job

Humour@work

By Viren Naidu

At Beryl Call Centers, in Bedford Texas, the CEO once rode through the office on rollerblades dressed as a matador. Sounds crazy? Michael Kerr, an international Hall of Fame business speaker and president of Humour at Work shares more insights:

Humour, take it seriously

Studies find that people tend to respect people more who laugh at themselves. It also helps leaders come across as more authentic and real, and therefore, helps build trust at work. One simple activity to do is to have a ‘bonehead award’ or ‘blooper award’ as a prize once a month for whoever committed the biggest ‘oops’. Another key is to practice what I’d call ‘relevant humour’ (humour that is linked to your company’s brand and style and tied to your particular profession or trade). Celebrating an offbeat, fun theme day once a month is a simple, fun way to keep humour alive. For example, ‘High-Five Day’ where everyone high-fives each other; ‘Monochromatic Day’ when everyone dresses up in black and/or white, or ‘Third Person Thursdays’ where everyone talks about themselves in the third person are workable plans.

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L'ennui vous mine… Et si vous passiez au job crafting ?

Mêmes têtes, mêmes rituels, mêmes obstacles. Sans perspective d’évolution, au-dedans comme au dehors de l’entreprise, vous tournez en rond comme un lion en cage… Remodelez votre job de l’intérieur ! C’est le conseil de Jean-Michel Rolland, consultant en management et enseignant à l’Isen (1). Décryptage.

Par Marie-Madeleine Sève pour LEntreprise.com Continue reading

10 Things Not to Do When Interviewing (and 4 Bonus Tips)

by Herb Greenberg and Patrick Sweeney (ere.net)

Below are some “don’ts” to keep in mind when interviewing, many of which relate to the most common interviewing errors. It’s from our book How to Hire and Develop Your Next Top Performer, 2nd edition: The Qualities That Make Salespeople Great, @2012, McGraw-Hill Professional; reprinted with permission of the publisher. Continue reading

An Overlooked Ingredient: Discovering Corporate Culture Before Accepting the Job

By Joshua Bjerke (recruiter.com)

A job interview may be about the employer and what that company wants, but that doesn’t mean you, as an interviewee, can’t do some probing of your own in order to make the best decision when choosing among job offers. No matter how attractive a position may appear on paper, if your values and personality don’t mesh with thecorporate culture, you’ll either go for years working in a job that makes you miserable or lose more time, effort, and money jumping immediately back into the job market after a hasty exit. If you’ve ever quit a job, there were probably very good reasons to justify the act: a clash in values or attitudes, too competitive, or simply too unrelated to your career goals.

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Call in sick to work

I like to call in sick to work at places where I’ve never held a job. Then when the manager tells me I don’t work there, I tell them I’d like to. But not today, as I’m sick.

Jarod Kintz

Jarod Kintz
About this author:

I’ve been rejected by the finest creative writing program, and also the not so finest creative writing program.

The first rejection was from the University of Iowa’s MFA program, possibly the best creative writing program in the universe, and the second rejection was by the University of Wyoming’s MFA program–the anti number one writing program in the universe