The San Diego Union Tribute reports that wristwatch sales declined 25 percent between 2003 and 2005, supposedly because people use their mobile phones to tell the time—which seems extreme, but maybe we're old-fashioned. We want to know:
Has your cell phone replaced your watch?
Heck no! My phone isn't strapped to my wrist!
Yes, it's the main way I tell time now.
Not quite, but the phone means it's not a big deal if I forget to put on my watch that day.
__________________
Sig by Barker. He takes requests!!!! PM HIM Tell him I sent you.
Use Informational Interviews to Scope Out a New Job
The New York Times' Shifting Careers blog posts a good primer on the kinds of interviews that aren't meant to get you a job—at least, not right away. Setting up an "informational interview" with someone in an industry you're looking at is a way of finding out more about a job or career path from an inside perspective. Workplace writer Marci Alboher recommends a number of questions to ask, including:
1. Can you tell me how you got to this position?
2. What do you like most about what you do, and what would you change if you could?
3. How do people break into this field?
4. What are the types of jobs that exist where you work and in the industry in general?
As an important end note, make sure to follow up on any return requests you get from your interviewee, and be sure to keep the whole thing reasonably short.
__________________
Sig by Barker. He takes requests!!!! PM HIM Tell him I sent you.