Job Hunting Using the Internet to Succeed Thursday, Dec 24 2009 

A modern job search campaign is by nature very intricate. While the internet has offered a variety of new channels, it also creates increased competition for choice jobs and potential challenges for job hunters.

Job hunting needs to be thought of as a personalized, highly directed marketing process where you are the product. Your resume is an ad. Your extended network of colleagues is your source for job information.

So where does the internet fit in? At AA-Careers, we just posted a job on a popular job board and got more than 650 applications in a week. For one position. That’s increased competition for job openings.

Had a strong person called us before we posted the ad, they could have secured the job prior to having all that competition. How? By finding an employee at our office who became aware of the job prior to posting. Everyone knew about of the job for at least 12 days before it was posted. Who in your network might know of a job that’s coming available soon?

Be careful how you submit your application as well. When we did an analysis of the 650 resumes, we found a large number of errors. 63% of the applicants were easily eliminated with a fast triage process. How? The same way any HR professional would. By rejecting resumes where the objective didn’t match our job. By eliminating candidates whose cover letters gave us causes not to hire them, like "I know I’m overqualified but I really need a job". By eliminating prospects whose documents that didn’t open properly. And by rejecting candidates who didn’t trouble to spell check their cover letter and/or resume.

So the great news is that job sites give you a sense of who is hiring, and for what kinds of jobs. But once those jobs are posted, the competition is intense. You can still try, if you have a well thought out resume, designed to appeal directly and clearly to the recruiter. And if you have practiced interviewing – so you don’t stumble at a critical point.

Another potential problem to be aware of is how quickly and easily you can be looked up on the web. As we Googled several candidates, we ran into some pictures and comments that were in questionable taste. Nothing crazy, but enough to tilt our thoughts about who to employ.

AA-Careers provides a broad set of services for Bay Area job seekers, providing our clients a personal career consultant, a managed job hunting campaign, modern tools like a personal website, video, highly targeted resume, and much more. Let us know if we can help you.

Be careful out there, and good hunting!

The Negative Calorie Diet Friday, May 23 2008 

Let’s face it. Nobody likes to diet. We all know the best
approach to losing weight is changing our habits. Nothing takes
the place of real lifestyle changes if you want permanent weight
loss. But, nothing causes you to give up faster than going
day-after-day, and week-after-week, with little or no weight
loss.

So, if you’re ready to make long term lifestyle changes to
achieve your fitness goals, I will show you how to lose 10, 12,
or even 14 pounds in a week! I’ve done it, and so can you.
Hopefully, achieving these amazing results will inspire you to
keep the weight off, and replacing those bad habits with good
solid healthy habits that will serve you a lifetime.

“So,” you ask, “What do I need to do to achieve weight loss like
this?”

There really is no magic involved. IF you can give up the
processed and starchy foods for just a week, and replace them
with what is known as “negative calorie foods,” you’ll be amazed
just how fast the weight drops off! After you reach your goals,
you can begin incorporating the foods you love into your diet.
But, if you want to keep the weight off, you’ll have to make
these negative calorie foods a regular part of your diet.

So what are “negative calorie foods”? Basically, they provide
less calories to your body than the body uses to process them.
Cabbage is a negative calorie food. So are mushrooms. So is
spinach, and so are tomatoes.

You can eat as much of these foods as you’d like and still lose
weight. In fact, the more you eat, the more weight you’ll lose!
Why? Because the body expends more energy digesting these
foods—more than it takes in.

If you’re ready to lose the fat, and feed your body with the
good, natural foods as God intended us to eat, you need to
replace those chips, doughnuts, and cookies with healthful,
natural, negative calorie foods. Just give it a try. You’ll be
amazed with the results.

Mp3 Player for running (or any exercise). Tuesday, Apr 22 2008 

Using an Mp3 Player for exercise, whether we are running or
working out in the gym, we like to do it to music. To our
favorite music or music we’ve chosen for what we’re doing -
possibly vigorous music for aerobics, soothing music for
weightlifting, or a good beat for running, snowboarding or
skiing, whatever works for you, is the best for you.

One of the easiest ways to carry that music is with a
suitable MP3 player that is light, compact and loaded with your
choice of music.

Using an Mp3 player for running, as we all know, over
many years people have carried radio’s, cassette players and CD
players while they were running. All of these were either
awkward to carry, or were limited by the length of tape or CD,
or the CD would skip, or the radio reception was varied or
nonexistent.

The MP3 player for running has changed a lot of that, but
not all. It has become noticeable that some MP3 players are best
not used for vigorous activity. Over the years we’ve been told
that computer hard drives are temperamental and deserve to be
looked after. Shaking or dropping them, we’ve been told will
damage them, as a minimum - cause bad sectors, and ultimately
cause loss of data or a damaged boot sector.

Then what happens - we are sold MP3 players that run from
computer hard drives (ie, spinning disc’s). Yes, we know they
have shock protection built in, but this is so we don’t hear the
skipped music tracks - not to stop the hard drive from being
damaged.

I was discussing these thoughts with a client last week, and was
interrupted by a computer technician, I thought whoops what have
I said wrong, he then confirmed what I was saying is right, as
he had replaced his MP3 player hard drive twice in 2 years. He
had put it down to heavy use as he is always playing it, apart
from the running, and not realized the real problem (that he was
using his MP3 player for running) until after a discussion with
his work mates. Now he uses a solid state MP3 player for his
25Km runs and has had no problem with either the new unit or his
hard drive MP3 player over the last 18 months, none at all.

My advice is to only use a solid State MP3 player for running,
they can carry from 2 hours to over 300 hours of music (from
128Mb to 4Gig of storage). These units have no moving parts,
therefore shock movement will not damage the music quality, the
storage or there long life.

Follow the guide to Choose the best MP3 player for running, at

http
://www.mp3-music-player-info.com/mp3_music_player.html

Learn the Simple Secrets of Supersets for More Muscle Now Thursday, Apr 17 2008 

There are quite a number of effective muscle building techniques
and weight lifting tips you can use in your lifting programs. By
putting together a plan and implementing these muscle ideas in
an effective manner, you can create a variety of weight training
routines that will help you to gain muscle mass as quickly as
your genetics allow.

One of the best weightlifting tips you can use is a variation of
the superset technique. If you’re not familiar with supersets,
here’s a quick rundown.

A superset is when you perform two exercises back to back with
no rest in between the exercises. There are a number of
different versions of the superset. One is called
pre-exhaustion. This is when you perform two exercises for the
same muscle. The first exercise is an isolation movement, such
as flyes for the pecs. Then you perform a compound movement for
the same muscle. In this case you would use the bench press.

By performing a superset in this manner, you pre-fatigue the
muscle you are working (in this case the pecs) and then hit it
hard with a compound movement that allows other muscles that are
still fresh to help the pecs (in this case the delts and
triceps) work even harder. This manner of superset is designed
to help overcome weaker muscles in an exercise so you can work
the main muscle group harder. In this example, a lot of times
the weaker triceps will give out on the bench press before the
stronger pecs are effectively trained.

Another variation of this muscle building technique is
post-exhaustion, where you perform the exercises the way I
described above but in reverse. So using this weightlifting tip,
you would peform the bench press and then go to the flyes. This
version allows you to use heavier weights on the main exercise,
in this case the bench press, and then use the isolation
exercise to up the intensity and further work the muscle. I’ve
always preferred this verisio to the typical pre-exhaustion
method. Call it ego, but I would rather drop the weight on use
on flyes than I would on my bench press.

Another variation would be to take a brief 30 second rest
between the two exercises. This gives you a lot of the positives
of the muscle building superset but helps to minimize the main
negatives, which is stopping the set short from aerobic
exhaustion before working the muscles efficiently, and the fact
that you need to reduce the weights on the second exercise.

A very effective muscle building alternative to the mass
training techniques above is performing supersets of
antagonistic muscle groups, such as back and chest, biceps and
triceps, quadriceps and hamstrings, etc. In the case of the
chest and back you could superset bench presses with bent over
rows.

While these are all effective muscle building techniques, one
that you may find even better is the following. When utilizing
antagonistic supersets, consider taking your typical rest
between sets. So instead of supersetting with no rest between
sets, you go back and forth with rest, like you would with
straight sets.

Let’s say your typical weight training workout for back and
chest consists of 5 sets of the bench press followed by 5 sets
of bent over rows. Now, if you were using supersets, you’d
perform one set for the chest and then do one set for the back
with no rest, then rest for 2 - 3 minutes and repeat this five
times.

Instead of utilizing the superset technique in this manner, you
would do one set of the bench press, take your normal rest, then
do a set of bent over rows, take your normal rest, and repeat
until finished. In other words, you would stagger your sets. You
wouldn’t really be doing a typical superset so much as switching
back and forth between bench presses and bent over rows with a
normal rest period.

What’s the advantage of this mass training tactic? For one, you
won’t get winded as you might in a more traditional superset,
especially when performing big, compound exercises for body
parts like the chest and back. You’ll also be able to use
heavier weights and you’ll concentrate better because you won’t
have the tendency to rush as you might in a typical superset.

You can also adjust your training to your goals. You can change
the amount of time you rest between sets to focus more on
strength and power or pure muscle building and mass gains.

These muscle building techniques have a unique advantage when
performing the antagonistic muscle group version. Whenever you
work a muscle group, it’s antagonist works to some degree as
well. For example, when you work the biceps with barbell or
dumbbell curls, you’re also working the triceps, especially when
you resist the weight on the way down. Think about it. Lowering
the weight on a barbell curl is effectively the same motion as a
reverse grip tricep pressdown.

When you do a bent over row, it’s like the negative of a bench
press. When you do the negative on the bench press, it’s like
the positive part of the rep on the bent over row.

That bit of work helps the antagonist muscle recover faster.
Consider how you recover faster from a run by walking as opposed
to dropping to the ground and lying still.

By using these antagonist supersets, you’ll also find yourself
stronger on each exercise, because of the extended rest. Using
the example above, you’ll get a lot more rest between sets of
bent over rows when using this version of the superset than you
do when you do straight sets.

These superset weight lifting tips are awesome for gaining
muscle mass and strength. You can use these superset variations
in any weigh trainng split.

Try these superset muscle building techniques for six to eight
weeks and watch your muscle mass and your strength shoot
forward. After six to eight weeks of hard training, you’ll want
to back off a bit and then switch to a completely different
weight training routine.