Quick Tips: Your success team?

(I originally posted these tips on Twitter. @sweetcareers)

  • Who’s on your success team? Surround yourself with individuals who inspire you. These should be people you trust, whose work ethic is admirable.
  • Drop the “friends” that are unmotivated and are sabotaging their own success.
  • Your success team doesn’t have to be in your field or industry. They do need to be honest with you, but also encouraging.
  • You don’t have to connect with these individuals everyday, but connecting is important. Update them regularly and remember to inquire about their lives.
  • Members could include professors, coaches, advisors, career counselors, industry professionals, co-workers and fellow students.
  • Success teams work best if they are mutually beneficial – remember to give back.
  • Would anyone want you on their success team?




Resume Phrases – Greek Life

It can sometimes be challenging to come up with ways to describe your accomplishments, particularly those from extra-curricular settings. Here are a handful of resume phrases that college students or recent alums with Greek Life experience may find useful:
Continue reading Resume Phrases – Greek Life »




Who’s Hiring in Your Town?

Guest Author: CareerAlley

Companies are leveraging their company career sites on a more consistent basis than they have in the past. This trend has picked up pace in the last few months as the sagging economy has forced companies to look for ways to save money. The other benefit for companies is that it gives them greater control over their initial screening process (rather than depending on Job Boards and Recruiters). This trend is likely to increase as the practice becomes a part of “standard operating procedures”.

Continue reading Who’s Hiring in Your Town? »




Quick Tips: Choosing a Major

(I originally posted these tips on Twitter. @sweetcareers)

  • Speak with faculty and current students in a department about the major before you declare. These conversations can help you confirm or dis-confirm your expectations about the major.
  • Picking a major that you love will be more effective than selecting a major whose job prospects seem good, but remember to supplement your degree.
  • Look for ways to uniquely mix your major with your career interest. For example, I wrote about Pip’s career prospects in Great Expectations (I was an English/Psychology major).
  • If you love art history, for example, but want to be an event planner, go ahead and major in art history, but look for ways to get event planning experience through internships, volnteering, and involvement in student organizations.

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