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Nettie Boo (Paperback)
Judy Adams Brown
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R218
R182
Discovery Miles 1 820
Save R36 (17%)
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Found a Job Yet? and Other Questions Not to Ask is the only book of
its type on the market. While there are thousands if not millions
of books for the job seeker, this is the only practical guide for
parents, spouses, other family and friends of those in a job
transition. Whether your job seeker is a recent graduate, newly
unemployed, long term unemployed, miserably employed, or returning
to the job market, Found a Job Yet? and Other Questions NOT to Ask
is for you. You play an essential role in your job seeker's job
search. Yet many husbands and wives, fathers and mothers, sons and
daughters, and best friends do not know what they can do to help
their loved one find a job. If you have a job seeker in your life,
you will find this guide invaluable in your interactions with your
job seeker and in your efforts to help. Find out what the new job
market is really like, the bad news and the good Discover the Six
Steps in successfully finding a job Learn about the marketing
materials that are required by today's job seeker; it is much more
than just a resume Read accounts from real job seekers. In these
actual stories, job seekers share what people did for them that
they found helpful and appreciated. Read what people did that
unknowingly hindered the job search. And understand what job
seekers wished others would have done for them while they were in
the job transition. Know what you can do that helps your job seeker
and avoid the mistakes that others have made that sabotage the job
search It is the book every job seeker wishes YOU had
The Johnny Adams Story is about a man, his music and a lifelong
struggle to become free. Free from a corrupt music industry that
often times denied legal counsel, worked hard to keep many black
entertainers under their tight control and ultimately robbed them
and their families of earnings and royalties that were rightfully
theirs. Travel back with us now to a time when great artists like
Johnny Adams were just getting started and learn the truth about
what it meant to be black, uneducated and truly gifted during the
50's and 60's. a time when some of the greatest music ever heard
was sung to a nation and some of our most gifted black artists
struggled for just a small taste of equality. The Johnny Adams
story may shock you; it may even anger you; but one thing is
certain.it will inspire and teach you that even when it seems the
whole world is conspiring against you; that love is still the
binder that holds the pages of life together.
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