Good chore to seize if your 16?
i dont want liek mcdonalds or some fastfood places.itd help if it be online application. :]
Answers: at a grocery store,like stop & shop.*
You really can't take a 'good job' until you are 18.
Unless you do atypical jobs for those around your neighborhood (If you live in one).
Sometimes they take-home pay good, sometimes not.
It adjectives depends.
You can get a chore as:
- a grocery bagger
- a runner or stocker at a department store or home improvement store
- babysit (you bid the shots and the pay)
- farmwork or landscape company (if you approaching the outdoors)
- busboy in a restaurant (you could work your style up)
- car clean up attendant - drying cars (either at car dust or car dealership)
- apprentice contained by a warehouse environment
While you are limited by your age due to endorsed reasons, you really are predetermined by your own imagination. Do what you like to do and interests you.
Good luck and enjoy fun.
grocery store...or KFC
Which would you budge for?
A relatively technologically up to date salaried job inside your profession where you hold no previous experience in but vastly interested to learn......OR.
A proletarian waged employment within your profession where on earth you're more than qualified for, and the opportunity to work with friends first met from another employment from the same profession (and have a great time working with them).
Answers: Go near the first choice. You want (or should want) to grow in your corral. If you have the casual to learn something strange, you should defintely go that style. You'll have solely learned a bright skill to add to your resume, and will hold made yourself that much more valueable for another (better) position in the adjectives. Friends will be there to hang down around with after work or on the weekends :)
I'd run for the first option instinctively. There's room for progress and you'd learn closely.
If you need a portion time job and want to pilfer care of something else next to your extra time, go for the 2nd risk.
i would pick the 1 i fell most comfortable w/.wouldn't u.*
Go for the job that have a salary and you are interested within learning something unusual in. It will look better down the road when looking for another post that you picked up that skill.
Personally I'd we weighing it between which I have a feeling I'd be happier at, which I might make more money at, and which one have the best outlook on moving up. And then pick from that what I prefer.
People you know and work ably with is a great plus, but if it turns out to be a crappy environment otherwise, or in attendance seems to be little hope to finance...
What do you do next to work-related events that are "optional" but "strongly encouraged"?
I'd rather not dance, and I don't get full compensation for the cost of attending this item, but I also am not sure I should blow off something that's "open but strongly encouraged."Thoughts?
Answers: Unfortunately, if you want to procure ahead in the workplace you'll own to suck it up and go otherwise you'll seize the label of not man a team player. Some tips to back you out with costs.
If you can share a room, do so and cut your costs.
Call ahead of time and obtain a mini-fridge for the room. Instead of eating at the hotel and spending a fortune, you can stir to the grocery store and get yourself sandwich fixings which are much cheaper. I did this and my coworkers be spending 40 bucks a day on food, my bill be 40 a week.
Instead of taking cabs, try to take public transit if it is available. It's much cheaper.
If you want to finance with the company next you should go. Try to share taxi's next to others, and take some granola bar so you can skip breakfast (unless provided at no charge by the hotel) and do other things to save paid for by the office.
If you decide not to be in motion, then you involve to come up with a accurate excuse that will be plausible! To just not progress will hurt you in the long run as you will not be view as a "team player".
"Optional but stongly encouraged" is corporate code for we aren't paying you but you still enjoy to go. If you enjoy plans to advance near the company, you should go. Otherwise, I would start looking to get surrounded by at a company that doesn't play those type of games.
See if you can share the hotel room with someone else to store on costs. Look at this as a good network opportunity. Some of these events put you in contact next to prospective future employer. This is how you build networks. If it is strongly encouraged, you will hold to attend some of these or you will not be regarded as a troop player.