Taking some of the above into account, owning a home can make the highly
mobile professional feel stuck.
Not exact matches
The two, who are in a relationship, wanted to offer single
professional Asians a new way to find love, creating a community
feel by combining desktop and
mobile experiences with events & dating advice.
Those
mobile apps had been made with great care and
professional feeling for all singles across the world, which are in need of finding a lifetime partner.
In essence, it's about being
professional and taking care, which means don't: agree to meet alone; allow over-familiarity; give out your personal
mobile number; meet informally outside working hours and away from your organisation's premises (and certainly don't do so without getting formal approval); allow too frequent contact or over familiarity that may be acceptable with friends, colleagues and family but not from people with whom you only have a commercial relationship; discuss your private life, or social or recreational interests of you or your partner; accept offers, discounts or other services or products by the client, customer or contractor; accept hospitality or gifts that you yourself wouldn't pay for from your own pocket; and don't do anything that makes you
feel uncomfortable, obligated or might be open to misinterpretation or might be difficult to explain to your manager, a journalist or an investigator.
(See «Safety Lessons That Saved My Life...» or «How I Stay Safe») In fact, about 42 percent of female real estate
professionals and 18 percent of male agents say they've «occasionally»
felt unsafe, according to an online survey of 450 real estate
professionals conducted by Moby, a safety
mobile app company.
A range of
mobile apps are available — some even designed specifically for real estate
professionals — that can do everything from instantly alerting others when you're
feeling threatened to even automatically accessing your GPS coordinates to request help when you need it most.