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Showing posts with label Winner. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Winner. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 29, 2013

Mel’s Whore Chili: Winner and the Sore Losers

So.

We have an Annual Chili Cook-Off here in the LinkUp office.  Usually, I don’t enter my chili.  I prefer to let my peeps enter their own chili, their favorite family recipes, hidden secret ingredients and all that; plus I want to spread the glory around if you know what I mean.  But when I heard each chili entry was going to be anonymous, I thought this was going to be MY year.  I did not want to win by only the SuckUp vote.  My chili was just known by its name:  Mel’s Whore Chili and the number 1.  Fairsy.

Just so you know, I make fun of all those cooking shows, from Rachel on down to that blonde guy who screams at his chefs.  The women in my family read recipe books like dime store novels, passing them around, and giggling over their discoveries.  I could eat Cheerios, turkey sandwiches on white bread, and meatloaf every day with a Diet Coke Chaser if it were up to me.  Kansas.

Still, I just knew I could win the chili contest.  Have you heard Billy’s Pretty Good at Drinking Beer song?  I am pretty good at eating chili.  How hard could making it be?

The entire office staff sampled, compared, and swirled chili around their mouths just like Bobby Flay would.  I was away from the office during the contest.  Truth: I was simply too nervous.  But…drumroll, I won.  A fair vote, I did not give anyone even a sly wink as in “Vote for the boss’s chili.”  I am above that.

The office was shocked when it was announced who the winning chef was—how did I have time to create this awarding winning chili?  Someone else must have made it for me, someone said.  Another said, “Did he buy it from a restaurant?”

I agreed to write down my recipe just to prove it.  So, here it is.

Mel’s Whore Chili

1. Go to Target

2. Buy 8 cans of chili

3. Only 2 can be the same brand

4. Pour in crockpot, stir

5. Heat on low for 4 hours.

This cooking thing is easier than I thought.  Methinks Naming the Recipe is the trick.  Mel’s Whore Chili, get it?

I kill me yet again.


View the original article here

Tuesday, June 12, 2012

11 Résumé ‘Truths’ That Will Brand You A Winner!

Funny thing about a résumé . . . no one has ever hired a résumé, but very few people can get hired without one. And in today’s challenging job market, where the typical “headhunter,” hiring manager and Human Resources professional is inundated daily with dozens, if not hundreds of résumés (I receive between 300 and 500 résumés a week!), it had better be a good one.

What defines a “good” résumé? It is one that gives the recipient what I refer to as “cause for pause,” one that catches the recipient’s attention within about 30 seconds and makes him or her continue reading it. If your résumé doesn’t meet this minimum standard, it’s likely it will either be quickly and completely eliminated or, at best, be added to the burgeoning stack of résumés already received, perhaps never to see the light of day again.

With this in mind, then, through years of professional experience and extensive research, I have come up with what I call the 11 “truths” that go into creating a good résumé, a job-winning résumé. If you will follow these “truths,” and incorporate them into your résumé, it will immediately brand you as a potential winner and move your candidacy forward!

RÉSUMÉ TRUTH #1 – It must be visually appealing.  

Plenty of “white space.”Use of bullet points to highlight quantifiable accomplishments and achievements.No long rambling paragraphs. I don’t care how good you are, long blocks of text simply will not be read and you will be eliminated from further consideration.Use Times New Roman or Arial type faces. Nothing smaller than 11 point. Careful use of bold face type and italics. (Just last week I received a resume from a chemist. The entire resume was in bold face italics. When everything is emphasized, nothing is emphasized except your lack of understanding of accepted business writing practices! Wouldn’t you agree that this very bullet point is becoming hard to read?)

RÉSUMÉ TRUTH #2 – A résumé is a “movie trailer,” not the entire movie!

Today people are busy and harried. No one has time to read a lengthy document. We are in a “Twitter” and text messaging world limited to 140 characters.

Mark Twain once said, “I didn’t have time to write a short letter so I wrote a lengthy one instead.” Mull that over for a moment.

Length? Two pages. No more!

RÉSUMÉ TRUTH #3 – No “Career Objective.”

But how will a potential employer know what kind of a job I want? The brutal truth is this: When companies are initially sifting through an inbox full of résumés, they don’t really care what you want. They only care what they want. What you want only becomes relevant when—and if!—you make it to the offer stage and they are then trying to woo you.

RÉSUMÉ TRUTH #4 – Work experience in Reverse Chronological order only.

You get hired when your experience is current and relevant. If you don’t do what a company needs you to do, you get hit with the “DELETE” key.

The “Functional Résumé is generally deleted. (And yes, hiring managers tell me the same thing.)

The “hybrid”? Maybe. If all of the other résumé “truths” are adhered to, the hybrid may pass the initial screen and you might move to the “maybe” folder.

RÉSUMÉ TRUTH #5 –  Include one or two sentences on what each employer does.

The readers of your résumé don’t have the time (or the patience) to “guess” what the companies you have worked for actually do. If, for example, they are looking for a sales manager with experience in industrial filtration, they want to know you have that experience.

Example:

National Filtration Systems, Inc.

Vice President of Sales and Marketing

What does this company do? Provide water filters for the home? Make filters for cigarettes? Neither! It is “A $60 million design build engineering firm of industrial filtration units for natural gas and oil.” By including that one sentence, you have just branded yourself as a potential candidate and made it easy for the person reviewing your résumé to say “yes” to your candidacy.

RÉSUMÉ TRUTH # 6 – Include numbers, numbers and more numbers—and throw in a few percentages for good measure!

Brand yourself a winner by using quantitative measurements to demonstrate results.

Example:

Quality Manager

Responsible for improving processes and reducing defects.Improved revenue by increasing production.

(Hit with the DELETE key!)

Versus:

Quality Manager

Reduced equipment failure rate by 89% in first year.Increased production by 15%, resulting in an annual revenue increase of $12.5 million.

(She got the job!)

RÉSUMÉ TRUTH #7Eliminate personal and family information

Example: “Excellent health, happily married with two children.”

Result: Résumé DELETED! What?! Why?!

As crazy as it may seem, this simple statement actually puts the company in an EEOC (Equal Employment Opportunity Commission) quandary. There have been situations where, for example, a single person was hired. Later the “married person with children” found out and the result—a lawsuit. “I was unfairly discriminated against because I am married and have a family“. The company just didn’t want to add my family and me to its group health insurance plan.”

Or, what if the hiring manager just got divorced? Happily married? Who needs that? DELETE! (Yes, it happens.)

RÉSUMÉ TRUTH #8 – When all else fails, tell the truth.

Never resort to a “liar, liar pants on fire” résumé.

In this brutal economy, many résumés are inflated (some estimates go as high as 40%). Companies are on the look-out. Today, background checks are extremely thorough. When (not if) you are found out, you will be eliminated from further consideration. If you have already been hired, chances are you will be fired.

RÉSUMÉ TRUTH #9 – Eliminate the “pyrotechnics” and other “razzle-dazzle.”

Unless you want to be branded as an amateur:

Don’t’ use yellow highlighting, colored words, background colors, etc.Don’t use colored paper.Don’t change fonts. Sparingly change type sizes. The main sections of your résumé can be in larger size, but not words within a sentence.

RÉSUMÉ TRUTH #10 – Eliminate “References Available Upon Request.”

It is a given that a pro will have them. Keep the résumé short and succinct.

RÉSUMÉ TRUTH #11 – To include or not include dates of graduation?

There are professionals who will adamantly tell you to leave dates of graduation out. Since we are dealing with “truths” here, the truth is there isn’t a right answer. You see, it has been found that 30% of people who don’t have a date of graduation on their résumé have left this information off because they never graduated! They only attended. Others leave it out because they are trying to disguise their age.

What I do know is this: the more quantifiable and relevant your accomplishments and achievements, the far less important this whole issue becomes.

Adhere to these “truths” when you craft your résumé and you definitely will brand yourself as a winner, someone who deserves an interview.

Author:

Skip Freeman is the author of “Headhunter” Hiring Secrets: The Rules of the Hiring Game Have Changed . . . Forever! and is the President and Chief Executive Officer of The HTW Group (Hire to Win), an Atlanta, GA, Metropolitan Area Executive Search Firm. Specializing in the placement of sales, engineering, manufacturing and R&D professionals, he has developed powerful techniques that help companies hire the best and help the best get hired.


View the original article here

Wednesday, October 5, 2011

Mel’s Whore Chili: Winner and the Sore Losers

So.

We have an Annual Chili Cook-Off here in the LinkUp office.  Usually, I don’t enter my chili.  I prefer to let my peeps enter their own chili, their favorite family recipes, hidden secret ingredients and all that; plus I want to spread the glory around if you know what I mean.  But when I heard each chili entry was going to be anonymous, I thought this was going to be MY year.  I did not want to win by only the SuckUp vote.  My chili was just known by its name:  Mel’s Whore Chili and the number 1.  Fairsy.

Just so you know, I make fun of all those cooking shows, from Rachel on down to that blonde guy who screams at his chefs.  The women in my family read recipe books like dime store novels, passing them around, and giggling over their discoveries.  I could eat Cheerios, turkey sandwiches on white bread, and meatloaf every day with a Diet Coke Chaser if it were up to me.  Kansas.

Still, I just knew I could win the chili contest.  Have you heard Billy’s Pretty Good at Drinking Beer song?  I am pretty good at eating chili.  How hard could making it be?

The entire office staff sampled, compared, and swirled chili around their mouths just like Bobby Flay would.  I was away from the office during the contest.  Truth: I was simply too nervous.  But…drumroll, I won.  A fair vote, I did not give anyone even a sly wink as in “Vote for the boss’s chili.”  I am above that.

The office was shocked when it was announced who the winning chef was—how did I have time to create this awarding winning chili?  Someone else must have made it for me, someone said.  Another said, “Did he buy it from a restaurant?”

I agreed to write down my recipe just to prove it.  So, here it is.

Mel’s Whore Chili

1. Go to Target

2. Buy 8 cans of chili

3. Only 2 can be the same brand

4. Pour in crockpot, stir

5. Heat on low for 4 hours.

This cooking thing is easier than I thought.  Methinks Naming the Recipe is the trick.  Mel’s Whore Chili, get it?

I kill me yet again.


View the original article here

Sunday, August 14, 2011

170 Hackers. 24 Hours. 1 winner.

August 3rd, 2011

On Friday night, LinkedIn’s Mountain View cafeteria was filled to capacity with over 170 interns both from leading tech companies throughout the Bay Area and leading schools (Berkeley, Stanford,  Waterloo, Upenn, and MIT among others). As droves of college students checked in, the energy in the room was focused on hacking right from the start.

The interns were gathered for LinkedIn’s first open Intern Hackday — a chance to win a MacBook Air, an iPad or Apple gift card — but more importantly, a chance to earn permanent bragging rights among their peers. The anticipation mounted as teams were formed, monitors plugged in and the genesis of potential ideas discussed.

A little after 7pm, Hackday guru Adam Nash opened the flood gates unleashing the fervor of typing fingers, murmured conversations and illegible chicken scratch on whiteboards. My role at this event was to handle logistics, quickly resolving any issues that came up: food shortage, power outage, computers overheating, interns overheating, etc.

We stocked the fridge with an unhealthy supply of energy drinks like Red Bull, Monster, and Rockstar, but it definitely came in handy as interns refueled continuously. We also made sure we had a never-ending supply of food, including snacks like ice cream, chips of all kinds, candy, Chicago deep-dish pizzas, a 2am delivery of Chinese food, breakfast burritos, tacos, and more. Many interns escaped to the lounge area to relax, an oasis complete with over-sized beanbags, Foosball and a ping pong table.

Saturday at noon marked the end of hacking and the beginning of preliminary judging. 45 projects were presented where we saw 3D games, music apps, UI frameworks, augmented reality, AI, location apps, IDE extensions, p2p file sharing and even a 20 page report. We picked 15 finalists whose 24 hour hacks were judged by James Gosling (creator of the Java programming language), Omar Hamoui (founder of AdMob), and Kevin Scott (LinkedIn’s VP of Engineering).

The final judging was lively as LinkedIn’s own Ryan Seacrest, Adam Nash, attempted to keep the interns’ heavy eyelids from closing. After 2 hours of presentations, the judges collaborated and announced the winners:

3rd place went to beam.it: peer-to-peer file transfer in the browser2nd place to LinkedOut: use LinkedIn data to predict the probability of someone moving to a certain company and the effect this would have on their network1st place went to Rocks: a real-time, 3d, multiplayer, in-browser game similar to capture the flag with some impressive feats of WebGL and hardware acceleration

As I was pulling out of Stierlin Court almost 35 hours later, the winning team was walking away, a tired pride hung over their shoulders, and I offered them a ride to the nearby train station. Their eyes occasionally closed on the hour-long car ride but when they did talk code, I was lost.

One thing I did hear: “This hackday was awesome.” Next Play.

We also put together a timeline of tweets and relevant photographs that captured the highlights of those 24 hours. Click through the picture below for a closer look.  

Tags: , , , , ,

http://blog.linkedin.com/2011/08/03/linkedin-open-hackday/trackback/


View the original article here

Sunday, August 7, 2011

170 Hackers. 24 Hours. 1 winner.

August 3rd, 2011

On Friday night, LinkedIn’s Mountain View cafeteria was filled to capacity with over 170 interns both from leading tech companies throughout the Bay Area and leading schools (Berkeley, Stanford,  Waterloo, Upenn, and MIT among others). As droves of college students checked in, the energy in the room was focused on hacking right from the start.

The interns were gathered for LinkedIn’s first open Intern Hackday — a chance to win a MacBook Air, an iPad or Apple gift card — but more importantly, a chance to earn permanent bragging rights among their peers. The anticipation mounted as teams were formed, monitors plugged in and the genesis of potential ideas discussed.

A little after 7pm, Hackday guru Adam Nash opened the flood gates unleashing the fervor of typing fingers, murmured conversations and illegible chicken scratch on whiteboards. My role at this event was to handle logistics, quickly resolving any issues that came up: food shortage, power outage, computers overheating, interns overheating, etc.

We stocked the fridge with an unhealthy supply of energy drinks like Red Bull, Monster, and Rockstar, but it definitely came in handy as interns refueled continuously. We also made sure we had a never-ending supply of food, including snacks like ice cream, chips of all kinds, candy, Chicago deep-dish pizzas, a 2am delivery of Chinese food, breakfast burritos, tacos, and more. Many interns escaped to the lounge area to relax, an oasis complete with over-sized beanbags, Foosball and a ping pong table.

Saturday at noon marked the end of hacking and the beginning of preliminary judging. 45 projects were presented where we saw 3D games, music apps, UI frameworks, augmented reality, AI, location apps, IDE extensions, p2p file sharing and even a 20 page report. We picked 15 finalists whose 24 hour hacks were judged by James Gosling (creator of the Java programming language), Omar Hamoui (founder of AdMob), and Kevin Scott (LinkedIn’s VP of Engineering).

The final judging was lively as LinkedIn’s own Ryan Seacrest, Adam Nash, attempted to keep the interns’ heavy eyelids from closing. After 2 hours of presentations, the judges collaborated and announced the winners:

3rd place went to beam.it: peer-to-peer file transfer in the browser2nd place to LinkedOut: use LinkedIn data to predict the probability of someone moving to a certain company and the effect this would have on their network1st place went to Rocks: a real-time, 3d, multiplayer, in-browser game similar to capture the flag with some impressive feats of WebGL and hardware acceleration

As I was pulling out of Stierlin Court almost 35 hours later, the winning team was walking away, a tired pride hung over their shoulders, and I offered them a ride to the nearby train station. Their eyes occasionally closed on the hour-long car ride but when they did talk code, I was lost.

One thing I did hear: “This hackday was awesome.” Next Play.

We also put together a timeline of tweets and relevant photographs that captured the highlights of those 24 hours. Click through the picture below for a closer look.  

Tags: , , , , ,

http://blog.linkedin.com/2011/08/03/linkedin-open-hackday/trackback/


View the original article here

Saturday, April 23, 2011

Winner Of “Best Elevator Pitch Contest” Chosen By PwC

Hundreds of college students submitted videos for the chance to win a $5,000 prize in the Best Elevator Pitch Contest hosted by PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC)—a part of Personal Brand Week 2.0—but only one could win.

Students were asked to submit 30-second videos pitching what makes them stand out to potential employers, and over a six-week period, family, friends and supporters cast their votes for the best video. The 10 most popular clips advanced to the finals, where they were judged by a committee of PwC recruiters and a Generation Y workplace expert in four categories: body language and professional appearance; the ability to articulate unique skills; future aspirations; and a strong close.

Paula Loop, U.S. and Global Talent Leader with PwC, reminds job seekers and students how important an elevator pitch is to their professional brand. “A good elevator pitch is an essential part of one’s personal brand. It helps make the right first impression and succinctly communicates your value as a professional,” said Loop. We were impressed with all of the submissions we received. The effort and creativity put forth by students made it difficult to choose a winner.”

A free eBook download of the job advice from Personal Brand Week 2.0, which included topics such as promoting your online brand, building a strong network and what recruiters look for in candidates, is available on the PwC Facebook page and career site.

What did you think of the winning video for the contest? Would you have done anything differently?

Author:

Heather R. Huhman is a career expert, experienced hiring manager, and founder & president of Come Recommended, a content marketing consultancy for organizations with products that target job seekers and/or employers. She is also the author of #ENTRYLEVELtweet: Taking Your Career from Classroom to Cubicle (2010) and writes career and recruiting advice for numerous outlets.

Related posts: Perfect Your Elevator Pitch And Win $5,000 Tweet You’re stuck in an elevator with the CEO of...Personal Branding Interview: Paula Loop for Personal Branding Week 2.0 at PwC Tweet Today, I spoke to Paula Loop, who is the...HOW TO: Determine and Sell Your Differentiation Tweet Employers and clients are looking for ways in which...

View the original article here

Friday, March 25, 2011

Job Hunters: Are You A Winner With Your Words?

Winner

In three words I can sum up everything I've learned about life: it goes on. ~ Robert Frost

I like love words. Words build up. Words encourage. Words are powerful. Words bolster, motivate, inspire, and support. On the flip side, words tear down, discourage, destroy, belittle, devastate. Words can get you fired. Words can get you hired. Words comfort, console, compel, and convince. Words matter.

As a job hunter, I would invite you to carefully consider each and every word you use to speak about yourself and your brand, be it in a phone call, a text, a tweet, an e-mail or a face-to-face conversation. The words you choose are a direct reflection of the brand you represent as a job candidate, colleague, leader, partner, client, and friend.

Listed below are '11 words for 2011' conversations. Which, if any, of these words might you select for interactions with recruiters, hiring managers, network connections or your neighbor next door.

1. Imagine

2. No excuses

3. You deserve

4. You decide

5. I get it

6. Uncompromising integrity

7. Believe in better

8. Real-time

9. The simple truth

10. Let's get to work

11. If you remember one thing

If you would like to discover additional words to use in 2011, you can read more from Dr. Frank Luntz, the author of Win: The Principles That Take Your Business From Ordinary to Extraordinary.

Think twice before you speak, because your words and influence will plant the seed of either success or failure in the mind of another. #NapoleonHill


View the original article here

Monday, March 7, 2011

Job Hunters: Are You A Winner With Your Words?

Winner

In three words I can sum up everything I've learned about life: it goes on. ~ Robert Frost

I like love words. Words build up. Words encourage. Words are powerful. Words bolster, motivate, inspire, and support. On the flip side, words tear down, discourage, destroy, belittle, devastate. Words can get you fired. Words can get you hired. Words comfort, console, compel, and convince. Words matter.

As a job hunter, I would invite you to carefully consider each and every word you use to speak about yourself and your brand, be it in a phone call, a text, a tweet, an e-mail or a face-to-face conversation. The words you choose are a direct reflection of the brand you represent as a job candidate, colleague, leader, partner, client, and friend.

Listed below are '11 words for 2011' conversations. Which, if any, of these words might you select for interactions with recruiters, hiring managers, network connections or your neighbor next door.

1. Imagine

2. No excuses

3. You deserve

4. You decide

5. I get it

6. Uncompromising integrity

7. Believe in better

8. Real-time

9. The simple truth

10. Let's get to work

11. If you remember one thing

If you would like to discover additional words to use in 2011, you can read more from Dr. Frank Luntz, the author of Win: The Principles That Take Your Business From Ordinary to Extraordinary.

Think twice before you speak, because your words and influence will plant the seed of either success or failure in the mind of another. #NapoleonHill


View the original article here