Posts Tagged ‘US Job market’
Young Workers in US Face Dire Labor Market
Tuesday, April 26th, 2011The labor market in the United States is starting to show signs of recovery, but for many young workers the recovery is not happening fast enough. Although the national unemployment rate is now the lowest it has been in two years, one study suggests the job prospects for 16 to 24-year-olds remains grim.
If you are an international student or an international young professional who is
- Looking for an internship or job in the United States
- Feeling lost and confused about the U.S. Job Market
- Entering the U.S. workforce for the first time
- Aspiring to transit from an American university to the American workplace
- Looking for direction to find work opportunities and achieve your career goals
U in the USA is Your Answer!
Here are some of the benefits that you will receive from us:
- Unique insights into the actual hiring practices of American companies
- Guidance to transition from an American university to the American workplace
- Essential strategies for success
- How to find before anyone else 80 percent of the open jobs that are never advertised
- Learn how to secure H-1B sponsorship and discover other work authorization paths
- Build your personal brand, maintain it and leverage it into the career of your dreams
- A comprehensive career coaching service and personalized assistance.
Interested? contact us here
3 Ways to Start Your Overseas Job Transition
Monday, June 21st, 2010Leaders who go to work overseas are often surprised by how much they thought they knew about a culture, and how little they really do. Here are three ways to begin your cultural transition before you start working or seeking jobs in a different country:
1. Check your assumptions. You will hear many things about how people in the other culture get work done. Remember that all cultures are nuanced and while generalizations can be descriptive, you can’t accept them as universal rule.
2. Attend workshops. Leading up to your move, find workshops or lectures about doing business in different countries or go to a country-specific conference.
3. Immerse yourself in global coverage. Find publications, websites, and television programs that give you a cross-cultural view of what’s going on in the world and insight into how other cultures view global news.
Today’s Management Tip was adapted from “Managing Yourself: Making It Overseas” by Mansour Javidan, Mary Teagarden, and David Bowen.
Source : Harvard Business Review
If you want to know what to expect as an employee in the American workplace and how to navigate the U.S. Job Market, attend our workshop here
