Sentences with phrase «not real jobs»

Because statistically, jobs posted online are not real jobs that are begging real people to apply.
If you don't get paid then it's not a real job Fatty.
It wasn't a real job posting, but it describes Thomas Weinreich's unique assignment in the summer after his freshman year at Brown.
That's not a real job!
Even my teachers in school were like, «It's cute that you want to be a video game designer, but that's not a real job».
I didn't take it as snarky at all, I just find the whole thing smacks of the «you should feel honored to tell stories / this isn't a real job you should expect to get paid for» vibe that so many commenters online offer.
They say I'm just wasting my time, time that could be spent working at a «real job», (as if raising a (two generation) family is not a real job) they don't get it.
Even my teachers in school were like, «It's cute that you want to be a video game designer, but that's not a real job».
She told him that he had to sit out the day's activities because, apparently, being a games developer is not a real job
Of course you have the obstacle of having no money — that was a big one, because most people got real jobs, and not to say that art is not a real job, but it's hard to establish yourself as being an artist but I guess it was the passion that got me through the day.
Peiser is, or was, a social anthropologist, and, according to Wikipedia, is currently a visiting fellow (not a real job, I suspect) at the University of Buckingham (definitely not a real university [2]-RRB-.
Even my teachers in school were like, «It's cute that you want to be a video game designer, but that's not a real job».
You compete — and win — by including on your resume the achievements, projects and assignments you may have overlooked, or chose not to put on your resume because they were short - term, campus - only related or «not a real job
Often, the recruitment firm doesn't even have anything to do with the company, and / or there isn't any real job available; they are merely trying to gain your business.

Not exact matches

Orlando has been one of the nation's fastest - growing job markets for several years, with an economy driven by immigration, affordable real estate, and «snowbirding» baby boomers resettling for their empt7 - nest years.
But rather than blurting out anything, Welch says you should plan for this question «with an answer that shows your head isn't in the clouds, and your eyes are on the prize of the real job awaiting you.»
It's a real bummer when you see something that's so ubiquitous out in the world, that we can not miss, and they did a poor job on it.
There are also so many pressures on restaurants at the moment, including increased competition, great volatility in the number of establishments, and a difficulty in finding help (and if you can't fill a job, it disappears and looks like a job loss), that there are many reasons that real job losses could happen.
In my first «real job» after college, I experienced firsthand how management that doesn't value its employees ends up suffering from massive turnover and fails to be as successful as it could otherwise be.
My biggest misconception that I get all the time is that people think I don't have a real job or that I just have fun and eat all day long.
As fun and cool as the job was I couldn't ignore a very real emotion: I had an entrepreneurial itch I needed to scratch.
And if tomorrow's job report shows no signs of real wage growth (which is what economists predict it won't), the Fed's case for a rate hike will start to look more faith - based than empirically driven.
Most of the kids we help at Futurpreneur don't have any business experience: They are fresh out of school, and this is their first real job experience.
And demographic changes that affect the age distribution of the population could mask the real state of the job market, too: «if the population is aging, a greater percentage of the population may hit retirement age and willingly retire, which doesn't imply a weaker job market,» CEPR's Evan Butcher and Nicholas Buffie wrote in a blog post this week.
Luckily, this did not get out of hand or cost me relationships, opportunities or my job because, of course, if I wanted to succeed at Waze, I had to shape up real quick.
That criticism is a very fair one, because if you build a company to the size of TOMS that's able to do real good and create jobs then why not do it?
I feel very lucky to run an amazing organization like Back on My Feet — this is a real passion and mission, not just a job — and that in itself can make it very hard to switch off the email, laptop, or phone and take a moment to yourself.
I believe that the re-orientation of British politics under Corbyn and in particular of the Labour Party is highly beneficial, not only to the large strata within British society that have been discarded in the last 20 to 30 years, but interestingly also for British business that produces real stuff as opposed to the City of London and various other service sectors that produce precarious jobs and nothing much of substance.
The reason so many companies were able to get away with violating the law (because it really was so clear that Connecticut employment lawyer, Daniel Schwartz, described the ruling as «far from shocking,» on Twitter) was because interns didn't want to complain because they were afraid they wouldn't get any internships, which then lowers their chance of getting a real job upon graduation.
A person with a «real job» made the daily commute to the office, like it or not.
After reading my new book, Real Leaders Don't Follow, an old friend and business associate who's had a long and successful career, Ziv Azmanov, sent me an email that, among other things, does a pretty effective job of explaining what distinguishes real entrepreneurs from the pReal Leaders Don't Follow, an old friend and business associate who's had a long and successful career, Ziv Azmanov, sent me an email that, among other things, does a pretty effective job of explaining what distinguishes real entrepreneurs from the preal entrepreneurs from the pack:
The industry hasn't done a good job of attracting new talent, and with retiring baby boomers, there's a real lack of solid upcoming talent.»
«It acknowledges that you are self - aware and have weaknesses, like all of us, but none that are any real concern because they don't really matter for the job,» he explains.
«We're not afraid to give young people real jobs.
I began on the path to making a real difference in my professional life only after I decided I would not take the crumbs the government doles out through unemployment benefits and would get a job no matter what I had to do.
Robots make excellent task - masters and time - keepers — but that's not the same as the real job of managing people
Everyone knows Steve Jobs, and Bill Gates, and everyone knows Facebook, but the truth is, as important and impactful as those companies are, they are not the real drivers of real job creation, and even innovation in this country.
Yet the dance skirts the real jobs issue that the President and tech CEOs should be spending their time on: how to find real solutions to the continued disruption that's coming, not from trade, but from technology.
In some scenarios, simulated training is superior to the real thing: Not only does it eliminate the risk of accidents in high - risk jobs, it has been proven to shorten instruction periods and increase people's abilities to remember what they learn.
38:06 — Jason says it's exciting that the robots are out in the real world performing a job, but he isn't sure how venture - fundable the company is in its early stages.
Phil Blair, Manpower NO: Economic adviser to the president is a very important job and not one that should be sloughed off to a newscaster with no recent economic experience in the real world.
Traditionally, being self - employed used to come with a social stigma; you were self - employed if you couldn't get a «real job
Chair Yellen, with real growth over the recovery a little slower than we thought, output gaps and job market slack still on the scene, prices appearing to decelerate and wages / compensation revealing little in the way of threatening pressures, try as I might — and I repeat, I'm solidly in your camp — I don't see the rationale for tightening, even a little.
My concern has always been that I won't have enough money for a long retirement, but I won't realize it until I'm 10 years into retirement, at which point it's MUCH harder to «get a real job» again.
By investing in commercial real estate for the long - term, I now have enough cash flow where if I lose my real job, I have enough income in perpetuity to get by pretty well, not at my current standard of living, but at an above average existence.
But banks are not lending more, for the simple reason that a third of U.S. real estate already is in negative equity, while small and medium - sized businesses (which have created most of the new jobs in America for the past few decades) have seen their preferred collateral (real estate and sales orders) shrink.
We don't really have any new jobs, and there's a massive speculative frenzy going on in Wall Street that is disconnected from the real economy.
Indeed, incentives for commercializing are essentially seen as perverse, because if a faculty member is spending time commercializing research then, by current evaluation standards, they are not doing their real job.
Whenever I started a new job it didn't take me long to figure out who the real boss was.
The real reason I bought a new car was because not only was the interest rate lower but it came with insurance for if I lost my job they would cover my payments (USAA) I thought this was real important since Im young and im not really secure in any job that I've had.
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