How to Get Your Old Job Back

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Did you leave your previous job on an amicable note? If not, you may wish to reconsider the whole operation of getting your old job back, your current miserable status not withstanding. Assuming that you parted on good terms, getting back to your previous firm will be a notch easier. Let’s get started on “mission reapplication”.

Step 1: Making Contact
Having been a part of the organization, you are at an advantage. Contact your old colleagues to get an insider’s view on the hiring scenario. If everything appears to your liking, waste no time in establishing contact with the person in charge of hiring. Decide on the most appropriate means of bridging contact, it could be a phone call, an e-mail or a meeting.

Step 2: Update Your Resume
Do not undermine the importance of an updated resume even if you’ve worked for the company before. Your qualifications and abilities may be known to them, but you need to tell them what you’ve gained in the period you were away. It doesn’t matter if the nature of your work was completely different, a good resume will prove how it has helped you enhance your capabilities.

Step 3: Expect Scrutiny
You may be put through a full-fledged interview, in case of a management overhaul. Refrain from harping on your past achievements, focus instead on the current situation. The person in charge will already have an idea of your contributions. Shift to the present and stress on how you see yourself benefiting the organization now.

Step 4: Be Reassuring
You may not have left your previous firm in a lurch the last time you left, but expect to do a lot of reassuring this time around. Your boss is bound to put you on his suspicion radar, at least throughout your probation period. You must not fuel their insecurity by being lax with your tasks. Be on top of your job and make your company feel happy about rehiring you. Read the rest of this entry »

Comments

Are advertising agencies going out of business? is it unrealistic to want to start a Marketing Firm?

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I am interested in Television and Film Advertising and Marketing. I am also interested in Film Production and all other aspects of Marketing. I even have a great idea on how to improve Telemarketing for the Marketers and the customers…. any advice is great.

Best reply by lafilmprod:

For the most part, ad agencies are not going out of business. They are, however, rapidly changing with new technology and going away from the traditional points of reaching their markets. With recent advances in rotating electronic billboards, media-based cell phones (or on-the-go processors i.e. netbooks/ iPads), social networking sites, and several advances that will be made in the near future, advertising budgets are actually growing to meet the current demands in “new media” over the last couple of years (despite the recession) and will grow even more soon, but they are cutting back heavily on allocated expenditures on traditional TV commercial advertising, stand-alone magazine ads, and the “old” way of creating market awareness.

The biggest advice you can have right now is: follow the current technology trends because that is what is paving the way in advertising, production, and consumerism right now, more so than I have ever seen. There has been a huge spike in social media and computer integration with everything- from digital cameras, post workflows, broadcast, to how we will view this media and be reached at home or “out of home”. It will be surprising for many people how quickly things will change in the next couple of years.

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Are advertising agencies going out of business? is it unrealistic to want to start a Marketing Firm?

Comments

What kind of advertising can I do for my college area restaurant?

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I own a little restaurant in the college area of San Diego. I’m wondering if you can give me any tips for advertising my sandwich shop to the college students.

Print advertising? Online Advertising? How much does it cost?

Can you also give any ideas on special events or promotions to get customers in?

Thanks!

Best reply by ‘Just smile’:

Free adertising all over the net. Just type in classified ads uk / usa.
-go to local colleges and speak about it, get people talking.
-hand out flyers etc
-word of mouth.

INTERNET:
-via blogs on request. Popular teen sites like:
Hi5
Bebo
My Space
Face book.
-business forums
-free ads sites
-MLM programmes

Land (non-net) advertisng costs alot but not sure how much xactly. If youre thinking billboards youre paying thousands to a million.

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What kind of advertising can I do for my college area restaurant?

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