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- 4 Mar 2006
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- 1,063
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Considering career switch - need advice, please!
Hi guys,
the other day I went job searching with my partner who has been unemployed for quite a while and stumbled on an add for a debt advisor (salaried, basic + bonus OTE nearly double my current yearly wage). Now as you can see from my profile I'm currently working at a sandwich shop/cafe (whatever you want to call it), which is nowhere near the add, however they do say all training will be given to successful applicants.
With this in mind I have a few CV related questions:
a) most (as in 99%) of my work experience comes from working for the same company, but contains 2 different senior roles (one being responsible for hot food // temperatures // equipment the other for health and safety // kitchen productivity // training) alongside both of which I had additional supervisory tasks. Should I list both of them on the CV separately (with any achievements in each field) or meddle them together into one huge listing of duties and achievements
b) prior to that (with a year's gap in between the two jobs) I had 5 years of 'part time experience' (i.e. few hours during the weekends, cash in hand, no real contract or anything) at my mum's tax advisor bureau where my job was to sort out paperwork and some data entry - should I bother listing this on the CV?
c) the big bad of my life's choices - while working for my current company I got my priorities all wrong (job + WoW > uni ... yes I know, foolish) and didn't complete my university course (or well, according to them I have - just didn't receive any final grade for it, as it was in my final year that I dropped out) - how do you suggest putting this into the education section of the CV without being immediately dropped into the 'shall not bother with' bin
d) last but not least - should I even bother? I realise that OTE jobs require tons and tons of hard work to get even close to the advertised sum, however I am slowly approaching 30 (well 3 years to go but you get the drift) and would like to push my life in a direction where I wouldn't have to worry about getting food for myself and my partner because my hours got cut to a minimum. Lastly I really don't mind putting however many hours are required to succeed as long as it gets me somewhere, which I can't really say about my current employer.
Hi guys,
the other day I went job searching with my partner who has been unemployed for quite a while and stumbled on an add for a debt advisor (salaried, basic + bonus OTE nearly double my current yearly wage). Now as you can see from my profile I'm currently working at a sandwich shop/cafe (whatever you want to call it), which is nowhere near the add, however they do say all training will be given to successful applicants.
With this in mind I have a few CV related questions:
a) most (as in 99%) of my work experience comes from working for the same company, but contains 2 different senior roles (one being responsible for hot food // temperatures // equipment the other for health and safety // kitchen productivity // training) alongside both of which I had additional supervisory tasks. Should I list both of them on the CV separately (with any achievements in each field) or meddle them together into one huge listing of duties and achievements
b) prior to that (with a year's gap in between the two jobs) I had 5 years of 'part time experience' (i.e. few hours during the weekends, cash in hand, no real contract or anything) at my mum's tax advisor bureau where my job was to sort out paperwork and some data entry - should I bother listing this on the CV?
c) the big bad of my life's choices - while working for my current company I got my priorities all wrong (job + WoW > uni ... yes I know, foolish) and didn't complete my university course (or well, according to them I have - just didn't receive any final grade for it, as it was in my final year that I dropped out) - how do you suggest putting this into the education section of the CV without being immediately dropped into the 'shall not bother with' bin
d) last but not least - should I even bother? I realise that OTE jobs require tons and tons of hard work to get even close to the advertised sum, however I am slowly approaching 30 (well 3 years to go but you get the drift) and would like to push my life in a direction where I wouldn't have to worry about getting food for myself and my partner because my hours got cut to a minimum. Lastly I really don't mind putting however many hours are required to succeed as long as it gets me somewhere, which I can't really say about my current employer.
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