Frustration Friday: Credit Where Credit Is Due

You know who needs more respect, credit, and wads of cash in their paychecks?

People working in job placement.  The recruiters, the job counsellors, and the like.  Wether they work freelance or with big placement companies, they deserve more recognition for what they do and what they go through.  Their job is not easy.

Consider the lot of someone working at, say, in recruiting or an outplacing company and all the challenges they face.  They have to deal with clients who have laundry lists of needs that no normal human being could meet, or two sentences of requirements that say nothing.  They have to read the Resumes From Hell – in this case the level of Hell where people can't describe their careers or skills, and proper punctuation is something that happens to other people.  This is their lot.

Now, beyond the challenges that people in placement and job searching and the like face, they also face the fact they don't get much credit for the work they do and the things they go through.  When's the last time you've seen them mentioned in the news favorably, or beyond a source of statistics?

Honestly, especially in this economy, they don't get enough credit.

Job searching and placement is a set of skills, ones that take effort and deliberate action to master.  Doing it for someone else is even more challenging – and many people out there have indeed mastered it.  They're just not going to get much recognition for it.

So let us raise a glass (probably of your favorite Energy Drink) to the people who do all this: the recruiters and counsellors and placement experts.  They've mastered the job search skills and knowledge and pass it on to others.

This Frustration Friday, let's acknowledge their frustration and recognize people who place us in jobs, and the hard work they do.

– Steven Savage

Frustration Friday: Bye-Bye Retirement Plan

Man I miss my retirement plan.

Oh it's not I don't have one, or am not working on one, it's just I miss the one I had before the Great Recession.  The one that was soberly planned, carefully laid out, and based on what turned out to be a naive idea of some levels of market stability and predictability.  Sure I had ups and downs in mind, but not the entire re-alignment of the world financial system.

You know what I'm talking about.

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