I'm updating my resume on Monster.
I'm wondering, since I've never been anything but someone's dumbass assistant/secretary/minion, can I even think about applying for management jobs? Will anyone even take that seriously?
I feel stuck.
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
I'm updating my resume on Monster.
I'm wondering, since I've never been anything but someone's dumbass assistant/secretary/minion, can I even think about applying for management jobs? Will anyone even take that seriously?
I feel stuck.
Damn. Now I'm super hungry.
Where shall I go for lunch?
SUSHI!
Oddly enough, I really want a steak.
Mostly, I want to sit outside and have a nice lunch.
I'm wondering, since I've never been anything but someone's dumbass assistant/secretary/minion, can I even think about applying for management jobs? Will anyone even take that seriously?
Honestly, I think that will be tough. I think you best shot would be to find a place where advancement seems possible.
There's an interesting article about Craig's List on MediaGuardian today--all about how it's boggling the minds of traditional media advertising execs.
( I don't know jack about getting jobs BUT)
Allyson, with all your coordinating experience, I think you'd have a better chance than most with an admin/asst/minion background. I'm in a similar stuck, but my experience isn't so broad that I could make that leap even if launched from a catapult.
I'm wondering, since I've never been anything but someone's dumbass assistant/secretary/minion, can I even think about applying for management jobs?
Depends what kind of management job. Managing who? Or what? I mean, it seems like it would be relatively easy for you to move into like an office manager job.
I'm wondering, since I've never been anything but someone's dumbass assistant/secretary/minion, can I even think about applying for management jobs? Will anyone even take that seriously?
A lot of the jobs I'm applying for now have titles like "Program Manager" or "Administrative Specialist," and they seem like they're made for people who are good at the administrative side of things, but are trying to make the jump out of the clerical world.
ETA or Office Manager jobs, which I avoid like the plague because I figure I'd hate the work.
Universities seem to have a lot of these types of jobs, FWIW.