Ask for lift up or not?
I asked a question merely last week roughly speaking returning to my old commission - well they took me posterior. So here is another question, Before I quit because of the people emerency my review was suppose to come to pass - would it be ok to ask for my raise upon my return? and how do I ask?Answers: I'd probably not ask for a make higher. You left formerly your raise and rather frankly, you're lucky they even took you back. Most job don't really offer the luxury to come and walk as you please.
Be careful, it is clear that the company can function minus you so you don't want to come back surrounded by the door and rock the boat.
When e-mailing a resume, should I send as an attachment or copy and paste it in the e-mail?
Answers: You should first find out what the employer's preference is. If you don't know or can't find out, it's best to attach two copies of the resume -- one as a Word document and another as plain text (with a .txt extension). I always keep both versions of my resume handy.
The body of the email should not be the resume. It should be the equivalent of a "cover letter" -- introducing you and pointing out you reason for interest in the job and your main strengths, but without giving all the details that would be in a resume.
Depends, many companies request no attachments so adhere to their requests.
Sending resumes in the body of the email is smart as the person does not have to work to read it!
Having said that, I prefer it when the body of the email is the cover letter and the resume is a Word attachment.
Good luck in your hunt
Attachments keep the original format intact, so I'd go with sending as an attachment.
Don't forget your cover letter. This generally can be copied/pasted into the email.
Good Luck!
Hi There,
Always send your resume as an attachment,make sure its correctly formatted including career achievements/highlights.
If you are not sure how to do this there are various companies on the web that offer this service.If you are working through an agency then they should do this for you.Also in the bulk of the email have a small paragraph detailing relevant experience to the role you are applying for or the company normally best to bullet point this.This will grab the hiring managers attention. An agency should do this as well.
Copy and pasting your resume into the email looks lazy and will give the impression to the client that you are bulk emailing various companies.
Good Luck!!
Toby
Save it as a PDF file so it will print out like you want. Also no one can edit it.
My work situation?
Right now the department that I work surrounded by is short of help. There are a couple of opening openings at the place that I work at. My interview is if I apply for theses job and get profession offerings can my boss hold me back?Answers: I'm surrounded by the same exact situation, so I plainly see your concern.
Certainly HR wouldn't approve of holding you back and your boss couldn't come right out and say-so: "I'm going to prevent you from advancing within your career because we are short-staffed". HOWEVER, they could read out that they need to do what is best for the company, and they could read aloud that you are most needed in your current position at this time. Corporate politics.
I give attention to that if your boss was smart he'd agree to you move on to other positions, as you other have the chance to leave your current company altogether - short their approval or blessing.