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33 votes
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What are the best resources for finding work in today's climate?
I've been a professional in the IT sector for the past 25 years, and during that time I've gone through several different methods of finding my next gig. Back when I started out, the internet was...
I've been a professional in the IT sector for the past 25 years, and during that time I've gone through several different methods of finding my next gig. Back when I started out, the internet was still a relatively new thing, so I got my first few positions by answering ads in the local newspaper (remember those?)
Two years ago, I decided to try my hand at writing novels, and while that has been quite fulfilling personally, it hasn't yet started to pay any bills so I've had to keep my IT skills sharp and hold down a standard job to pay the bills.
Now though, I find that I'm looking a lot harder at the companies and people I work for, and I'd like to be able to shop around a bit more for a position at a place that is more in line with me as a person.
To that end, I'm wondering what methods are more commonplace now for finding employment, as opposed to my standard, which is pretty much indeed and the occasional linkedin find. Which methods have you had the most success with?
22 votes -
Some small towns in America are disbanding police forces, citing hiring woes
23 votes -
UK government looks to rollback sickness benefits
18 votes -
As employers expand artificial intelligence in hiring, few states in the USA have rules
12 votes -
Brazilian delivery workers take their fight to get app users to pick up their orders to local legislatures
16 votes -
Millennials didn’t kill the ‘organization man’ after all. Federal data reveals it was the boomers all along.
37 votes -
The number of strikes rippling across the US seem big, but the total number of Americans walking off the job remains historically low
14 votes -
X to collect biometric and employment data
39 votes -
US senator and pilot Tammy Duckworth: anyone who votes to reduce the 1,500 hour rule for pilot training will have blood on their hands
62 votes -
Working from home: Perks and policies?
Wondering how other organizations are supporting / controlling working from home? Do you guys get your internet reimbursed? Do you have to use a company-controlled wifi router? Do you get a...
Wondering how other organizations are supporting / controlling working from home?
Do you guys get your internet reimbursed? Do you have to use a company-controlled wifi router? Do you get a cellphone (with data) so you have a back-up connectivity? Allowances? Are you surveilled?
23 votes -
The women’s recession is officially over — but not everyone has recovered equally
10 votes -
Treasury Department releases first-of-its-kind report on benefits of unions to the US economy
61 votes -
How US labor movement can win at the bargaining table
14 votes -
Albania: Europe’s hidden haven for digital nomads
6 votes -
TSMC blames struggle to build Phoenix plant on skilled labor shortage but workers cite disorganization and safety concerns
31 votes -
A warning to employers that US NLRB labor agency has changed the rules governing formation of unions to be easier for workers and harder for employers to oppose
41 votes -
Zoom CEO reportedly tells staff: Workers can't build trust or collaborate... on Zoom
52 votes -
Women working in Antarctica say they were left to fend for themselves against sexual harassers
50 votes -
In a rare win, a migrant worker sued his bosses in Singapore. And won
22 votes -
Walt Disney Pictures VFX workers move to unionize
50 votes -
Why are gender pay gaps so large in Japan and South Korea?
21 votes -
The day women shut down Iceland
8 votes -
Bosses dislike work-from-home but suspect they’re stuck with it
72 votes -
As its moderators remain on strike, Stack Overflow introduces "Overflow AI"
48 votes -
Madison Reeve explains why she quit Linus Tech Tips (CW: self harm, slurs, sexual harassment)
167 votes -
How do I keep myself sane while trying to find a WFH job?
Since pretty much the beginning of the year, I've been searching on-and-off for something WFH-related, but it feels like the only thing that ever calls me back is something that either defines...
Since pretty much the beginning of the year, I've been searching on-and-off for something WFH-related, but it feels like the only thing that ever calls me back is something that either defines itself as 'contract work', requires cold calling or sales (which is insanely stressful and comes with those good 'ol CommissionsTM!), or lists as remote but is actually hybrid.
I'm fine with tech support, customer support, data entry-- I just don't want a job that has "make your own hours!" or shift bids or whatever. And yet, I never hear back from anything that isn't either pseudo-telemarketing or something else that relies on commission in order to actually justify a viable living.
And don't get me started on the website applications. What in the fuck is the point of Indeed if every single major company just asks me to apply on their site afterwards, anyway? I already have all of this information, along with about 60 of those proficiency tests that are supposed to get me noticed, already filled out on Indeed. And even if I download my Indeed profile as a resume and upload it to another site, if I'm lucky it'll pull my previous employer's name and my job title. But that still means filling in contact information, references, and the whole shebang of everything else.
I've also tried to find something local that's not Remote, but unless I want something super-mega-corporate, full-time seems to be out of the picture.
So anyone have any suggestions? What do I do at this point? Indeed feels like how most people describe Tinder if you're a straight man, or finding a D&D group if you're not a DM.
Oh, as an aside: About 50% of WFH jobs seem to be related to medical in some way, and all of those require someone who already has experience in medical data entry or something already. How does that work? Ditto insurance companies, I guess.
38 votes -
New Jersey court sides with Catholic school that fired unmarried pregnant teacher
24 votes -
Boots Riley interview about SAG, WGA Strikes and the future of Hollywood's labor movement
13 votes -
Want employees to return to the office? Then give each one an office.
116 votes -
US Federal judge orders Southwest Airlines attorneys to attend ‘religious-liberty training’ from conservative Christian legal advocacy group
42 votes -
Fighters win key ruling in case that could upend UFC’s business
8 votes -
Italian man crushed to death under falling cheese wheels
42 votes -
Embracer Group has shut down Campfire Cabal as the company begins closing down some of its development studios
8 votes -
I'm looking for some career advice
Apologies if this isn't in line with the spirit of the group/site but I'm just looking for some advice really. I'm 27m and just feel really stuck career wise. I didn't do very well in school and...
Apologies if this isn't in line with the spirit of the group/site but I'm just looking for some advice really.
I'm 27m and just feel really stuck career wise. I didn't do very well in school and it took me a lot longer than everyone else to figure out myself. I have a degree in a redundant subject (very niche, no value in any career). Before COVID I was finally able to get my live music photography work off the ground but then that came crashing down. Other than that I mostly only have experience in retail and hospitality, and I've been a manager in both fields.
I'm looking for a work from home job for multiple reasons, mostly customer success/account management jobs and have had a few interviews too. I even got down to the final 2 for a promising one a few months ago. Every single job basically said that it was only down to my lack of experience compared to other candidates, but they did like me.
What is there I can actually do to aide this? I'm just worried that the older I get with only retail management work the harder it will be for me to start a real career path. The whole thing is getting me really down and I just don't know what to do.
Thanks.
26 votes -
US CNBC anchor accuses UAW leader of 'class warfare' for fighting for workers
32 votes -
On "bullshit" jobs - New data supports the idea that some jobs are "so completely pointless, unnecessary, or pernicious that even the employee cannot justify its existence"
66 votes -
Wisconsin’s dairy industry relies on undocumented immigrants, but the state won’t let them legally drive
20 votes -
American Physician Partners is latest physician staffing firm to fold — it follows Envision, and physicians consider further consequences of difficult market
9 votes -
Night-shifters of Tildes, what tips do you have?
In a few weeks I'm starting a new position at work that will be 7p-7a, 2 days in a row (each week, so work for 2 days, off for 5). It'll be a sort of "on call" type position that will have busier...
In a few weeks I'm starting a new position at work that will be 7p-7a, 2 days in a row (each week, so work for 2 days, off for 5). It'll be a sort of "on call" type position that will have busier spats at the beginning and end of the shift, but the middle tends to be slow, occasionally no work at all. My employer doesn't have any major restrictions as far as work downtime, I have a lot of freedom there.
What tips do y'all have for managing sleep surrounding overnight shifts, and also maintaining alertness/awakeness during the overnight shifts?
30 votes -
99-year-old US trucking company Yellow shuts down, putting 30,000 out of work
30 votes -
From car parts to cargo bikes: GKN workers in Italy
6 votes -
Not all porn is created equal - is there such a thing as a healthy pornography?
83 votes -
California hotel workers are on strike because app based staffing agencies punish them for refusing to cross picket lines
28 votes -
They’re the names you don’t know. Hollywood’s ‘journeyman’ actors explain why they are striking.
13 votes -
Trevor Project begins layoffs during union bargaining session, two months after recognising union
10 votes -
End of the bartender? The UK vending machines pouring pints for the masses
19 votes -
Why I cannot take a holiday... Work!
I have a very senior role inside of a 450 person company, in IT. I'm not going to be too specific but it's in the TV industry. I state this because anyone that works in TV probably knows it's full...
I have a very senior role inside of a 450 person company, in IT. I'm not going to be too specific but it's in the TV industry. I state this because anyone that works in TV probably knows it's full of hot heads and technically inept people. I have a very small team of two in the UK looking after four sites, a couple of guys in the US too, looking after almost pure remote folks, they're mostly cloud.
Every time I go on holiday and as the most technical and senior person, some shit happens that ruins my break. I've had everything from ISP issues caused by finance not paying the bill so we had a site cut off, through to a show not being able to be delivered to channel on a deadline of hours which meant I had to step in, no matter where in the world I am and on what vacation.
I'm away again. Today, 10am, ping after ping about a site outage. Servers unavailable. Telephones not working. IT have failed again. The usual email chains and Teams/Slack chats that start pointing and poking. Absolutely furious and away on a family break I ignored it for the youngsters to solve, it should have been an easy fix. But no, the information given to them was wrong. The diagnosis handed to me incorrect. A cancelled ISP contract kicked in but we have multiple site outbound connections so that should not effect us. The site to site link goes dark for this particular site. I finally get THE CALL. I'm not going to rant too much as it gets technical but there's only so much that can be done from a phone VPN over a poor quality cell connection when you're somewhere between a wooded area a beach, and all you have on you is a 6" android device. I eventually got hold of my US senior tech who spent a four hours trying to direct the UK youngsters on what to touch, where to look. Turns out, some people randomly plugged in a switch, a NAS with DHCP server on and then managed to loopback the network using two ports of a SIP phone over the weekend as they had no clue what they were doing and eventually the network gave out. Spanning tree is not as good as it should be. We're a small team and due to always being overridden in protocol I've never been allowed to MAC address deny by default even though we're often a hacker target. BYOD is rife and it's getting harder to not lose data.
Anyway. Another day of my vacation ruined, time I should have spent concentrating on my family and having fun, building memories. The seething email I have sent to the board will go down like a lead balloon, I cannot wait to read the responses on Monday! Deny is going to get enabled by default or I'm going to resign.
So I ask you, how many others like me are there in here that work pushes in to your personal time, every time you try to get away from it?
48 votes -
Teamsters in the USA win historic UPS contract, with zero concessions
87 votes -
Inside American Starbucks' dirty war against organized US labor
23 votes