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Saturday
May 25th

Plan Your Career by Julie Desmond

Julie DesmondJulie Desmond is Talent Manager for Express Employment Professionals.  Write to This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it .

Pressure: Why people choke

Take every emotion you have ever had, put it in a blender and fire it up. This is what it might feel like for an Olympic athlete standing on the edge of a diving board or in the blocks on the track or facing a balance beam or pommel horse waiting for the signal to start. Got pressure? Every sweaty, chalky, bloody day, every goal set, every sacrifice offered up, every thought and every breath has been about getting to now. Blow it, and the dream is over. There is no second chance today, and the next tomorrow is four years away. So how can it happen that even Olympic athletes choke under pressure?

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Splash Mob: Etiquette for umbrellas

Splash Mob: Etiquette for umbrellas

What better time than in the middle of a nationwide drought to talk about the one thing we all need: rain? When the heavens finally open, those of us with just the right kind of luck will be caught outdoors, on our way to important meetings, job interviews or ball games. An umbrella is a good thing to have, if you know how to use it.

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The benefits of being neutral

The benefits of being neutral

When General Mills recently announced its company’s stance against the ban on same sex marriage, the uproar could be heard from both sides of this highly charged issue:  there were both cheers and jeers.  High profile organizations take such a stand only after relentlessly considering the not only issue but also the consequences of choosing a side.  Strong leadership sometimes requires making tough, even divisive, decisions sometimes.  And sometimes, strong leadership requires not taking a position at all.  Neutral is a choice, too.  The key is in knowing when to step back, and how to maintain that neutral position under scrutiny.

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Career stalled out? Work at becoming creative at work

Summer has its dog days.  So do careers.  When work becomes too routine, or too complicated, daily tasks can seem like those heat waves that smother the lungs and keep us all from doing anything productive.  Infusing a little creativity into your summer – a picnic, a beach trip, a new fan – can spice up a day; infusing some creativity into your work can spice up a career.  Eugene Randsepp of Princeton Creative Research offers suggestions that can inspire even the most lackluster employee.  A few of my favorites:

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Pace Yourself: Make slow time work for you

It’s hot out there.  Half the team is on vacation and the other half might as well be, mentally at least.  Unless it’s the day before their day off, nobody is moving very quickly these days.  Now’s the time to take advantage of your competition’s summer slump and start moving fast toward your own success.

Sales people understand using slow times to lay the groundwork for new business, but non-sales people can use the same ideas to get ahead.

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