Career Coaching, starting when you are ready: 50% off the first month; only $250 for your first month Contact me here. Buy it for yourself or for someone else as a gift. Save big money by purchasing the teleclass audio, signing up for February Career Seekers or contacting me about individual coaching by December 15, 2006. **AND Ive added another offer: Anyone who takes advantage of this holiday sale will receive a complimentary 40 minute coaching session from me absolutely Free! Pretty cool I think. Dont wait remember the offer expires December 15, 2006!
Sunday, April 19, 2020
Resume Tips - The Best Ways to Spell Out Your Skills, Achievements and Business Experience For Maximum Impact
Resume Tips - The Best Ways to Spell Out Your Skills, Achievements and Business Experience For Maximum ImpactIt is no secret that applying for a job is one of the best resume tips you can apply. After you've finished writing your resume, be sure to take a good look at it. You may have come across some resume tips that seem obvious, but in actuality could help you land that job you're looking for. After all, if you are applying for a position which doesn't even exist, isn't it going to be better to lose a little sleep than lose a lot of money?One great resume tip that most people will agree on is that you need to utilize graphics in your resume. This has been used for years and it will continue to work as long as the target audience is not limited. There are so many individuals who don't even realize that there are many graphic possibilities when it comes to their resume and how they appear on it.Remember that most of these online application sites have worked out special templates an d they are free to use. Many will even let you upload pictures of your resume. This is a good resume tip because it gives you that professional look.You need to make your graphic presence known and it should be apparent from the first paragraph of your resume. You can use graphics to show off your accomplishments, your skills, your accomplishments or even a message that you want to convey to your employer.To get a job you must display certain skills. Resume tips include using graphics to show off your business experience and skills. They can also make a personal statement, which is what you should use when composing your cover letter.One last tip to consider is to always start off with a positive thought. Although you want to have a positive outlook, it is imperative that you never start off an email with a negative tone.This is a great resume tip because it will drive the employer crazy with your enthusiasm. You should strive to be happy about everything about yourself while still keeping your professionalism intact. Be sure to always include the phrase 'I am looking forward to speaking with you about this opportunity' in your resume.
Tuesday, April 14, 2020
Bethenny Frankel How I Went From Debt to Millions
Bethenny Frankel How I Went From Debt to Millions Bethenny Frankel has a beef with Postmates. A recent order placed with the delivery service was simple enough. Just a bagel, muffin, and cup of coffee. But this modern-day convenience backfired. Her bag contained just a muffin and the bagel. Coffee? Nonexistent. Cream cheese? Not a schmear in sight. âRidiculous,â Frankel says, lifting her hands in the air at her SoHo apartment as she reaches for a piece of vegan sushi. âIâm still mad.â Whether in business or in life, Frankel, 47, expects perfection. In fact, that may be the secret to her success. The brash Real Housewives of New York City starâs relentless hustle has lifted her from a financially insecure childhood spent around racetracks throughout New York to her current status as a multimillionaire entrepreneur. Anything less than the best gives her a headache. In 2011, when she sold her Skinnygirl cocktail line to Beam Global for a reported $100 million, she was careful to retain the right to license the brand name for other products, a move that allows her to profit from a constantly growing line of Skinnygirl spinoffs. Frankelâs famous work ethic has helped her forge an unusual path to riches. Sheâs a businesswoman who demands to be taken seriouslyâ"and a reality star who trades in quips and jabs (âBethenny-isms,â as her fan base calls them) on a television show not exactly known for serious business. Her daily Instagram stories track this dichotomy. One minute, sheâs in full glam, commanding the Skinnygirl offices in Manhattan; the next, sheâs at home in bed with her dogs, stripped of her makeup, her hair in a messy bun. When we met this summer, Frankel seamlessly displayed these complexitiesâ"with her desire for flawlessness shining through more than anything else. âIf Iâm not going to give it my all, then Iâm not doing it,â Frankel tells me, draped in T.J. Maxx sweats inside her apartment. âIf I make you a drink, Iâm going to be sure itâs the best drink youâve ever had.â She sets her sights on what is immediately in front of her. âWhoever made this brownie,â she says of her post-sushi dessert, âdoes not share my philosophy. Itâs disgusting.â Perhaps the greatest result of this consistent drive toward greatness is what Frankel calls her âfinancial freedom.â Looking back on a career that saw her parlay an appearance on The Apprentice into a starring role on Housewives and now a coveted guest-investor gig on Shark Tank, Frankel laid out for MONEY the four most important steps to financial independence. Sheâs still hustlingâ"and she wants others to learn to do the same. Control Your Debt Frankel couldnât be the businesswoman she is today if she hadnât learned a lesson or two about debt. For much of her adulthood, she says, debt hindered her from becoming her best self. âUntil my late thirties, everything was just an anxiety and a struggle,â she says. âItâs like the way people feel when they eat something and they donât feel good about it.â There were awkward dates where she didnât want to pay any part of the bill. She felt shame while shopping, with pangs of guilt coursing through her every time she bought a new item, even if it was on sale. All told, she says, she had $20,000 in credit card debt and was no stranger to bouncing checks. âIâd be on the phone begging to get the [fees] reduced,â she recalls. Frankel at Boston University in 1988 courtesy of Bethenny Frankel Before Frankel found financial security, she could barely afford her New York City rent. She would walk to events rather than take a cab or the subway and had no money management skills, aside from simply trying not to spend too much. Frankelâs skewed approach to spending left her throwing money away on frivolous items. If she had cash in her purse, she says, it would find its way to street vendors, balloons at a fairâ"anything, really. âSomehow, all the cash would go,â she says. That mentality devolved into a nasty habit with credit cardsâ"a mechanism Frankel once thought would make spending easier and, ultimately, cursed her with guilt. âI used to think the credit card didnât count,â she says. âThen I consolidated all my credit cards and got a strategic plan to pay more than the minimum each month. That was a concerted effort.â Now that she has more money than she could ever have imagined, Frankel still hears that âmoney noise,â as she likes to call itâ"itâs just not that loud. Her biggest advice, to herself and to others, is to stay out of the red whenever possible. And when you do take on debt, you should have a large enough safety net to be able to pay those billsâ"whether a monthly mortgage or credit card balancesâ"at a momentâs notice. âYou canât put yourself in a position where, if the sâ"t hit the fan, you couldnât pay all of your bills at one time,â she says. âIf the world came to an end, I would be able to pay for everything. I might not be left with much, but I can afford what I have.â As for many of her Housewives costars? Frankel isnât optimistic. âThey canât afford the lives theyâre living,â she says. âAnd if the music stops, theyâre going to get in some trouble.â Bethenny Frankel with the cast of The Real Housewives of New York City in 2009 Andrew Ecclesâ"Bravo TV/Courtesy of Everett Collection. Make Work Work for You Frankelâs philosophy toward work is quite simple: Work hard, and donât waste anyoneâs time. Thatâs easy enough, theoretically, but Frankel says most employees can fall into a trap of becoming lazy or procrastinating. âMost people are moving papers around a desk, pretending theyâre working,â she says. âIf you are a really hard worker, you know it. And you will soar.â Nowadays, Frankelâs best employees get the job done accurately and quickly; those working overtime arenât impressing anyone. She learned that when she worked at an event production company owned by Merv Griffin, where a former colleague would stick around until 9 p.m. because he procrastinated all day. âThe owner used to say, âWhy are you leaving? Heâs still here,â?â Frankel scoffs. âAnd I said, âItâs because he didnât get his work done.â?â âI donât lollygag,â she adds. âYou know if youâre that person whoâs really going to be Michael Phelps and not look to the left or to the right and just get to that wall before anybody else.â Working efficiently also makes you a more valuable asset to any business youâre working for or any project youâre working onâ"and could result in faster promotions and better wages. But mobility within your own career has a lot to do with pushing to get what you want and knowing your worth. âTry to create a situation where you add value, and the whole thing comes from a place of yes,â she says of asking for a raise or promotion. And reading the room is critical. âIâve had people come in and ask me for too much, too often,â she says. âAsking for a raise is a very psychological and emotional thing. It has to be done at a reasonable time.â Making work work for you isnât just about negotiating a raise or getting that long-awaited promotion. Itâs finding that perfect combination of a job you enjoyâ"and something youâre good at. Even if you feel stuck in the same old nine-to-five, there are still ways you can make it your own and speed past your coworkers. âMost people are lazy, sit back, and wait for things to happen for them, and complain when they donât get them,â Frankel says. âSo donât be that person.â Frankel on the L.A. set of 'Saved by the Bell' as a production assistant Courtesy of Bethenny Frankel. From gig to gig throughout her adulthood, Frankel took each job seriously and consistently searched for ways to impress others. It was the early experience at the event production company that made her realize she was good at working hard, making money, and doing so with little oversight. She managed multimillion-dollar budgets and didnât work typical days in an office environment. âThatâs when I really started to blossom,â she recalls. Invest in Your Hustle When Frankel was approached to join the cast of what would become The Real Housewives of New York City, she wasnât the typical New York City socialite. And as an unmarried woman, she was certainly not a housewife. But Frankel saw Housewives as a one-of-a-kind business opportunity, long before anyone else thought to do the same with reality television as a platform. While paid just $7,250 for the showâs first season in 2008, Frankel made a key decision that set the stage for her financial success. She refused to sign a portion of the contract that would have required her to give TV network Bravo a percentage of the profits she earned from the businesses she promoted on the show. Though neither she nor Bravo knew it at the time, that excised portion of her contractâ"now known as the âBethenny clauseââ"made Frankelâs Skinnygirl fortune all the more lucrative. âEverybody else just had to try to play catch-up after they saw what I did,â Frankel says proudly. But this wasnât an out-of-the-box fluke. Frankel was born into a hustlerâs paradise. She quite literally grew up on the racetracks, with a father and stepfather both horse trainers, surrounded by gambling and âunsavory characters.â âYouâre prepared for anything,â she says. âThereâs competition there; thereâs speed; thereâs money; the stakes are high.â That intense environment set the tone for Frankelâs career. Whether it was charging a fee at the door for high school parties or opening her own baking business years later, Frankel has always tried out new projects and businesses. It wasnât until Skinnygirl, a brand she developed in her late thirties, that she crossed the finish line, in a sense. âIâve failed so many times,â she says. âBut Iâve always learned more from my mistakes.â If one business didnât work out, then it was on to the next one. If she was presented with a not-so-perfect opportunity, she would turn it into one. When she came in second on Martha Stewartâs version of The Apprentice in 2005 before appearing on Housewives, it only drove her further to push idea after idea and, eventually, to develop the right recipe for success. As a guest investor on Shark Tank, she now encourages others to do the same. On the show, she focuses on investing in women- and minority-run businesses, whose owners tend to receive significantly less in venture capital funding than their white male counterparts. Still, despite that $100 million deal with Beam Global under her belt and millions more coming in each year that could easily fund Frankel for the rest of her life, sheâs setting the bar high for herself. When we spoke about Skinnygirlâs expansion into other productsâ"snacks, seltzers, and, most recently, size-inclusive jeansâ"Frankel was eager to hype âpossibly the biggest business dealâ to date for Skinnygirl down the roadâ"but wouldnât disclose the exact details. In true hustler fashion, sheâs keeping her cards close to her chest on this one. Spend Wisely â" and Give Back Finding financial freedom isnât as simple as controlling your debt, finding success at work, and keeping your hustle mentality alive. Spending your money wisely is paramountâ"and when you do splurge, do so responsibly. For Frankel, who came into a lot of money very quickly, sheâs been careful about what she spends it onâ"and what she invests in. She still considers herself frugal and hates frivolous spending. âEven if itâs buying a diamondâ"which Iâve doneâ"Iâd like to be able to get a good deal on it,â she says. âI donât like to be robbed.â For her, the ultimate cornerstone of financial freedom is having the agency to invest in experiences or products that make her life and those of her loved ones more enjoyable, without the headache or anxiety spending once brought her. Sheâs constantly on the hunt to find fun, new adventures for her and her 8-year-old daughter, Bryn. She brings her along to events that can double as a work/life excursion, like an appearance she booked at Disneyland. And the jacuzzi she installed at her home in the Hamptons? Thatâs for her daughter to enjoy with her friendsâ"and Frankel to relax in after a workout. âThe best money I ever spent,â she says. Financial freedom for her also means giving those without it a possible leg up. Last year, Frankelâs B Strong charity program partnered with Delivering Good, a New York Cityâ"based nonprofit, to charter more than 50 planes and bring millions of dollarsâ worth of food, water, gift cards, and emergency supplies to those affected by the hurricanes in Puerto Rico. In the fall of 2017, she used Twitter to ask fellow celebrities and fans for larger donations and traveled to Puerto Rico several times herself, donning a shirt from her charity that read â#thisisacrisis.â She has continued to work on relief efforts in recent months, visiting Guatemala after that country was devastated by a deadly volcanic eruption. Frankel in 2017 in Puerto Rico, where she has spearheaded relief efforts through her charity Courtesy of Bethenny Frankel. In raising money for relief efforts, Frankel worried that donors would be concerned about where exactly their money was going. To give them financial empowerment, she says, her team would provide donors with a list detailing how the charity was spending the money. And Frankel says that just enticed them to give more. âPeople now are so much more educated, and they want to know where their money is going. Even if itâs a dollar. Is it a bottle of water, a nail, a piece of wood? And I gave them that,â Frankel says. âI gave them that financial freedom and power to say youâre giving money, and hereâs where itâs going.â
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