I have found that confidence, eye contact and a good general sense of humor always helps on interviews. Experience is built job-by-job but it does take getting a foot in the door. That can be tough especially now. Good luck. I'm still looking for something with more hours and consistency.Although getting over $150 million in one month and spending that on flooding the airwaves didn't hurt Obama either lol. Yes, I know that we'll have to wait til Jan. 20th to find out if this is a change for good, but everybody's been saying that he's gonna wave his hand and all our problems go away if we elect him and yeah, he's not the president yet, but I doubt that everything will be better off the day after he takes the oath of office. As for what I'm doing to get a better job, I'm looking, I have my resume out there, I'm not gonna go to places and hand them my resume and have them take a look at me. They take one look at me, even if I get all cleaned up and shaved and all that and think that they'd probably hire somebody else. That and people only want people with experience. Once a job I like opens up, I'll try to get it ok?
Daniel
...and the speeches given at political dinners are often hard to swallow! Wacka! Wacka!Rubber chicken dinners are hard to chew.
I think you went and hit the nail on the head, Frogboy. That's how I felt about this overall. I was wanting to contribute to the Obama campaign financially and I would have if I didn't live abroad and have them thinking I was some 'foreign' contributer or some such thing. But, that was how motivational Barack Obama was throughout the campaign and he motivated me to get involved in the politics of my nation of birth from the very start. He got me to register to vote and I did.As for Obama, there's so much out there about how much he spent and it is true, but he raised it from individuals. His has to be one of the most successful grass-roots campaigns in history. Supportive citizens were practically throwing money at him instead of the usual rubber chicken dinner crowd of the well-to-do.