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Tag: job

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Should You Be Allowed To Go On Social Media At Work?

  Whilst the growing popularity of sites such as Facebook and Twitter has allowed us to connect with our friends, families and peers faster and more constantly than ever before, it has also raised the issue of whether we should be permitted to access these sites at work. In short,

How to Improve your LinkedIn Profile

Editor’s note: If you’re looking to improve your LinkedIn profile, check out our more up-to-date articles on similar topics; building your LinkedIn profile and building your LinkedIn network. Whether you’re an avid LinkedIn user or you’re just learning the ropes, you really should be thinking about how you can maximise your LinkedIn profile, especially if
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Spring Clean Your Social Media For Employers

Editor’s Note: This article was originally published back in April 2014. Although it is still useful for ensuring your page is prepped for any employers, our more recent article “How to get a job with social media“ could be more useful if you’re looking for advice on how your social media could be
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How U ‘n’ I connect – How Universities are using Social Media.

For the hundreds and thousands of students out there, they will already know how social media is being used, maybe not by the Universities themselves, but by the people at them. Facebook pages are swamping cyberspace with many of the “Tell him/Tell her” University pages, Freshers pages and ‘Spotted’ style
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How can social media be used to help you find a job?

  Applying for jobs used to mean sitting in the privacy of your own home, perfecting and printing your C.V. on posh paper, then firing it off to employers advertising in the local paper. Things have certainly progressed a little in recent years. If you haven’t already, set yourself up
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PR placed at No. 7 on list of ‘Most Confusing Professions’

  Yep, that’s the face my mum still makes when I explain to her what it is I do. A recent poll on Linkedin showed that, nearly half of UK parents don’t understand what their child does for a living. 42% of the parents asked had kids working in or