The Social Networking Series started out this past Saturday with a bang! We had 65 participants in attendance. Maria Whitworth did an excellent job presenting an overview of all the Social Networking sites available. We did video Maria's session for those that couldn't make it. Maria has generously agreed to make her presentation available via a PDF download. Do email Lissa at options@career-design.com if you would like the PDF of Maria' presentation. She'll send you the link.
The next presentation in the series is on Saturday, April 4th at 10 am. Dorothy Beach will be discussing Twitter indepth. This meeting is open to the public at no charge. Do RSVP to CDA Inc. if you are interested.
Monday, March 23, 2009
Thursday, March 12, 2009
Check out DMN article -- Coaches help jobless boomers work out frustrations, careers
Do check out the Dallas Morning News article Coaches help jobless boomers work out frustrations, careers in today's paper (03/12/09). Dr. Harkness is featured on the front page. http://www.dallasnews.com/sharedcontent/dws/dn/latestnews/stories/031209dnbusboomercoaches.3d78893.html#slcgm_comments_anchor
Labels:
Career,
Career Change,
Career Coach,
Career Design,
Helen Harkness,
Job,
Job Search
Thursday, March 5, 2009
Stay on a learning curve
Staying on a learning curve is absolutely essential in our fast paced, rapidly changing "future shock" world as Toffler predicted 40 years ago. However, Pogo, my favorite philosopher, reflects my current frustration: "Every time I find out where it's at, someone moves it!"
Stagnation today is deadly and prepares us only for the compost pile. The bottom line may be that we can't change the world problems, but we can alter our response to them. I maintain that we change when our pain is greater than our fear: C = P > F. We shift our thinking when we use our intuitive right brain and our organized left brain to gain new insights, awareness, judgment and techniques.
I spent years researching the Chaos/Complexity Theory to understand how to strengthen our career actions under pressures of change. Later, I branched into the rapidly growing worldwide field of Positive Psychology: The Science of Happiness. I am attending their first World Congress conference in Philadelphia in June (www.ippanetwork.org for more details). I am currently synthesizing and integrating these two growing concepts for a lecture on careers, Positive Psychology: Creative Cure for Careers in Chaos for the World Future Society in Chicago on July 17-19, 2009 (www.wfs.org for more details).
Special Notice: I am coordinating free career counseling for attendees. Any career counselor who volunteers two hours each day can receive free registration to the conference. Email options@career-design.com for details.
Stagnation today is deadly and prepares us only for the compost pile. The bottom line may be that we can't change the world problems, but we can alter our response to them. I maintain that we change when our pain is greater than our fear: C = P > F. We shift our thinking when we use our intuitive right brain and our organized left brain to gain new insights, awareness, judgment and techniques.
I spent years researching the Chaos/Complexity Theory to understand how to strengthen our career actions under pressures of change. Later, I branched into the rapidly growing worldwide field of Positive Psychology: The Science of Happiness. I am attending their first World Congress conference in Philadelphia in June (www.ippanetwork.org for more details). I am currently synthesizing and integrating these two growing concepts for a lecture on careers, Positive Psychology: Creative Cure for Careers in Chaos for the World Future Society in Chicago on July 17-19, 2009 (www.wfs.org for more details).
Special Notice: I am coordinating free career counseling for attendees. Any career counselor who volunteers two hours each day can receive free registration to the conference. Email options@career-design.com for details.
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