Sunday, January 2, 2011

[itroundtable] Digest Number 2345

Messages In This Digest (3 Messages)

Messages

1.

GENERAL:  Problems Changing Careers/Finding Jobs

Posted by: "john sampson" jcsspike@yahoo.com   jcsspike

Sat Jan 1, 2011 6:27 am (PST)



Career Shift Often Means Drop in Living Standards
By CATHERINE RAMPELL
Published: December 31, 2010

Sue Bires, 60, was laid off from a job managing homeowners' associations in Orlando, Fla. She eventually filed for bankruptcy and took a job at a call center.
A new study of American workers displaced by the recession sheds light on the sacrifices a large number have made to find work. Many, it turns out, had to switch careers and significantly reduce their living standards.
"In many cases, these people are not very happy," said Cliff Zukin, professor of public policy and political science at Rutgers University and one of the authors of the study. "They're the winners who got new jobs, but they're not really what they want, and not where they want to be."
The study, conducted by the John J. Heldrich Center for Workforce Development at Rutgers, was based on a survey of Americans around the country who were unemployed as of August 2009 and re-interviewed about their job status twice over the next 15 months.
As of November 2010, only about one-third had found replacement jobs, either as full-time workers (26 percent) or as part-time workers not wanting a full-time job (8 percent).
And of those who successfully found work, 41 percent had switched into a new career or field.
Some of these may have been workers who retrained for new fields they wished to enter, but many seem to have taken their new jobs out of desperation. Only a minority of those displaced workers changing careers — 22 percent — said they had taken a class or a training course before finding their new job.
"Look, I am really happy to have a job — that's the main thing," said Sue Bires, 60, who was laid off from a job managing homeowners' associations in Orlando, Fla., in September 2008. She initially had another job lined up with a different realty association in Orlando, but when that fell through, she moved to Austin, Tex., to stay with a friend. She filed for bankruptcy and took a job at a call center.
But she now earns $30,000, far below the $45,000 she was paid when she was managing properties.
"It's competitive out there, even for the lower paying jobs, especially when you're 60 looking for a job in a young town," Ms. Bires said. "So I'm grateful to have a job where the people are nice and I have a little bit of flexibility in my hours. That's especially important now, since retirement is looking like a long way off."
Like Ms. Bires, most of those forced to switch careers generally seemed to downgrade their job status.
Nearly 7 in 10 of the survey's respondents who took jobs in new fields say they had to take a cut in pay, compared with just 45 percent of workers who successfully found work in their original field.
Of all the newly re-employed tracked by the Heldrich Center, 29 percent took a reduction in fringe benefits in their new job. Again, those switching careers had to sacrifice more: Nearly half of these workers (46 percent) suffered a benefits cut, compared with just 29 percent who stayed in the same career.
Many of those who found work in a different field say they have come to terms with the limited opportunities, but they are reluctant to see their new job as a calling.
"I wouldn't go so far as to say I've switched careers, since I'm not exactly sure this is a career, but I'm definitely doing something different," said Adam Kowal, 30, of Royal Oak, Mich.
After being laid off from a job as a quality control supervisor at a department store warehouse and losing his house, he moved his family across the state to live with his mother. Unable to find similar work, he initially took a "soul-sucking" temporary job on an assembly line making auto parts, and is now working in a kitchen at a high school.
His hourly wage has fallen from $15 an hour at the warehouse to $10.50 an hour washing dishes and preparing food, and he has gone from having health insurance coverage for his whole family to no benefits. He, his pregnant wife and their 4-year-old son are now on Medicaid.
"I'd love to go back to what I was doing," he said, or even into what he described as his true passion, full-time screenwriting. "But when I talk with the unemployment office here in Michigan, they tell me the chances of going back and using the same skill set I had before are pretty farfetched."
 

MIS Ntwk Assoc Mtg Dates:

Jan 4th Reg Mtg - 6 pm - Berman Larson Kane Offices, Paramus - DO NOT use GPS for directions - Bring 15 copies of your resume

Feb 8th Combined Dinner Mtg - Assoc of Women in Computing - Totowa - Rod Colon - Networking: Do You Get It?
2.

LEADS: 25 IT Pos - NYC/NJ - Devel/BA/Eng/Security/QA

Posted by: "john sampson" jcsspike@yahoo.com   jcsspike

Sat Jan 1, 2011 8:25 am (PST)



Warm wishes for a Happy and Healthy New Year!!!

I hope the New Year finds you well and brings you lots of good fortune.
Here is a quick list of immediate hiring needs that we are actively
searching for. Please feel free to contact me or pass on to your
friends and family that may be interested.

1. Java Software Engineer for world renowned Internet Retailer
(NYC)

2. Core Java (consultant) with Restful Web Services, Spring, JDBC
and Oracle for new web product at SW firm (NYC)

3. Natural Language Processing Engineer for Global Software Firm
(NYC)

4. Machine Learning Personalization Engineer for Web division of
Media Firm (NYC)

5. C++ Software Engineer for Financial Market Data Systems (NYC)

6. Software Engineer for Algorithmic Trading Systems (C++) for
Financial Firm (NYC/NJ)

7. Quantitative Developer (PhD in Math, Physics, Engineering) for
Derivatives Systems and Hedge Funds (NYC)

8. Quantitative Developer (C++, Matlab, Mathematica, Advanced
Degree) Pricing Models for Financial Firm (NYC)

9. C++ Software Developer (STL, Distributed Systems,
Multithreading, Web Crawling) for Media/Legal Products (NYC)

10. Software Engineer (C++, Unix, OOP/OOD, Algos, Multithreading)
for high volume transactional financial syst(NYC/NJ)

11. Front End Web Developer (CSS, AJAX, JavaScript,) for Consumer
Facing sites (NYC)

12. Hedge Fund - C#/.NET Software Engineer (WPF, WCF, SOA, OOD/OOP)
(CT)

13. Web Security Engineer for large scale Enterprise Systems (JBoss,
Weblogic, Perl, LAMP, Network Security) (NYC)

14. SR QA Engineer (Cons) - Automated Testing for Web based
transactional sites (Selenium, Cucumber, Scripting) (NYC)

15. QA Engineer - Manual/Automated testing (QTP) for Financial
Trading Firm (NJ)

16. Senior Unix/Linux Systems Engineer (SAN, Security, Automation,
Networking) for large scale systems (NJ)

17. Senior Network Engineer (Arch/Des/Imp, L/3,L/2, Cisco, Linux,
Solaris) for Software Firm (NYC)

18. Senior Java Developer for Web R&D Team (Performance, Scalability
for Consumer Facing Sites) Media (NYC)

19. SQL Developer for new DW build and integration of Financial
Investment Data (NYC)

20. Informatica Developer for new DW build for Investment firm (NYC)

21. Application Architect to drive technical vision and core
platform for portfolio construction at top Hedge Fund (CT)

22. PHP Developers for web company 2 openings (NYC)

23. Mobile Developer Team Lead (Android or iPhone) for Global
Software firm (NYC)

24. Business Analyst with Legal or Finance experience for global
investment firm (NYC)

25. Informatica ETL Developer (Consultant) for leading Financial
Firm (NJ)

Please feel free to reach out to me if you would like more detail on the
openings above...or if you just want to connect and update. Here's to a
great 2011!

Have a great Holiday!!!!

Brian

Brian Wiseltier
Vice President
SilverSearch, Inc.
brian@silversearchinc.com
201-947-7050 x102
2 Executive Drive, Suite 705
Fort Lee, NJ 07024
Link to me at http://www.linkedin.com/in/wiseltier
Website: www.silversearchinc.com

MIS Ntwk Assoc Mtg Dates:

Jan 4th Reg Mtg - 6 pm - Berman Larson Kane Offices, Paramus - DO NOT use GPS for directions - Bring 15 copies of your resume

Feb 8th Combined Dinner Mtg - Assoc of Women in Computing - Totowa - Rod Colon - Networking: Do You Get It?
3.

15 things to remember for 2011

Posted by: "jackmck@juno.com" jackmck@juno.com   jackmck54

Sat Jan 1, 2011 8:44 am (PST)




I wish you all a Happy New Year filled with nothing but happy days and special memories.

Here are some things that I will work on in the coming new year. Maybe some of these things will be helpful to you, too.

My top 15 things to remember:

1. Your Health - Your health is one of the most precious things you have. Take care of yourself. Go to the doctor for a physical. Eat healthy foods (most of the time) and start exercising with your doctor's approval, of course. You will have more energy. Your body and your mind will thank you for it. Exercise is good for the body and the spirit.

2. Live in the Present - Remember, you can't do anything about the past, or about the future. Regretting what happened in the past or worrying about the future does you no good at all. Live in the moment...right now. Appreciate all the fantastic things you do have in your life. If you really think about it, you will find you have many.

3. Gratitude - Make a list of all the things for which you are grateful. Don't forget to include things like the ability to be able to read this email; the start of a brand new day; a beautiful flower; a star-filled sky. Read it often and focus on all the good things you have in your life...not what you think you don't have.

4. Love - Love comes in many forms. Don't look for love in all the wrong places. Love can be found everywhere. Start with yourself. Make a list of all the wonderful things about yourself. Look at yourself in the mirror and say "I love you". And, while you are at it, wrap your arms around yourself and give yourself a big hug. You are special. If you don't believe that, no one else will.

5. Pay it Forward - Make a Difference - Volunteer or help those who need it. Volunteer at an animal shelter, a nursing home, a hospital; mentor a child. Let someone cut in front of you at the grocery store; smile at someone who looks sad. Send a happy e-mail or make a phone call to a friend who may need it. Pay someone a compliment. We are all in this world together. Let's help each other. Your day will be brighter, too.

6. Make your life the best it can be - Every day you wake up, is a day to make your life the very best it can be. If you are in the middle of a difficult situation, see if there is anything you can do to change it. Sometimes the only thing you can do is to accept it and let it go and have faith that things will get better. If you are in a bad situation, tell yourself that it is difficult - RIGHT NOW. Those words will help you see that the situation you are in will not last forever. Those words will give you hope.

7. Forgiveness - Forgiving someone who has hurt you, will set you free. You forgive, not for the other person, but for you. Forgiveness will set you free and make your life more peaceful.

8. Choose Peace - It's easy to get upset with everyday irritations. The driver on the road; the line which is way too long in the grocery store; someone who doesn't say "thank you" when you hold the door open for him/her. (That's my pet peeve). Take a deep breath and just let it go.

9. Comparisons - Don't ever compare your life to someone else's. Don't waste your time thinking that someone else has something that you wished you had. You don't really know how someone else lives. Stick to your own business and concentrate on your own life.

10. Tolerance- Accept the fact that others do not think like you, and might not have the same opinion as you. That's not a bad thing. That's how we learn from others. Be open-minded and be respectful of others' opinions; even if you don't agree with them.

11. Challenge Yourself/Set a Goal - Is there something you always wanted to do (within reason of course) and haven't found time to do it? Go for it! Make a plan and stick to it. Start taking baby steps toward what you really want in your life. Find a way to get it!

12. Friends - Choose your friends wisely. Surround yourself with people you look up to; people you respect and who respect you; people who inspire you; people who accept you the way you are, not the way they want you to be. The world is full of negative people and complainers who always seem to find fault with everything. Is this how you really want to spend your time?

13. Think positively - I know sometimes this is difficult. Life challenges us all the time. But think about it. Does thinking negatively change the situation or make it worse?

14. Be Brave - Sometimes life deals us a bad hand of cards. It's how you play them that will make you a winner. Adversity affects all of us. The true test of character is how you handle the difficult situations. It is easy to be happy when things are going our way. Be strong and have faith that things will work out.

15 Believe in yourself - Believe that wonderful things are possible. Believe that something fantastic is waiting for you, right around the corner. You deserve the very best. Believe it and it will happen!

__________________________________________________________
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