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Second careers


Even someone who leaves the military after a full 30 years of service (or more) has plenty of time left to pursue a second career. Between the job experience and education opportunities the military offers, employers are often eager to land a former service member. We’re always talking to small-business owners, corporate headhunters and other civilian professionals to keep our finger on the pulse of what they want in a former service member. Find out more about career opportunities that might be right for you here.
  • Panel: Is vets transition program working?
    Two decades after the creation of a transition assistance program for separating service members, the House Armed Services Committee is demanding answers about whether taking the classes really helps...
    Posted Monday Jul 5, 2010 12:47:34 EDT
  • It’s time to get your EDGE
    Starting in February, look for our brand-new magazine devoted exclusively to your professional and educational success: Military Times EDGE. In the meantime, check out our new Web site, Posted Friday Jan 9, 2009 11:51:38 EST
  • How to infiltrate the defense industry
    You may be getting out of the military, but career experts say smart job seekers won't stray far.
    Posted Thursday Sep 25, 2008 12:25:45 EDT
  • 7 reasons to try a staffing agency
    Take it from Agapito "Gapo" Soto: Temp jobs aren't boring — at least none of his have been.
    Posted Thursday Sep 25, 2008 12:21:02 EDT
  • Nuclear industry pays well — and it’s growing
    Americans are becoming more accepting of nuclear energy, and as the industry grows, it's expected to create more high-paying jobs that help reduce global warming.
    Posted Thursday Sep 25, 2008 12:14:39 EDT
  • 7 key I.T. certifications
    A number of battle-tested I.T. credentials remain in high demand, the experts say.
    Posted Tuesday Aug 26, 2008 13:07:41 EDT
  • The skills employers really want
    Civilian companies that employ people in information technology are placing increased emphasis on what hiring managers call "soft skills," the experts said.
    Posted Tuesday Aug 26, 2008 13:07:32 EDT
  • How to recoup your exam costs
    Service members or their dependents eligible for Veterans Affairs benefits under the Montgomery GI Bill, Reserve...
    Posted Tuesday Aug 26, 2008 13:07:24 EDT
  • Launch your business
    One thing Ace Sarich learned during his military career was that operations were a lot easier when troops and locals could speak each others' languages.
    Posted Tuesday Aug 26, 2008 10:46:01 EDT
  • Get I.T. certified
    Maintaining up-to-date information technology certifications — especially advanced credentials — is the best way to show civilian employers you're keeping up with progress in this...
    Posted Tuesday Aug 26, 2008 10:45:53 EDT
  • Travel, make big bucks in health care
    Carol Pennington's sense of adventure led her to the Army Reserve and Army Nurse Corps.
    Posted Tuesday Aug 26, 2008 10:45:39 EDT
  • The tie’s stranglehold is broken
    For many years, Workbytes has cinched a colorful swath of useless material around our neck every morning before we come to the office, at which time we promptly spill coffee on it.
    Posted Monday Aug 4, 2008 13:46:24 EDT
  • Go where the jobs are growing
    Way too many people walk around grumbling, "There are no jobs," when it isn't necessarily so.
    Posted Monday Aug 4, 2008 13:46:04 EDT
  • Business by the truckload
    It's not that Americans don't like to keep it clean — they just may be too busy to do so. That's why housekeeping and other residential clean-up franchises are booming.
    Posted Monday Aug 4, 2008 13:15:18 EDT
  • Virtual job fairs expand search options
    With the rising cost of travel and a shortage of time many of us experience trying to juggle busy lives, it can be tough attending a lot of job fairs or visiting prospective employers when looking...
    Posted Monday Aug 4, 2008 10:56:53 EDT
  • Study: China trade deficit cost Oklahoma jobs
    OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) — Oklahoma lost more than 15,000 jobs between 2001 and 2007 because of the U.S. trade deficit with China, a new study shows.
    Posted Monday Aug 4, 2008 10:05:34 EDT
  • Résumé revolution
    Whether you're starting from scratch or updating a résumé you've used in the past, you'll find there are as many ways to build a résumé as there are people looking for jobs. We...
    Posted Monday Jul 28, 2008 14:31:36 EDT
  • Game company’s business is a party
    Thank an Austin, Texas-based company for what may be the coolest new business opportunity ever to hit the streets.
    Posted Monday Jul 28, 2008 14:31:27 EDT
  • These 10 job skills will enhance any résumé
    The Virginia Workforce Network encourages job-hunters to emphasize the following transferable job skills on their résumés. The trick is succinctly describing specific experiences in which...
    Posted Monday Jul 28, 2008 14:31:17 EDT
  • Show your work in an online portfolio
    For jobs that require you to show samples of past work — artists and journalists in particular — it's a smart idea to create an online portfolio so that when an employer finds your...
    Posted Monday Jul 28, 2008 14:31:08 EDT
  • New-grad hiring on the rise
    In a rush to replace baby boomers who are set to retire, employers have decided to increase their ranks of employees from newly minted college graduates.
    Posted Wednesday Jul 2, 2008 16:55:47 EDT
  • Health care job market unfazed by economy
    In an economy that has shed thousands of jobs in the past year, health care has been one of the few bright spots.
    Posted Wednesday Jul 2, 2008 16:53:18 EDT
  • 8 interview questions to ask yourself
    What do they want to hear? The "they" is the prospective employer, and the question is the wrong one to pose.
    Posted Wednesday Jul 2, 2008 16:52:49 EDT
  • Essential advice for interview success
    Interviews involve more than answering questions. Getting the job means being prepared, understanding what you have to offer and providing brief, concise answers.
    Posted Wednesday Jul 2, 2008 16:52:07 EDT
  • The right setting is crucial to your home office
    You've no doubt heard the story of some successful business that started in the owner's basement or garage.
    Posted Wednesday Jul 2, 2008 16:51:30 EDT
  • Environmental impact
    Wesley Henderson didn't know much about the environment while serving as a combat engineer during operations Desert Shield and Desert Storm.
    Posted Wednesday Jul 2, 2008 16:49:03 EDT
  • More jobs in fitness
    If you want to become a personal trainer, but you don't like the idea of managing a business, then personal training is a good springboard for other fitness careers, too, said Fabio Comana, exercise...
    Posted Wednesday Jul 2, 2008 16:42:12 EDT
  • The inside track
    Clint Phillips gets paid to do what he loves — working out.
    Posted Wednesday Jul 2, 2008 16:38:41 EDT
  • Be a teacher by fall
    It happens every summer: School districts race to recruit new teachers for tough-to-fill positions, hoping to start the school year with a full faculty roster.
    Posted Wednesday Jul 2, 2008 16:33:55 EDT
  • Essential advice for interview success
    Interviews involve more than answering questions. Getting the job means being prepared, understanding what you have to offer and providing brief, concise answers.
    Posted Thursday Jun 12, 2008 13:11:58 EDT
  • Instructors sought to fill math, science teaching void
    A pilot program in greater Philadelphia aims to serve as the model for swiftly certifying military instructors to be "STEM"-discipline teachers in the region's public schools.
    Posted Thursday Jun 12, 2008 13:07:39 EDT
  • Military medical centers need civilian caregivers
    MERRITT ISLAND, Fla. — When the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq started, Jim Barfield and his partners saw an opportunity.
    Posted Thursday Jun 12, 2008 13:07:18 EDT
  • Reach for the skyscrapers
    Texas Army National Guard Lt. Col. Mary Hart manages civilian construction projects starting at the conceptual phase — between deployments, anyway.
    Posted Thursday Jun 12, 2008 13:07:07 EDT
  • 5 construction careers
    Maybe you've never overseen a construction site or installed a communications network in an office building.
    Posted Thursday Jun 12, 2008 12:58:40 EDT
  • Join federal law enforcement’s elite
    You need at least a bachelor's degree these days to compete for prized positions in federal law enforcement — to investigate environmental crimes, examine forensic evidence or detect high-tech...
    Posted Monday Mar 31, 2008 11:26:43 EDT
  • 5 high-paying jobs — no degree required
    While a college degree is beneficial, not everyone is driven to pursue one.
    Posted Monday Mar 31, 2008 11:26:33 EDT
  • The ‘mechanics’ of opening a business
    The auto business is booming despite rising gas prices.
    Posted Monday Mar 31, 2008 11:26:26 EDT
  • A job pitch with punch
    Eric Franco concedes that he's a lucky guy, but it wasn't luck that landed him the best civilian job he's ever had. An Iraq war veteran and staff sergeant in the California Army National Guard,...
    Posted Monday Mar 31, 2008 11:26:16 EDT
  • Beat anti-military bias with these replies to ‘loaded’ questions
    You know all too well the value of your military service. You've spent years getting high-tech training and developing leadership, problem-solving and project-management skills. You're reliable,...
    Posted Monday Mar 31, 2008 11:26:10 EDT
  • Inside information
    It's true that you never get a second chance to make a first impression — especially when you're looking for a job.
    Posted Monday Mar 31, 2008 11:25:59 EDT
  • Beef up your career — open a health club
    One of the best decisions Jackie Siochi ever made, she says, was joining the Air Force in 1989. Another was opening a Snap Fitness franchise in the Seattle...
    Posted Thursday Feb 7, 2008 14:46:11 EST
  • Career catalog contains everything you need
    A career catalog is your one-stop shop for everything a prospective civilian employer could ask for, says Virginia Employment Commission veterans representative Dave Silcox, a former Marine and...
    Posted Tuesday Feb 5, 2008 11:18:53 EST
  • Hungry for success
    The Original SoupMan franchise started as a one-man, walk-up soup counter, Soup Kitchen International, in Manhattan.
    Posted Monday Feb 4, 2008 12:17:39 EST
  • 2008 trend: Employers race to scoop up talent
    With the new year come new trends in hiring. From a quicker interview process, to video résumés, to plump perks, experts say getting hired in 2008 could be a smooth ride.
    Posted Monday Feb 4, 2008 12:17:25 EST
  • Smart video résumés
    More employers are willing to watch video résumés these days, so if you're brave enough to go out on a limb and give the new résumé genre a shot, it could make the difference in...
    Posted Monday Feb 4, 2008 12:17:11 EST
  • Customs and Border Protection wants to hire military
    U.S. Customs and Border Protection is recruiting for 11,000 jobs that need to be filled by the end of this fiscal year, and it's focusing heavily on transitioning service members.
    Posted Wednesday Jan 30, 2008 16:13:58 EST
  • Sing your praises on more pages
    It's the biggest workplace debate since Coke versus Pepsi in the vending machines — whether to limit your glowing résumé to one page.
    Posted Thursday Jan 10, 2008 16:57:50 EST
  • 5 human resources jobs
    When they're not helping workers understand complicated health insurance choices, human resources professionals provide employee development opportunities, recruit new workers and help set wages.
    Posted Thursday Jan 10, 2008 15:56:20 EST
  • Jobs expected to boom over the next decade
    Ever wish you had a crystal ball to reveal what your work life will be like after the military?
    Posted Tuesday Jan 8, 2008 13:06:45 EST
  • Superior rigs, more time home give trucking mass appeal
    Trucking. It's a term that evokes the image of a massive piece of machinery with a guy at the helm. But that misses the nuances. Trucking is a job. It's a career. And it's a lifestyle.
    Posted Friday Jan 4, 2008 15:55:15 EST
  • Be a standout candidate
    Landing a job is not just about your credentials and experience. Sometimes it's the little things that stand out and make you a desirable candidate.
    Posted Thursday Nov 1, 2007 12:39:45 EDT
  • Watch out for sneaky reference-checkers
    Looking for a job? Then be on the lookout for a trend in the hiring world — reference interrogation. Some companies are calling references listed on résumés, and instead of asking...
    Posted Thursday Nov 1, 2007 12:39:37 EDT
  • Define your skills in civilian terms
    If you're among the many young service members returning home to start new jobs and careers, you have tons to offer the civilian work force. The hard part will be explaining that to the nonmilitary...
    Posted Thursday Nov 1, 2007 12:39:25 EDT
  • Tricks for remembering names
    Remembering someone's name is an important aspect of starting your career. This skill will allow you to network within a company.
    Posted Thursday Nov 1, 2007 12:39:09 EDT
  • Recon your new job
    How much time and energy do you put into finding out what it's really like to work at a company before you head to an interview? If it's "not much," be careful.
    Posted Thursday Nov 1, 2007 12:38:57 EDT
  • Interview clincher comes in many guises
    There are plenty of unknowns when it comes to looking for a second career. But if you plan on working anywhere, there's at least one certainty in the future — a one-on-one conversation with a...
    Posted Thursday Nov 1, 2007 12:38:49 EDT
  • Listen up, or the boss will notice
    In the corporate world, proper listening is a vital skill. You may be sending your coworkers a bad message if you have a hard time listening. Try these tips for truly hearing what people have to say:
    Posted Thursday Nov 1, 2007 12:38:41 EDT
  • How to earn top pay in nursing
    Lt. Cmdr. Pamela Herbig enjoys her job in the Navy Nurse Corps, but she continually prepares for a career outside of the military.
    Posted Thursday Nov 1, 2007 12:38:32 EDT
  • Social networking can lead to work
    Jeff Dwoskin, an executive for marketing firm ePrize in Pleasant Ridge, Mich., uses the online social network Facebook mostly to connect with friends.
    Posted Thursday Nov 1, 2007 12:38:23 EDT
  • Labor shortage years in the making
    NEW ORLEANS (AP) — About the time Louisiana needs plenty of workers — especially skilled craftsman to rebuild from hurricanes Katrina and Rita — there's a labor shortage looming...
    Posted Monday Oct 29, 2007 15:15:12 EDT
  • Y? Because recruiters want a certain generation
    "BTW. Im runnin late. Will still have ur report by 10. Thnx."
    Posted Monday Oct 29, 2007 15:14:51 EDT
  • Boat builders try to keep art afloat
    EAST BOOTHBAY, Maine — For four centuries Mainers have turned trees into boats, creating an industry that epitomizes the state's hard-working, sea-faring sense of itself. But now Maine has a...
    Posted Monday Oct 29, 2007 15:11:16 EDT
  • East to West, Americans are feeling under greater stress
    Stress is up everywhere in the nation.
    Posted Monday Oct 29, 2007 15:10:25 EDT
  • Projecting a shortage, engineers step up recruiting efforts
    Engineers, needed to rebuild the nation's roads, bridges and sewers, could be hard to find unless more students start going into the field.
    Posted Monday Oct 29, 2007 15:09:53 EDT
  • Top 10 charities
    Forbes magazine lists the largest U.S. charities. In 2006, Forbes named the following top 10 in total revenue.
    Posted Monday Oct 29, 2007 15:08:39 EDT
  • Top 10 occupations
    Top 10 occupations within advocacy, grantmaking and civic organizations.
    Posted Monday Oct 29, 2007 15:07:52 EDT
  • Not a company — a cause
    Carlos Maldonado loves his job, and he loves living in Jacksonville, Fla.
    Posted Monday Oct 29, 2007 15:07:35 EDT
  • Women in uniform: Should you stay or should you go?
    Should I stay or should I go?
    Posted Monday Sep 24, 2007 15:39:15 EDT
  • Veterans wanted to fill skills gap
    Blaine Williams went back to his farming hometown of Ada, Minn., in 1992 after nearly nine years in the Army. He'd been a vehicle mechanic and done a little welding. But the non-farm job scene in Ada...
    Posted Monday Aug 27, 2007 10:49:07 EDT
  • Your future starts at our career fair
    Military Times joins forces with CareerBuilder.com in September to bring our readers together with employers on the lookout for military talent.
    Posted Monday Aug 27, 2007 10:48:50 EDT
  • Turning to others for advice
    Building a company can be lonely work. One way to reduce your isolation and gain a wealth of knowledge is by forming an advisory committee. I've had advisory committees for two of the companies I've...
    Posted Monday Aug 27, 2007 10:48:27 EDT
  • High-tech finds home in new New Orleans
    NEW ORLEANS — When Nicolas Perkin was brainstorming his new online trading company last year, he considered launching in New York or San Francisco.
    Posted Monday Aug 27, 2007 10:48:04 EDT
  • Create a great workplace
    David Jaffe, chief operations officer at Pulse 220, a Southfield, Mich., company that sells so-called "experiences" to its customers, knows a thing or two about building a great company culture. Here...
    Posted Wednesday Jul 25, 2007 14:06:41 EDT
  • Women: Dress for success and still stand out
    The interview suit may still be de rigueur in certain industries, but what is office — and interview — appropriate "has relaxed considerably over the past 10 years," says Lucky fashion...
    Posted Wednesday Jul 25, 2007 14:06:24 EDT
  • Microchips implanted in humans: High-tech helpers, or Big Brother surveillance tools?
    CityWatcher.com, a provider of surveillance equipment, attracted little notice itself — until a year ago, when two of its employees had glass-encapsulated microchips with miniature antennas...
    Posted Wednesday Jul 25, 2007 14:05:53 EDT
  • Minimum wage increase to boost up some of the nation’s poorest workers
    WASHINGTON (AP) — Fast-food waitress Fawn Townsend of Raleigh, N.C., knows exactly what she is going to do if her salary goes up with Tuesday's increase in the federal minimum wage: start...
    Posted Wednesday Jul 25, 2007 14:03:05 EDT
  • Greenwood couple fulfills 36-year-old dream by joining Peace Corps
    GREENWOOD, S.C. (AP) — In February of 2005, Virginia and Mark Pulver embarked on a 27-month adventure when they joined the Peace Corps and went to the Ukraine.
    Posted Monday Jul 23, 2007 14:02:34 EDT
  • Cafes take the place of offices
    Mark Yurich and Ralph Dor-Ghali, who work in sales at Sysco Food Services, took over a corner of Panera Bread in Troy, Mich., near Detroit, one recent day.
    Posted Monday Jul 23, 2007 14:01:01 EDT
  • Fuel your bus for maximum performance
    Workbytes wishes Jon Gordon would hurry up and get here.
    Posted Friday Jul 20, 2007 16:58:40 EDT
  • Hot field of accounting demands right training, skills
    You probably won't be seeing "CSI: Accountants" on television anytime soon. Still, increased federal regulations and the rise of forensic accounting are helping to transform the once stereotypically...
    Posted Friday Jul 20, 2007 16:58:25 EDT
  • Surviving is all about managing cash flow
    Every entrepreneur I know wants to make more money.
    Posted Friday Jul 20, 2007 16:57:41 EDT
  • To get a job, focus on networking
    When Jason Alba was laid off from his management position in information technology, he wasn't too worried. After all, he had great skills that were in demand and an MBA, and people seemed to like...
    Posted Friday Jul 20, 2007 16:57:24 EDT
  • Web sites, groups, legislation aim to counter bullying bosses
    I first wrote about bullying bosses in 1996 when I interviewed Harvey Hornstein, author of "Brutal Bosses." He said an estimated 90 percent of the nation's work force suffers abuse by a boss at some...
    Posted Friday Jul 20, 2007 16:57:06 EDT
  • Eastman Chemical to train soldiers to take civilian jobs
    KINGSPORT, Tenn. — Eastman Chemical Co. has joined a program that trains soldiers for civilian jobs, a move company officials say will result in about 10 percent of the 150 to 200 chemical...
    Posted Monday Jul 16, 2007 16:56:12 EDT
  • Release your inner networker
    Somewhere between the playground and the conference room, we forgot how to network.
    Posted Monday Jul 16, 2007 16:55:52 EDT
  • Choose wisely in job video
    Who knew that "Legally Blonde" would be a forward-thinking movie when it came to job-hunting — and for more than just "what not to do"?
    Posted Friday Jul 13, 2007 11:38:07 EDT
  • Returning job-seekers find a different world
    Jeanni Dennis quickly learned the job-search process is a lot different now than when she applied for an administrative assistant position four years ago.
    Posted Friday Jul 13, 2007 11:32:25 EDT
  • Middle managers deserve more respect
    In the television show "The Office" and the comic strip "Dilbert," the middle manager is often portrayed as a complete jackass, someone who is continually rewarded for being small-minded,...
    Posted Friday Jul 13, 2007 11:31:27 EDT
  • Improve selling skills step by step
    Question: I have currently been asked to take on responsibilities from the sales department as part of my new title. I never felt comfortable selling anything, and I'm not really sure that selling is...
    Posted Friday Jul 13, 2007 11:30:24 EDT
  • Reality star recruits military apprentice
    You could learn business from the guy who learned from "The Donald."
    Posted Thursday Jul 12, 2007 19:25:10 EDT
  • Good luck is hard work, face to face
    Claudia's last day at her job of 10 years was on a Friday, as most last days are.
    Posted Tuesday Jul 10, 2007 19:23:24 EDT
  • Minority workers still fight misconceptions
    Ken Arroyo Roldan says that there is a dearth of diversity at the senior levels in American companies today, and executive search firms share much of the blame for that fact.
    Posted Tuesday Jul 10, 2007 19:23:00 EDT
  • A patented plan for protecting your ideas
    First of all, CitiKitty was Workbytes' idea.
    Posted Tuesday Jul 10, 2007 19:22:40 EDT
  • Home entrepreneurs rent virtual offices
    Deanna Anderson's business card says her company is located in Suite 300 of an office building on 44th Street in Phoenix. But on most days, you'll find the 27-year-old entrepreneur working 20 miles...
    Posted Monday Jul 9, 2007 19:23:41 EDT
  • Placement service helps spouses find work
    In early January, Sara Headrick met with a consultant at Adecco, a company that helps employers find the right people for their temporary or permanent positions.
    Posted Monday Jul 9, 2007 19:21:33 EDT
  • Does combat experience belong on your résumé?
    The best résumés are specific. They give more than a general idea of your background.
    Posted Tuesday Jul 3, 2007 19:20:30 EDT
  • Cold storage is a hot prospect
    DARMSTADT, Germany — Four years after its Indianapolis founding, BioStorage Technologies has opened its first European office, raised $8.3 million among investors and aims to reach $30 million...
    Posted Thursday Jun 28, 2007 20:48:32 EDT
  • Companies adapt as workers retire
    At age 66, Clayton Brown recently found himself on a Royal Caribbean cruise ship in Alaska, but he wasn't there for the shuffleboard.
    Posted Thursday Jun 28, 2007 20:48:20 EDT
  • Forget checks: Employers turn to paycards
    For 71 percent of America's workers, payday means an automatic direct deposit into a bank account.
    Posted Thursday Jun 28, 2007 20:47:54 EDT
  • No job for the faint-hearted
    Tired of sitting in a cubicle punching numbers and pushing papers? Imagine searching for whale feces or diving into the waste lagoon at a pig farm.
    Posted Thursday Jun 28, 2007 19:24:15 EDT
  • Blogging about work can cause trouble
    It's estimated that there are more than 8 million blogs today, with people writing about everything from making homemade wine to top vacation spots to their latest love affair. And, of course,...
    Posted Thursday Jun 28, 2007 19:19:08 EDT
  • On the Web
    Some good resources for finding security-clearance job fairs include:
    Posted Monday Jun 25, 2007 20:47:40 EDT
  • Finding your dream job
    When we think of the dream job, many of us envision something that entails a personal jet, a job title that includes the word "royal" and an annual salary equal to the net worth of Bill Gates and...
    Posted Monday Jun 25, 2007 20:47:25 EDT
  • Job-search tips
    Question: Can you provide some insight on what I should be thinking about during my job search?
    Posted Monday Jun 25, 2007 20:47:10 EDT
  • Job fair tactics
    Your security clearance works a lot like a good reputation. It follows you, adds value to the way employers look at you and generally means better job prospects and salaries. That's why it's a good...
    Posted Monday Jun 25, 2007 20:46:19 EDT
  • How best to lead through change
    Question: My company is going though a major restructuring, and I've been chosen as one of the people to lead my department though the change. What are some things that I can do to help the...
    Posted Friday Jun 15, 2007 13:24:54 EDT
  • Politics and the workplace don’t often mix
    With the startup of the presidential campaigns, it's natural that many of us will begin to discuss the issues facing this country, and some of those discussions will probably take place at work....
    Posted Friday Jun 15, 2007 13:24:22 EDT
  • Tips for a happy career
    The greatest challenge facing the person who addresses the graduating class of 2007 is to say something students might remember for more than 24 hours, novelist John Grisham told the University of...
    Posted Friday Jun 15, 2007 13:23:52 EDT
  • 5 great agriculture jobs
    We've made the transition from agrarian society to industrial superpower. But one look at the career choices in Purdue University's College of Agriculture makes it clear that farming still creates...
    Posted Friday Jun 15, 2007 13:22:36 EDT
  • Struggling with work after war
    Charles Thomas came to dread his morning commute on the Red Mountain Freeway. The Arizona desert resembled the Middle East, and his mind would return to the battlefield of Iraq.
    Posted Thursday Jun 7, 2007 20:37:26 EDT
  • Searching for the elusive job satisfaction
    Question: I've changed jobs so often in my career that I can't imagine staying at one place for longer than three or four years. I always find something wrong with every job. Either it's the people I...
    Posted Thursday Jun 7, 2007 20:37:07 EDT
  • Data-loss prevention market booming
    Put Palisade Systems' "big brother" software on your company's network and Kurt Shedenhelm swears it'll find something you won't like.
    Posted Tuesday Jun 5, 2007 16:03:54 EDT
  • Federal law enforcement
    If you're not convinced Border Patrol is right for you, consider a law-enforcement career with one of these federal agencies:
    Posted Tuesday Jun 5, 2007 15:53:58 EDT
  • Job seekers, employers turning to video résumés
    Leveraging one of the Web's most popular new formats, job hunters and corporate recruiters are adding online video résumés to their arsenals.
    Posted Monday Jun 4, 2007 20:45:46 EDT
  • Sales workshop discounts for veterans
    Sales performance improvement firm Huthwaite is offering half-price enrollment fees to honorably discharged veterans and current reservists for three of its sales workshops through the end of this...
    Posted Thursday May 31, 2007 20:46:01 EDT
  • Career inspiration can be accidental
    Days before I was to graduate from college, a journalism professor with great influence over my final grades told me, "Andrea, you will never write," then marched away. After recovering from shock, I...
    Posted Thursday May 31, 2007 20:45:31 EDT
  • Prospecting grows business
    Question: Last year my sales team was No. 1 in our region. It is needless to say that we are expected to build on our success. To do this, I believe that we need to drastically expand our client...
    Posted Thursday May 31, 2007 20:45:15 EDT
  • Income gap between generations widens
    Prashant Tungare arrived in the United States in 1984 with a wife, a child and $500 in his pocket. Today, the India-born American citizen is a prosperous computer specialist at Wachovia Bank.
    Posted Wednesday May 30, 2007 15:12:34 EDT
  • Get ahead in the consumer products industry
    Retail jobs — they're not just for kids.
    Posted Wednesday May 30, 2007 14:56:49 EDT
  • Border Patrol Academy expands
    ARTESIA, N.M. (AP) — A trainee swings a rubber baton at the knees of three instructors wearing padded suits and helmets, acting out a scenario some of the new Border Patrol agents brought in...
    Posted Wednesday May 30, 2007 14:56:03 EDT
  • Federal law enforcement jobs
    If you're not convinced Border Patrol is right for you, consider a law-enforcement career with one of these federal agencies:
    Posted Wednesday May 30, 2007 14:55:49 EDT
  • Border Patrol to hire 6,000 by end of 2008
    Moving to the U.S. Border Patrol's Rio Grande Valley Sector was a culture shock for Border Patrol Agent Frederick Mangona and his family.
    Posted Wednesday May 30, 2007 14:55:41 EDT
  • Utilities brace for worker shortage
    HERNDON, Va. — Chain saw in hand, Ray Bryan elevates his cherry picker against a cloudless blue sky with a cheerful, "Get her on up."
    Posted Wednesday May 30, 2007 14:54:52 EDT
  • Entrepreneur designs career around Photoshop
    LOS ANGELES — You can't get rich writing computer books. Advances are low, and the lifespan of the book is short.
    Posted Monday May 21, 2007 20:43:49 EDT
  • Aerospace companies target young recruits online
    LOS ANGELES (AP) — Justin Wong, an aerospace engineering student from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, was schmoozing on Facebook.com last fall when he came across a sleek Boeing job...
    Posted Monday May 21, 2007 17:24:39 EDT
  • Work around that crazy boss
    Crazy bosses are nearly impossible to work for.
    Posted Monday May 21, 2007 17:23:56 EDT
  • Business relationships are personal, too
    People get hurt a lot at work. And I'm not talking about the repetitive-motion, carpal-tunnel, back and shoulder type. I'm talking about the pain you sustain when a co-worker, boss or client says...
    Posted Friday May 18, 2007 20:40:59 EDT
  • The entrepreneur’s tug of war
    Strategy versus execution. Sales versus operations. Increasing income versus reducing costs. Every entrepreneur faces a constant tug of war.
    Posted Friday May 18, 2007 13:36:47 EDT
  • Need for day care expands into night
    SIOUX FALLS, S.D. — Shortly before 8:30 p.m., after the last snacks have been eaten and hands and faces washed, Venus Schrader pushes out a cart filled with blue and red mats and places them on...
    Posted Friday May 18, 2007 13:01:48 EDT
  • 5 ways to impress on the first day of new job
    You're not sure where the copier is, let alone the restroom. You don't know whether to jump right in and ask for a task or wait around for someone to tell you what to do.
    Posted Friday May 18, 2007 12:43:52 EDT
  • Best Buy tries ROWE-ing without a time clock
    Flex work has taken on a new meaning as Best Buy rolls out the greatest work idea for Generation X since earbuds. ROWE stands for "results only work environment," which for Xers translates to no more...
    Posted Friday May 18, 2007 12:38:18 EDT
  • Find an angel to fund your small business

    Posted Wednesday May 16, 2007 20:40:27 EDT
  • Workers connect on social networking site
    Meet Art ... who knows Scott ... and knows Cory... and knows they don't know each other, but probably should for business purposes.
    Posted Wednesday May 16, 2007 18:40:41 EDT
  • ‘Desk rage’ warns of violence
    Workbytes' new friend, columnist Anita Bruzzese, calls it "desk rage."
    Posted Thursday May 3, 2007 16:25:38 EDT
  • Don’t lie on your résumé for any reason
    By now you may have heard about the dean of admissions at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) who admitted that she had cooked up her educational credentials in 1979, claiming to have...
    Posted Thursday May 3, 2007 16:21:50 EDT
  • Career outfitter: Your civilian clothing guide
    With a reputation for integrity, dedication and cutting-edge talents, service members rarely have trouble landing good jobs once they leave uniform.
    Posted Monday Apr 30, 2007 20:40:15 EDT
  • New job? Take these tips to work
    You finally land a new job, and you show up for your first day of work wearing your comfy sneakers and your new nose ring.
    Posted Monday Apr 30, 2007 20:39:49 EDT
  • Details make or break first impressions
    Think of it as a building block. Without a strong foundation, nothing stands — and that's what a first impression is all about.
    Posted Monday Apr 30, 2007 12:10:57 EDT
  • Be aware of at-will employment policies
    When, exactly, can your boss fire you? Pretty much any time he or she pleases and for any reason — as long as the reason doesn't involve such things as discrimination, retaliation, belonging to...
    Posted Monday Apr 30, 2007 12:09:11 EDT
  • Get started in the construction industry
    Construction job opportunities are ripe for military men and women such as retired sailors Ken Dianovich and Paul Beck, say officials with the National Association of Home Builders and its work force...
    Posted Monday Apr 30, 2007 12:06:42 EDT
  • Sexes’ wage gap narrows
    More than 40 years after the Equal Pay Act made it illegal for employers to pay women less simply because of their sex, there's still no state in the country where a typical woman earns as much as a...
    Posted Friday Apr 27, 2007 16:51:34 EDT
  • Rail companies recruit ex-military
    Just a few years ago, it wouldn't have been a promising career move. But today, if you're looking for a steady job, great promotion opportunities and immediate openings when you leave the military,...
    Posted Wednesday Apr 25, 2007 11:17:58 EDT
  • High-tech skills in high demand
    Job forecasts for the coming decade all point to an increasing demand for technological skills — no matter what the industry. There are few career fields that don't rely on technology in some...
    Posted Wednesday Apr 25, 2007 11:16:44 EDT
  • New sites let you 'work the room' online
    Sometimes, getting a position comes down to who you know. But now, you can "work the room" even if your connections and contacts are spread out around the world.
    Posted Monday Apr 23, 2007 16:18:53 EDT
  • Get a 'leg' up in online business
    Brian Jones turned America's obsession with a holiday movie into cash — lots of cash. Since its release in 1983, the movie "A Christmas Story" has grown from cult status to classic. The film...
    Posted Monday Apr 23, 2007 16:08:27 EDT
  • Job sharing keeps women working
    There's been much debate about why women drop out of the work force at the height of their careers. For whatever reason — to stay home with children, care for an aging parent or simply to drop...
    Posted Friday Apr 20, 2007 20:39:36 EDT
  • Workers skeptical about less-stress findings
    Been awhile since Joe, the tightly wound co-worker, slammed his keyboard against the desk? Been even longer since Mary, the micromanager, had an outburst?
    Posted Friday Apr 20, 2007 10:33:24 EDT
  • Stop wasting your money
    As the saying goes, you've got to spend money to make money. But no one wants to waste money. Most entrepreneurs are careful spenders, but all of us, from time to time, squander our precious funds.
    Posted Friday Apr 20, 2007 10:30:17 EDT
  • 5 things about working from home
    If you think everybody who works from home wears pj's and sneaks in housework, Jeff Korona and Cynthia Kidder are here to prove you wrong. These home-based workers make it a point to look and act...
    Posted Monday Apr 16, 2007 20:39:06 EDT
  • New Orleans needs medical professionals
    Our Lady of Wisdom Health Care has had to raise pay to maintain acceptable staffing levels in New Orleans' competitive health care market.
    Posted Monday Apr 16, 2007 12:37:52 EDT
  • Health-care franchise fulfills owner
    What do you get with a franchise? A proven track record, a business plan that works and name recognition.
    Posted Monday Apr 16, 2007 12:37:15 EDT
  • Opportunities abound for nurses
    However, shortages add stress to demands of job
    Posted Monday Apr 16, 2007 12:36:43 EDT
  • Bullying takes toll in workplace
    Here's the funny thing about bullying: It doesn't go away when you become an adult.
    Posted Friday Apr 13, 2007 13:58:37 EDT
  • Career path is something to cultivate
    Eighty-seven people have come up to me and said, "I still don't know what I want to be when I grow up." And that's just in the last year. So I hear it a lot. They always laugh when they say it. I...
    Posted Friday Apr 13, 2007 13:58:07 EDT
  • Faith, doubt are keys to business success
    On my desk, I have a small book of quotations that I look at from time to time for inspiration. The one that I refer to regularly as I run and build my business: "Great Faith. Great Doubt. Great...
    Posted Friday Apr 13, 2007 13:57:12 EDT
  • Veteran makes franchising history
    Military veteran Alan Martinez symbolizes the success of the Veterans Transition Franchise Initiative, also known as VetFran.
    Posted Monday Apr 9, 2007 21:21:19 EDT
  • Know when to share personal information
    When presidential candidate John Edwards and his wife Elizabeth publicly disclosed her incurable cancer last month, it put a mark in our minds that cannot be erased.
    Posted Friday Apr 6, 2007 13:12:10 EDT
  • Career coaches gain disciples
    While watching the "Oprah Winfrey Show" late last year, Satira Kitchen learned that the famous talk show host often hires coaches to help with various aspects of her life.
    Posted Friday Apr 6, 2007 13:11:24 EDT
  • Global real estate firm recruits veterans
    A worldwide provider of commercial real estate services has created a hiring program to recruit more veterans.
    Posted Thursday Apr 5, 2007 20:38:53 EDT
  • Nonprofit work grueling, rewarding
    On a balmy early evening in February in Rwanda, Josh Ruxin contemplates how his life now differs from the one he lived on the Upper West Side of New York City a couple of years ago.
    Posted Tuesday Apr 3, 2007 20:38:39 EDT
  • New career: voice captioning
    DES MOINES, Iowa — While Danielle Edwards is teaching, her students are talking. A lot. Only she doesn't mind.
    Posted Monday Apr 2, 2007 16:16:24 EDT
  • Franchise expo free for veterans
    Veterans will be admitted free to this weekend's International Franchise Expo at the Washington Convention Center in Washington, D.C.
    Posted Wednesday Mar 28, 2007 20:38:09 EDT
  • Gulf Coast needs your skills
    The future of the Gulf Coast region of Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi and Alabama, and the historic city of New Orleans, is in the hands of its people.
    Posted Tuesday Mar 27, 2007 12:45:51 EDT
  • Health career fast track
    A career in the military is all about service. That's one of the chief reasons service members choose second careers in the health care industry — they still want to work, and they still want...
    Posted Monday Mar 26, 2007 20:38:25 EDT
  • Collaboration drives younger workers
    America's youngest professionals value workplace relationships more highly than their counterparts from previous generations, according to a news release from SelectMinds, a provider of corporate...
    Posted Tuesday Feb 27, 2007 14:12:07 EST
  • Nonprofit helps Marines find careers
    You could call it a transition immersion program.
    Posted Tuesday Feb 27, 2007 13:56:00 EST
  • E-résumés require special attention
    The job market is all about electronics. People look for jobs online, and employers post their vacancies online. Given this environment, it's only smart for job seekers to learn the difference...
    Posted Tuesday Feb 27, 2007 13:52:36 EST
  • How to be your best in video interviews
    As more companies interview job candidates from around the world and more executives look for time-saving strategies, you may find that the next time you interview for a job, you're facing not a...
    Posted Tuesday Feb 27, 2007 13:48:30 EST
  • No degree? Not a problem
    Just because no bachelor's degree is on your résumé doesn't mean you can't find a good career.
    Posted Tuesday Feb 27, 2007 13:43:45 EST
  • More employers recruit the military ethic
    WASHINGTON — Employers looking to hire workers with strong work ethics, leadership skills and diverse backgrounds are increasingly turning to a select group of recruits: members of the military.
    Posted Tuesday Feb 27, 2007 13:34:39 EST
  • Pool franchise is fun for owners
    How would you like to sell fun for a living? While most of the masses try to balance work with play, the American Poolplayers Association offers both — through pool-league franchise...
    Posted Tuesday Feb 27, 2007 12:24:21 EST
  • Franchising on the Web:
    Go to the American Poolplayers Association's Web site to find which territories are available: www.poolplayers.com
    Posted Tuesday Feb 27, 2007 11:32:00 EST
  • Franchise fees at a glance:
    A low-cost franchise fee is less than $20,000, according to the International Franchise Association. Seventy percent of franchisers charge an initial fee of $40,000 or less, and the average franchise...
    Posted Tuesday Feb 27, 2007 11:30:07 EST
  • Use the Web to find your perfect job
    Employment Web sites have made job hunting easier than ever, placing hot opportunities from around the globe just a few clicks away.
    Posted Monday Feb 26, 2007 20:37:39 EST
  • Be your own boss
    Is it right for you? That may be the first question you ask if you're thinking about becoming a business owner. But it's only one of many. Being your own boss means running the show and basking in...
    Posted Thursday Feb 1, 2007 11:29:29 EST
  • Dress for success
    You've got an interview. What are you going to say? That may be your biggest worry if you're about to move toward a second career after military service. But you'll need more than a good verbal...
    Posted Saturday Dec 30, 2006 14:36:18 EST
  • 2007’s six hottest jobs
    When Sylvan Henry enrolled in a two-year radiology technician program at St. Philip's College in San Antonio, he knew a lot about computers and communications systems. What he didn't know was that he...
    Posted Saturday Dec 30, 2006 13:09:47 EST
  • Build a career without a college degree
    You can't be successful without a college degree. Everybody has heard that statement. But how true is it? And where's the evidence? While people who have earned college degrees...
    Posted Thursday Nov 30, 2006 13:16:18 EST
  • Your clearance is your foot in the door
    You are leaving the military and want to launch a civilian career that makes use of your security clearance. The trouble is you're still not quite sure what kind of job you want.
    Posted Thursday Nov 30, 2006 13:16:09 EST
  • Second-career secrets: Mentors help troops transition
    It's those first steps that are the hardest. Entering the civilian job market is like landing on the far side of the moon and setting out on an exploration that's, by nature, tough to do.
    Posted Thursday Nov 30, 2006 13:16:00 EST
  • 14 tips to land you that dream job
    When Sgt. Ken Corr left the Florida Army National Guard in 2005, exiting the military wasn't the only change he was looking to make. He wanted to embark on a new career path as well.
    Posted Thursday Nov 30, 2006 13:15:51 EST
  • Be your own boss with a franchise business
    Maybe you're tired of someone else calling the shots. Maybe you want to be your own boss. If you're thinking about a second career and the key word in your dream job is "independence," you...
    Posted Thursday Nov 30, 2006 13:15:42 EST
  • The secrets of small-business success
    Former Army Lt. Col. Carl Cockrum faced a difficult choice when he decided to retire after 22 years -- accept an attractive job from a defense contractor, or sink nearly $100,000 into a franchise to...
    Posted Thursday Nov 30, 2006 13:15:34 EST
  • Translation guide for civilian want ads
    During the search for a new job, chances are you'll read enough job ads to be able to mumble them in your sleep. Key words and phrases that seem to turn up again and again in most advertisements...
    Posted Thursday Nov 30, 2006 13:15:27 EST
  • 13 questions to ask — and win over — the job recruiter
    Jarrod Washington knew about interviews. He had spent more than five years as an Air Force recruiter. So when he sat down to interview for his first civilian job, he asked a question directly related...
    Posted Thursday Nov 30, 2006 13:05:29 EST
  • Want to join the $100,000 club? Follow two vets’ lead
    Claudia Petersen has made a stellar leap. She joined the Army right out of high school, served 10 years and separated as a sergeant in 2001. Now she's a senior operations coordinator for KBR in...
    Posted Thursday Nov 30, 2006 13:04:56 EST
  • Career Q&A: Keep that IT resume simple
    You know you're marketable. But how do you tell your story on one or two pieces of paper? Separating service members -- no matter how long they've served -- enter the civilian job market...
    Posted Thursday Nov 30, 2006 13:04:44 EST
  • How to figure out what you’d make as a civilian
    During your years in uniform, Uncle Sam always has been the one to decide the amount of your paycheck. But now that you are planning to leave the military, determining what you are worth can be as...
    Posted Thursday Nov 30, 2006 13:04:35 EST
  • Before jumping into a franchise, ask questions
    Your work history means years of following someone else's orders. But if you want to be in charge in your next career, you might consider owning your own business.
    Posted Thursday Nov 30, 2006 12:50:35 EST
  • Model for success: How a soldier built his own at-home business
    Logan Coffey was a new Army recruit with no previous sewing or design experience when he purchased his first sewing machine while stationed at Hawaii's Schofield Barracks in 1991. Fueled by a...
    Posted Thursday Nov 30, 2006 12:50:24 EST
  • You can turn that entry-level job into a great career
    Entry-level sounds like a non-starter to some job hunters, but it can be the best step to a great career. Clint Carpenter jumped on the fast track to success when he joined Cintas after his four-year...
    Posted Thursday Nov 30, 2006 12:50:11 EST
  • Interview advice: Know what interviewers can't ask
    Alex Coates said it happened all the time.
    Posted Thursday Nov 30, 2006 12:50:01 EST
  • Health-care franchise fulfills owner

    Posted Monday Nov 6, 2006 20:37:53 EST
  • Tips on lining up a flexible schedule
    A flexible work schedule can get mom or dad to Little League games, even if it means taking along their laptop, or just out of the office on time to pick up the kids from day care. A flexible...
    Posted Wednesday Dec 31, 1969 19:00:00 EST
  • Think outside the box when building a résumé
    Anyone who has ever sent out a résumé knows the anxiety that goes along with it.
    Posted Wednesday Dec 31, 1969 19:00:00 EST
  • There’s no perfect time to make a change
    You would think workers in their 20s and 30s would be less daunted by the thought of career change. They're young, right? It seems obvious to make a change before you're saddled with a mortgage,...
    Posted Wednesday Dec 31, 1969 19:00:00 EST
  • Gen X: Not as strange as boomers believe
    Larry Ballard and I write this column week after week to help give young readers insight into the working world. We slave to bring cutting-edge observations and useful commentary to those who are...
    Posted Wednesday Dec 31, 1969 19:00:00 EST
  • Practice makes perfect with people skills
    Question: What are some things I can do or practice so that I'm more natural and professional during face-to-face communication?
    Posted Wednesday Dec 31, 1969 19:00:00 EST
  • The wild life — Make your next career an adventure
    Do you have what it takes to protect mountain climbers at the summit of Mount McKinley or lead big-game hunters on a mountain lion chase through Idaho wilderness?
    Posted Wednesday Dec 31, 1969 19:00:00 EST
  • Technical skills take you straight to the top
    When Sgt. 1st Class Joe Bruehler retired from the Army in 1995, he never imagined he'd become a program manager for one of the world's largest defense contractors.
    Posted Wednesday Dec 31, 1969 19:00:00 EST
  • Five sports careers beyond fields of play
    So you want to work in sports, but you lack that laser rocket arm. Fear not. The sports world offers a variety of careers and salaries for those who love sports but play at a level more recreational...
    Posted Wednesday Dec 31, 1969 19:00:00 EST
  • Business in the great outdoors
    If you want a career in adventure sports, this just may be your lucky decade.
    Posted Wednesday Dec 31, 1969 19:00:00 EST
  • Protect, polish your online presence
    Admissions counselors are sometimes shocked at the e-mail addresses applicants submit on college applications. Addresses starting with PartyAnimal or lazegirl have crossed their desks.
    Posted Wednesday Dec 31, 1969 19:00:00 EST
  • MySpace contest recruits TV production talent
    Post your original five- to seven-minute TV pilot to a dedicated MySpace page starting Sept. 4, and you could win $25,000 and a development deal with Posted Wednesday Dec 31, 1969 19:00:00 EST
  • Jobster-Facebook partnership connects networking, recruiting
    Social networking site Facebook and employment site Jobster have teamed up to produce a new career networking and job...
    Posted Wednesday Dec 31, 1969 19:00:00 EST
  • Get good pay for weekend work with HireaHelper.com
    You can make extra cash in your free time by mowing lawns, doing household repairs, helping people move — or whatever your skills may dictate.
    Posted Wednesday Dec 31, 1969 19:00:00 EST
  • LexisNexis tool tracks executives
    Want to ensure you go to work with true movers-and-shakers? Think about researching your next boss using LexisNexis' new ExecRelate tool.
    Posted Wednesday Dec 31, 1969 19:00:00 EST
  • Web tools to get ahead in your education or career
    New Web tools for career development are springing up all the time, and colleges are increasingly offering degrees online. Check back for updates.
    Posted Wednesday Dec 31, 1969 19:00:00 EST
  • Sales or marketing? You need both
    In my company, we're having an internal dispute. We want to substantially increase our sales in the coming year, but to do so, we need extra help. No dispute about that.
    Posted Wednesday Dec 31, 1969 19:00:00 EST
  • Automation, downsizing fuel change in manufacturing
    INDIANAPOLIS — A sea change under way in U.S. manufacturing has plants looking for workers with computer skills and abandoned factory towns looking overseas for new employers.
    Posted Wednesday Dec 31, 1969 19:00:00 EST
  • Working from home gets respect from all sides
    When Chris Arnold's two children come home from school, she's waiting at the bus stop. In summer, she's there after their morning swim lessons. When they play outside in the afternoon, she keeps a...
    Posted Wednesday Dec 31, 1969 19:00:00 EST
  • 5 top home businesses
    Some people don't feel they belong in the corporate world. They long to be their own bosses, set their own hours and rules.
    Posted Wednesday Dec 31, 1969 19:00:00 EST
  • How to work for a high-maintenance boss
    They get more done in a day than most people accomplish in a year. They're brimming with ideas, charismatic, relentless in achieving goals, focused on the task and direct about how they want it done....
    Posted Wednesday Dec 31, 1969 19:00:00 EST
  • How to link up to LinkedIn
    It was somehow inevitable that the grown-ups would come up with their own version of MySpace and Facebook — a way to connect with others online — but without looking like immature...
    Posted Wednesday Dec 31, 1969 19:00:00 EST
  • Making the decision
    Michelle LaBrosse left the Air Force after four years of service and eventually launched Cheetah Learning Systems, a project management training company.
    Posted Wednesday Dec 31, 1969 19:00:00 EST
  • Companies turn to on-site health clinics
    MILFORD, Del. — As companies try to reign in rising health care costs, workers in many industries are dealing with on-site health clinics. Large employers including Toyota Motor Co., Pepsi...
    Posted Wednesday Dec 31, 1969 19:00:00 EST
  • Job misery takes many forms
    For 40 years, Patrick Lencioni's father came home from work complaining about his job and the "ridiculous" management practices he was forced to endure.
    Posted Wednesday Dec 31, 1969 19:00:00 EST
  • Women balance amid stereotypes
    Many of the boldest and brightest women leaders walk around on eggshells. If you're assertive, people say you're too tough. If you're too collaborative, you're not tough enough. What's a woman leader...
    Posted Wednesday Dec 31, 1969 19:00:00 EST
  • Reducing office worry by writing it down
    Question: I've spent the past week worrying about a situation at work. It seems like any decision that I make could very well be the wrong one. I've worried myself sick for a week now, and I haven't...
    Posted Wednesday Dec 31, 1969 19:00:00 EST
  • Poker brings cash into restaurants, bars
    Leon Barnett, manager of Scrimmage's Bar & Restaurant in Wilmington, Del., knows exactly why he added poker nights to his weekly event calendar: money.
    Posted Wednesday Dec 31, 1969 19:00:00 EST
  • Many people leave jobs for their family’s sake
    It seems that a lot of people are resigning from their jobs these days for the sake of their family. At least that's what they say, including White House deputy chief of staff, Karl Rove, who...
    Posted Wednesday Dec 31, 1969 19:00:00 EST
  • Read to succeed
    Your transition is approaching, and you're lagging a little in getting that post-military job hunt off the ground. Or maybe you're not entirely convinced life as a civilian is right for you.
    Posted Wednesday Dec 31, 1969 19:00:00 EST
  • Franchising: The money side
    Leaving the military means leaving a life of following orders — which may be why franchising appeals to some veterans looking for second careers.
    Posted Wednesday Dec 31, 1969 19:00:00 EST
  • New help for military entrepreneurs
    The Small Business Administration has enlisted banks across the country in a new loan program reserved for military veterans. The loan features fast approval times, low interest rates and up to...
    Posted Wednesday Dec 31, 1969 19:00:00 EST
  • Rescue helped grow veteran’s helicopter business
    COOS BAY, Ore. (AP) — Fifty years ago on the afternoon of Sept. 10, 1957, a two-hour rescue forever altered tiny Columbia Helicopters Inc.
    Posted Wednesday Dec 31, 1969 19:00:00 EST
  • Forensics specialists use science to catch the bad guys
    Forensic expert and former Army Maj. Michael Berkland likes to tell the story of the murder that wasn't.       
    Posted Wednesday Dec 31, 1969 19:00:00 EST
  • Find a job fair in your state
    ABOARD THE NEW JERSEY (AP) — For 10 months, Iraq war veteran Andrew Schumann has been looking for a job. So far, no luck.
    Posted Wednesday Dec 31, 1969 19:00:00 EST
  • Find the perfect job. We’ll help!
    Some veterans of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan have a harder time finding work than their non-military counterparts, statistics show.
    Posted Wednesday Dec 31, 1969 19:00:00 EST
  • The perfect career for ‘people’ persons
    As demand for qualified employees rises across U.S. markets over the next 10 years, expect more human resources professionals to step in to recruit and retain top talent.
    Posted Wednesday Dec 31, 1969 19:00:00 EST
  • Flight officer turns high-tech CEO
    She started a defense-consulting firm, Craig Technologies Inc., in 1999 with 10 employees. It has grown to 142 employees and several military contracts, in part because of the advantages of being...
    Posted Wednesday Dec 31, 1969 19:00:00 EST
  • Survey shows pay up 6 percent for security clearance jobs
    Average salaries for security-cleared civilians working in the defense industry rose about 6 percent over those reported in a previous survey, according to data published March 27 by the Web site Posted Wednesday Dec 31, 1969 19:00:00 EST
  • Critical mission
    The No. 1 priority in Air Force veteran Jennie Powell's civilian business venture is the vulnerable population her company cares for.
    Posted Wednesday Dec 31, 1969 19:00:00 EST
  • Eco-friendly jobs to start studying for
    Today, many companies employ workers with titles such as environmental scientist, environmental engineer, hazardous waste management specialist, geologist and industrial hygienist.
    Posted Wednesday Dec 31, 1969 19:00:00 EST
  • Prepare for your I.T. certification exam
    When you're preparing for your I.T. certification test, consider these nine tips from testing and assessment provider Prometric:
    Posted Wednesday Dec 31, 1969 19:00:00 EST
  • How to work a job fair
    Each week in hotel conference rooms, on military bases and in sports stadiums across America, job-fair organizers deliver potential recruits to civilian hiring managers searching specifically for new...
    Posted Wednesday Dec 31, 1969 19:00:00 EST

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