Networking Support thread for the unemployed:8-5-06 Highly talented folks looking for work in here

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mzkhadir

Diamond Member
Mar 6, 2003
9,509
1
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This is supposed to be an awesome website for getting a job with tips and other stuff.

http://landingthejob.blogspot.com/

"Faced with some technical site interviews, I decided to rummage the web and came across a blog titled Landing The Job. I found the advice on the blog far more useful than the other random tidbits I found, so I emailed its author a quick note of thanks. The next day I found Landing the Internship or Full-Time Job at my doorstep. Normally, I don't bother with career books, but this title is written by people that have recently landed an awesome job at companies like Google and EA Games rather than a hiring manager or recruiter. It even includes the resumes they used to "Land The Job." Read the rest of Paul's review.

Landing the Internship or Full-Time Job During College
author Robert R. Peterson
pages 299
publisher iUniverse
rating 9/10
reviewer Paul Gerken
ISBN 0595366813
summary A guide written by those that have recently landed jobs at Google, EA Games, Intel, Amazon, IBM, and others


The book starts out with a foreword by an IBM Executive and then covers 10 chapters which I comment on individually below. Each chapter is followed by a profile from either an intern or new hire at a fortune 50 company. The profiles include a Q&A and the resume of the individual. I found them to be practical and honest. For example, Ben Lewis who is profiled as an Xbox developer said that he sometimes feels that he can't make a difference at Microsoft.

As a busy computer science student, I can really appreciate how the contents are written. Each chapter has a "Bare Minimum To Do" list with suggestions on how much time each item should take. They also include "Common Mistakes" sections. I especially used the to-do list for the company research chapter.

Another observation I should share is that everything is by example. When cover letters are discussed, there are two example letters--when rejecting an offer is discussed there are example emails. There are even example dialogs for behavioral interviews and for salary negotiation. I think most career books endlessly rant on about methods and rules. Landing the Job seems to be more centered in reality.

The only complaint I have is that there are a few minor grammatical errors. Overall, I think this book is going to be a classic. I haven't had all my site interviews yet, but I know it will help me land my future job.

Chapter 10. HR Interviews and Salary Negotiation
In my opinion, this chapter should be first because it is the best one. It starts off by talking about why recruiters act the way they do. Then it covers salary negotiation which includes a sample dialog between a student with an offer and a manager. I used the "Offer Comparison" section and am sure I will use again. It walks through how to evaluate the worth of an offer step-by-step. It even has a sample offer letter that it walks through as an example.

Chapter 1. Building Unmatched Credentials
If you are like me you often skip the first chapter of books. I didn't read this chapter at first because it talks about how to get experience while you are in college before you are looking for a job. Since I am already looking for a job, it doesn't really apply to me. After looking over it again though, I think it has really good advice. For instance, it recommends that spending endless hours to increase your GPA by a tenth of a point is not as important as finding personal projects or interests in your field.

Chapter 2. Crafting a Successful Resume
This chapter walks through writing a resume from a brainstorm to text and pdf versions. I didn't follow the entire process because I already had a resume, but the examples really helped. I also used the resumes from the profiled new hires and interns at the end of each chapter for ideas.

Chapter 3. Writing a Strong Cover Letter
I didn't have a cover letter prior to reading this. This is one of my favorite chapters because it is a short and sweet guide to getting together a nice cover letter. It includes two sample cover letters written by a mechanical engineer and a computer scientist. It also explains when to use a cover letter. For example, it suggests that a cover letter on-top of a resume can be mailed to any company address--say their customer service department--generating job leads outside of typical HR channels.

Chapter 4. Researching an Organization
I used this chapter less than the others, but it does answer some vital questions--what you need to find out and where to find it. It covers research with the internet, at company career sites, and at libraries. It has a profile of an IBM new hire at the end explaining how company research helped him.

Chapter 5. Secrets of Applying Online
This chapter is amazing. I didn't know how to put together a text resume properly until I read this chapter. I didn't know that many online forms accept unicode 2.0 not ascii so you can add bullets, underlines, and other characters to text resumes. The end has a profile from an Intel new hire and how he got his job by applying online.

Chapter 6. Mastering Career Fairs
This chapter wasn't that much use to me since I've been to a lot of career fairs. However, I agree with all the advice which is basically to know what you are going to highlight from your resume, how to act calm and confident in front of a recruiter, and to pay attention to who is attending a fair. It also cites references of where to find career fairs.

Chapter 7. Learning the Art of Interviewing
This chapter covers interviewing in general and topics that are not specific to behavioral or technical interviews. I read this chapter twice and I think I'm going to read it again before my next site interview. It covers how not to be nervous, getting safety offers, phone interviews, dinner interviews, and what you should try to emphasis about yourself during an interview (as well as what not to say). The end profiles a PhD student deciding between Google, Amazon, and Microsoft.

Chapter 8. Behavioral Interviews
Although I don't often do behavioral interviews and I don't think they are that big of a deal, I found this chapter useful. It explains why employers like behavioral interviews so much (in a nut shell they are assume future behavior will reflect past behavior). It also has an example behavioral interview and example questions--they are hard ones too.

Chapter 9. Technical Interviews
It is clear that the author has had some serious technical interviews. This chapter covers brain teasers to quality assurance questions to hard-core programming questions. It has a huge section on example questions and solutions (which takes up about a 4th of the book). It covers how to write good pseudo code, how to handle the situation when you haven't a clue what the answer is, and even technical questions for non-computer majors like civil engineering and mechanical engineering.

This is an excellent book for any major in college."

Review from slashdot.
 

dmcowen674

No Lifer
Oct 13, 1999
54,889
47
91
www.alienbabeltech.com
Hi folks,

Greetings from Katrina land.

Speaking of Katrina, my fiancee and I are getting out of New Orleans and moving to Tulsa Oklahoma.

Anyone know of any job openings in the Tulsa area would be greatly appreciated.

Making this move with no job or home lined up.

As Debi put it, we are being like 1800's early American Pioneers and saddling up our wagons.

 

xospec1alk

Diamond Member
Mar 4, 2002
4,329
0
0
Looking for a QA Test Lead in Stamford, CT

hopefully with at least 5+ years experience doing software testing.

PM me please.
 

MotionMan

Lifer
Jan 11, 2006
17,124
12
81
I am looking to move into an IT-related position in Los Angeles (California) County, either in marketing, legal or another appropriate field.

I write computer hardware reviews for another website (I attended CES as press), I studied computer science in college and have "afterhours" experience in computer hardware (I build all my own rigs and for others). I have a BA and JD and I have been a lawyer for 10 years.

Resume available upon request.

MotionMan
 

AreaCode707

Lifer
Sep 21, 2001
18,447
133
106
Seattle Washington area:

I have several job slots open for folks in an Employee Service Specialist capacity.
Good customer service skills a must
Experience in some administrative capacity a must
HR experience a plus
SAP experience a BIG plus

I also have an open Payroll Manager role, and candidates MUST have experience in the position already.

Shoot me a PM if you're interested.
 

spanky

Lifer
Jun 19, 2001
25,716
4
81
my boss is looking to hire some techie type ppl. will train the right person to be a support engineer for a voip development company. so i guess any experience is telco or voip would be nice. knowledge of sip and xml is also a plus.

company is located in mountain view, cali. please pm me or email me at "vision_8@yahoo.com" with "anandtech" in the subject line if interested. oh... and do it soon... he's looking to hire pretty soon. thanx.
 

Train

Lifer
Jun 22, 2000
13,599
90
91
www.bing.com
Looking for MAC OSX Developer in the Detroit Area.

Should have strong understanding of OOP, and be able to use the Mono Framework to convert existing .Net project to compile under the Mono framework.

please PM me if interested, this could be a good paying, full time position, and we offer very good healthcare.
 

RU482

Lifer
Apr 9, 2000
12,689
3
81
Any electronics technicians in the midwest need a job?

Small and expanding company selling tablet computers needs a technician to provide repair support, customer service, and a "can do" attitude.

Cedar Rapids, Iowa - Salary $35k-$50k (great salary balanced by minimal benefits)

you will basically be replacing me. I hate to leave but I am in school and they really need more time/dedication than I can give them.
Must be a good troubleshooter, down to the component level. Must have proven experience performing surface mount soldering (nothing too tough, mostly 0805 and some 0603 resistors). Computer operation and troubleshooting experience very important.


Thanks!!!
PM me if interested.
 

EagleKeeper

Discussion Club Moderator<br>Elite Member
Staff member
Oct 30, 2000
42,589
5
0
Dice Link

Title: College Student Tech Spec
Skills: Software, Software Engineer, Engineer, development, engineering, testing, application, libraries, applications, C, programming, Ada, Java, OpenGL, 3D, modeling, SIMULATION, ELECTRONIC SYSTEMS, SYSTEMS, INTERN

Date: 1-15-2006
Location: Orlando, FL
Area code: 407

Tax term: FULLTIME
Pay rate: Market
Length: See Job Description

Position ID: 639796
Dice ID: lckmtncx

Job description:

Specific Description
Software Engineer to work in a software development/integration
environment supporting the ReadiSim product area. The position
encompasses all aspects of software engineering life cycle, including
design, implementation, integration, testing and documentation. The
ReadiSim products provide the common software infrastructure and core
application libraries required in virtual, constructive, and live
training applications. Preferred: C programming experience. Desired:
Strong math background. Experience with C++, Ada, Java, OpenGL, and
real-time programming techniques. Experience with 3D modeling data
formats and tools.

General Position Description
Performs assignments in technical/engineering organizations e.g.,
Electronics Engineering, Software Engineering, Facilities Engineering,
Manufacturing Engineering during vacations and short-term breaks from
college attendance while enrolled in an accredited degree program.

Business Unit: SIMULATION TRAINING AND SUPT
Business Area: ELECTRONIC SYSTEMS
Job Class: Software Engineering
Job Designation: SUMMER INTERN
Location: Orlando, FL
Department: SOFTWARE ENGINEERING
Relocation: NO
Clearance Required: NONE
Work Week: FLEX
Requisition Type: SUMMER INTERN
Direct/Indirect: DIRECT
Work Shift: FIRST
 

hypn0tik

Diamond Member
Jul 5, 2005
5,866
2
0
Might as well post here.

I'm currently in the 2nd semester of my 3rd year of Engineering at the University of Toronto.

I'm in a program known as Engineering Science, but my discipline is Electrical Engineering.

If anyone is interested in a student intern for the summer, please PM me for a resume.

Thanks.
 

richardycc

Diamond Member
Apr 29, 2001
5,719
1
81
The company that I work for is always looking for biology/biochem/chem freshly grad with no or very little work experience to work in the analytical lab. pm me for more info. probably wont get much reply, as most are looking for computer related jobs here. well, at least I try to give back. :)
 

RightIsWrong

Diamond Member
Apr 29, 2005
5,649
0
0
My family is wanting to relocate to the RTP/Cary area of NC. Currently living in Mississippi and planning to move in March.

I currently work in IT Support for a major defense contractor. I have a BS in MIS, AS in CS, A+, MCP, CCNA. Looking for Level II or highrer tech support or sys admin work.

PM for resume if interested.
 

promposive

Senior member
Jun 15, 2004
912
0
71
3rd year computer science student, graduates in May 2007, lost job today as software developer.
A+ Certified


Any jobs around Richmond, ky / lexington, ky area?
Resume available upon request.
 

TailsNZ

Member
Nov 27, 2004
136
0
71
I hope this isn't classed as Spam (I haven't posted it on any other boards, and I work for Lik-Sang myself). If you'd like to work for our import videogame store though:

"We are looking for experienced PHP/MySQL specialists, assuming key responsibilities in development and continual up time for web operations around our database driven e-commerce web site.

This is a full time or contract position (at least 1 year).

Requirements:

# Strong PHP background with years of experience
# Strong MySQL skills with years of experience
# Completed one or more ecommerce projects employing PHP/MySQL
# Linux/Apache/MySQL/PHP server experience
# Linux administration skills are an advantage
# Experience with CVS and PHP EDI is an advantage
# You are an expert with web technologies
# HTML is definitely required, DHTML/CSS/XHTML/XML is an advantage
# Able to take control of a project on your own


How to Apply for this Position

Please include the following documents with your application:

# Cover letter about yourself and your aims working in the advertised position.
# CV (Curriculum Vitae) / Resume in English language.
# Relevant documents showing your education, experience, certifications.
# Reference letters from previous employers (no translations required).

Please include the phrase Web Developer as part of your e-mail subject and send your application to jobs@lik-sang.com. Emails without certain phrases in the subject will be filtered by the email server in order to combat Spam."
 

cw42

Diamond Member
Jan 15, 2004
4,227
0
76
Hey hey. I'm an IT major in my Junior year, and planning on graduating in May '07. I am currently looking for a summer time job in NJ, or NYC.
 

statik213

Golden Member
Oct 31, 2004
1,654
0
0
I'm looking for work in the DC/VA/MD Area, recent college grad, major in CS and minor in math.
Strong skills in Java, PHP and C++.
PM me for a resume.
 

imported_KuJaX

Platinum Member
May 29, 2004
2,428
0
0
This is more of a "side" job for someone rather than a full time position.

My company is looking for a gifted graphics and multimedia designer. We are looking for someone that has some experience with creating graphics, Flash banners/movies and brochures to sell a product. Our website needs a little bit more "beauty" to it that really twists our viewers arm's to give us a call and learn more about our products. It is computer related, and we have an idea of what we need done, so we can discuss this via PM.

In the PM, please be sure to include some examples of your past work, even if you only do this for fun rather than as a career. Fun or Career based graphics and multimedia designer.... as long as you have the gift, we don't care! Shoot me over a PM for more details and with your past work. Thanks
 

MetalMat

Diamond Member
Jun 14, 2004
9,687
36
91
For anyone looking for a job out there.

Halliburton is hiring Openhole Wireline Operators in the Logging and Perforating PSL here in New Iberia, LA.

The work is physical, but there is a great opportunity to make some money with this job. The schedule is 8on/2off/7on/4off

When on, you are on call 24 hours a day. This is not a typical 8-5 office job and is often in the field. For more info give me an e-mail.
 

vital

Platinum Member
Sep 28, 2000
2,534
1
81
I'm going to be graduating with an IS/IT degree this May and would like an entry level position or internship in San Diego or Los Angeles, anything available?
 

OCedHrt

Senior member
Oct 4, 2002
613
0
0
Should be graduating with a BS in CS from UCD in June. Been exposed to all sorts of languages: C, C++, Java, Lisp, Python, Intel Assembly, etc... Generally I stick with C/C++ but I catch on pretty fast to new languages.

Any positions/internships available in CA? LA area preferred.
 

Steelerz37

Senior member
Feb 15, 2003
693
0
0
I am a Management Information Systems major in my first semester of my senior year. I will be graduating in December 2006, a semester early. I am looking for a job or internship for this summer that could possibly result in a full time position upon my graduation. I have instructional experience in C++, databases, systems analysis, and more. My work experience includes data processing at a small bank. Also I have worked for the local school district for the past 2 summers performing networking tasks, basic domain administration, desktop troubleshooting, etc.
 
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