Remove Budget Remove Learning Remove Mentoring Remove Resume
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Looking at This Year’s Successes as You Set Next Year’s Goals

All Things Admin

You worked with a budget. Did you learn any new skills? • Did you learn any new software or technologies? • Did you mentor or help another colleague achieve a goal? • Did you update your resume, professional portfolio, and other vital career documents? • But you don’t just show up to the airport and board a plane.

Goals 98
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On the Outside Looking In

Laughing all the Way to Work

A Job is Waiting to Happen to You Long gone are the days of scouring the newspaper want ads and pounding the pavement going from office to office submitting your resume. There are sites that are specifically for job hunters where you can submit your resume and a profile about yourself for any employer to see. First impressions count.

Temping 100
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What Are You Thankful For?

The Office Professionals Place

Some have lost jobs, didn’t get promotions or pay raises, or lost funding due to employer budget cuts. My advice is to grab a member and become a mentor or get mentored! Not only are you improving your skills and adding to your resume, you are making yourself more indispensable and an asset to your company or the next one.

IAAP 100
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Ep 242: Nicki Cave on Managing a Team of Assistants and Finding Happiness in Your Work

LEADERASSISTANT.COM

She mentors, trains, and coaches EA/AAs across the region. And they’re like, Hey, we’ve got this role that came up at the Boston Consulting Group, we found your resume that fell behind a filing cabinet as filing cabinets back then. While supporting J., And I was like, I said, No, I’m not interested. Some don’t.

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My Job Changed, Why Not My Title

Administrative Arts

As your boss learns what you can do, he starts adding on more duties. Still, many bosses are afraid you’ll break their budget if they reclassify your position. It would probably give you more room in your pay scale to grow, and it would also give your resume a bit more oomph when you decide to change jobs. The Job Changes.

Salary 40
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Answering Reader Mail: Making A Splash Without Changing Everything

Musings of a High-Level Executive Assistant

Just like new CEOs do, your first 6 months or year are really about learning about the company, your department, office politics, and how things work. Regardless of your age, seniority, or years of experience you will always find something new to learn. Be open to learning, be open to change, and be grateful, have fun, and be eager.

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Even More Questions Answered

Musings of a High-Level Executive Assistant

You will see that aside from typing, Word, and Excel, some of the bigger companies will test you on logic, grammar, listening, putting together a budget, creativity, and more. When I entered the workforce, my resume was already pretty lengthy so I didn't have to start from the very bottom. How can you make yourself easily found?