Career
Descriptions
I once read that the dynamic and evolving human changes careers (or
jobs) every seven years. If this is the case for you, or if
you are in high school contemplating your future or in college about to
go into the work force, you may be interested in career descriptions
and the databases that offer career descriptions.
There are a number of great sources to tap, including such sites as
Salary.com, a site that includes a job search engine (updated daily),
one which can also be found at numerous other current sites, such as
metasearch engines Monster.com, Flipdog.com, Yahoo! Hot Jobs, and
Jobs-Matrix.com. At the same time, local jobs can be
researched at smaller search engines, like JobStar SF or California Job
Bank, for example, for those living in or moving to the California Bay
Area, for instance.
Whatever role you hope to fill, you can look through thousands of
positions, and study the career descriptions on the EUREKA database,
which offers information such as projected openings in a particular
field. In the Interior Design field, for instance, EUREKA
projects by 2008 will be able to find a job in one of 12,200 openings.
In order to provide the best of services once you are in a position,
you need special skills and specific qualifications: for example, in
one job opening description, the most desirable applicant would bring
to the position the following:
* Highly refined sense of aesthetics demonstrated in a powerful
portfolio;
* Current knowledge of technology and trends;
* Excellent team and client communication skills; and
* The ability to think visually.
You will therefore need to know what training or additional training
you will need to be able to provide such skill sets. Details
on exact training you need for exact skills you should bring, can be
found at such comprehensive sites as The U.S. Department of
Labor’s Bureau of Labor Statistics. There you will
also find, besides or within specific and thorough career
descriptions, what the salaries are for each level of a particular job,
what health, environmental, and safety hazards exist, and projected
estimates on job availability and hourly or annual wage considerations
in the future of that job.
Also at the Labor Bureau site, you can detailed career descriptions,
with information ranging from unemployment trends and statistics, mass
layoff statistics, and national trends to business employment dynamics,
job openings, and labor turnover survey statistics.
Whatever your reasons for job searching, then, you will be able to
approach your new endeavor well informed and equally well prepared.
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