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Business : Careers

Careers eBooks

You have selected the subject of Careers.
The eBooks in this subject are listed below.

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RESULTS: 81 to 90 of 492
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Career As A Criminal Lawyer
By: Institute For Career Research Contributing Editors
Published by: Institute For Career Research

Criminal lawyers – also called attorneys – are called upon when the going gets toughest. The most obvious example of a criminal lawyer is the criminal defense attorney made famous by decades of movies, television and crime novels. In the United States, people charged with crimes are guaranteed access to a lawyer by the Constitution. Sometimes they are public defenders, lawyers on the public payroll who have to be ready to defend anybody who needs their services. Other times they are employed by private firms or are solo practitioners and are paid directly by their clients. Criminal prosecutors are always on the public payroll. Their client is the state they work in, and they represent their client’s interest just like other lawyers represent their clients. Criminal attorneys are at the leading edge of the American criminal justice system, which can be a source of great pride as well as unending intellectual stimulation. And it’s no secret that they enjoy excellent earnings. On the other hand, criminal defense attorneys often have to represent people they find reprehensible. And prosecutors are required to aggressively go after people who they may feel don’t really deserve it. more...

Price: $15.00


Career As A Fabric, Quilt And Sewing Store Owner
By: Institute For Career Research Contributing Editors
Published by: Institute For Career Research

Are you a dyed in the wool needle crafter? Do you have a velvet touch with business and people? Fabric, sewing and quilt store owners do, and you might even say each is cut from the same cloth! In their stores, these careerists sell fabric and notions, as well as sewing tools and equipment. Quilt, sewing and fabric store owners set up shop in converted turn of the century homes, in modern malls, even online. more...

Price: $15.00


Career As A Funeral Director - Mortuary Science
By: Institute For Career Research Contributing Editors
Published by: Institute For Career Research

It’s not necessarily a glamorous or high-profile career. And those who choose to pursue it have often been stereotyped as saints or schemers, but a career as a funeral director can be both rewarding and challenging. Part counselor, part business person and part technician, the funeral director’s career allows those who enter it opportunities to exercise business expertise, and technical and interpersonal skills, and can provide an ever-changing work environment. While few get rich as funeral directors, it certainly can provide steady and comfortable earnings. Although many associate the task of embalming bodies with the duties of a funeral director or mortician, only a small percentage of a deathcare professional’s time is spent preparing bodies for burial. Most of a funeral director’s work hours are spent with families of the deceased, consoling them and helping to arrange funerals. For this reason, funeral directors are considered human services professionals, rather than technicians. Running the business and managing the daily affairs of the funeral home take up another good portion of a funeral director’s workday. Funeral directors are licensed, college-educated professionals responsible for providing guidance and support to bereaved families, filing legal documents for the deceased, and handling the logistics of dealing with the body. more...

Price: $15.00


Career As A Sports Coach
By: Institute For Career Research Contributing Editors
Published by: Institute For Career Research

Sporting competition is often compared, metaphorically, to war. Football teams lineup against one another, each desperately seeking to gain control of the line of scrimmage – their “front line.” Hockey players brutally attempt to gain control of the puck from the enemy, then as if it were a live grenade, they charge down the ice looking to thrust it into the net. Even tennis players and track stars push their limits in tough competition. If the athletes are portrayed as the combatants, locking horns with their opponents in a grueling test of their physical abilities, then that would make the coaches the generals. They oversee all aspects of the battle. They design tactics with the sole purpose of gaining victory during combat. They train their troops to be in peak physical and mental condition and motivate them to achieve maximum performance. They also take responsibility for their troops’ well being, making sure they receive the very best in care and maintenance for their bodies and minds. Coaches sometimes work individually, but more often they are part of a staff at a college, university, or professional sports franchise. They are responsible for devising successful training regimens and strategic game plans. They need to evaluate talent, recruit new athletes, and manage the athletes they oversee. They must assume many roles, including motivational speaker, psychologist, trainer, mentor, and tactician. The most important responsibility, though, is to make sure the men and women they coach are prepared to compete and succeed – not only in sports, but also in every other aspect of life. more...

Price: $15.00


Career As A Truck Driver - Trucking Company Manager, Owner
By: Institute For Career Research Contributing Editors
Published by: Institute For Career Research

There are almost three million truck drivers in the United States today. In the past 30 years, there has been a constant demand for truck drivers. Most experts say there are never enough trained, experienced drivers to go around. As a truck driver, you can work for a trucking company or a wholesale or retail store. You can work for the government, or you can be in business for yourself, owning and operating your own rig. Trucks come in all shapes and sizes, large, medium and small, and some have special features, such as refrigeration. All of these types are used throughout the country. more...

Price: $15.00


Career As An Advertising Artist - Graphic Designer, Creative Director, Illustrator
By: Institute For Career Research Contributing Editors
Published by: Institute For Career Research

Advertising is everywhere. Try to get through a day without seeing a printed advertisement, a television commercial, or a pop-up ad on a web site. Advertising is a dynamic, multi-billion dollar industry that helps us decide what we buy, what places to visit, where we eat, what we drive, and how we look. Advertising ranges from the smallest classified listing in the local paper to the biggest, slickest, all-encompassing campaigns that become part of the popular culture. Do you ever wonder who creates the ads that you see, remember, and talk about?. Someone had to think up the idea, kick it around, and manipulate design, composition, color, typefaces, and photography until an ad began to take shape. Advertising artists – also called commercial artists – are indispensable to this creative process, whether it’s designing a company logo, an annual report, a brochure, or a sign on the side of a bus. The very best advertising artists consistently impress a public innundated by thousands of advertising images every week – and the results show up on the client’s bottom line profit while giving us unforgettable catch phrases and characters that make us laugh, cry, or groan. more...

Price: $15.00


Career As An Automobile Service Technician - Master Mechanic, Repair Shop Owner
By: Institute For Career Research Contributing Editors
Published by: Institute For Career Research

Because of rapid advances in technology, the career of auto service technician has changed more rapidly than most careers. For many years, a person who had mechanical ability and a great deal of curiosity could graduate from high school and enter the field. These mechanics, or grease monkeys as they were called, may not have been good at math or reading, but if they were adept at taking machines apart and had an intuitive feel for what made them run, that was enough. Today’s auto service technician is a highly trained professional who has expertise in computer technology, physics, electronics and a variety of other fields. There is still the challenge of solving a problem, but now the technician is more likely to be reading computer printouts than listening to the engine. more...

Price: $15.00


Career As An Industrial Engineer - Efficiency Experts, Safety Engineers, Ergonomics Engineers, Environmental Health Engineer
By: Institute For Career Research Contributing Editors
Published by: Institute For Career Research

An industrial engineer’s job is to find the best combination of people, tools, materials, parts, information and power to provide products or services efficiently. Unlike the engineering specialties such as civil engineering or mechanical engineering, this career track isn’t restricted to one industry or type of work. It may be industrial in the sense of working in a traditional manufacturing, mining or transportation environment. Or it can lead to work for a financial services firm, a government agency or a magazine publisher. Industrial engineers research, analyze, model and test whole systems. They’re efficiency experts; safety engineers; ergonomics engineers; environmental health engineers; and in many cases, managers, principals or business owners. Almost any organization that you can name has a need for someone who understands what all the factors affecting its mission are, how they’re related, and what can be done to make it all work better. That’s what industrial engineering does – it makes a system, a process or an organization work better. There are almost 200,000 professional industrial engineers in the USA. Over 65 percent of them work in manufacturing industries. However, they’re found more widely throughout these and other kinds of industries than other engineers, because their skills are needed practically everywhere. more...

Price: $15.00


Career Building
By: Editors of CareerBuilder.com
Published by: Harper Collins

Your one-stop guide to finding a job, navigating the corporate ladder, and leaving when the time is right. Did you know that:.:.; 60% of hiring managers will offer a higher salary if asked?.; 14% of workers have used happy hour to get ahead?.; 66% of businesses monitor Internet use?.; 77% of workers feel burnout on the job?. From the experts at CareerBuilder.com, America's largest online job site, comes a complete handbook for career domination. Whether it's answering the questions the interviewers are really asking, making the most of your performance reviews, or quitting with great references and without burning bridges, Career Building explains it all. This book offers everything from job hunting basics to hiring manager secrets, office survival advice to career change suggestions, workplace statistics to sample resignation letters, and more. Whether you're looking for your first job or your fortieth, or you're just eager to move up the ranks at your current company, this is the one and only guide you need to create the career you've always wanted. more...

Price: $13.99


The Career Change Resume
By: Hofferber, Karen; Isaacs, Kim
Published by: McGraw-Hill

Written by the official resume advisers to Monster.com, this is the ultimate guide to creating life-changing resumes. The Career-Change Resume helps aspiring career-changers reinvent themselves by showing them how to transform their resumes. The book includes step-by-step instructions demonstrating how to craft resumes that open doors to new careers; more than 150 sample resumes and cover letters; valuable, innovative career-change tools and strategies; and solutions to common problems plaguing career-changers. more...

Price: $12.95


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