New York Jobs

August 30, 2006

Return of the signing Bonus

Filed under: Uncategorized — newyorkjobs @ 3:56 pm

Rarely seen since the dot-com boom, signing bonuses are making a comeback — sort of.

From the late 1990s until 2001, the national unemployment rate hovered around 4 percent. With business booming, employers pulled out all the stops, making sky-high salaries, stock options and signing bonuses fundamentals of offer letters.

“Back in the late ’90s, companies felt they needed to move (on hiring a candidate) right away,” said Dave Sanford, executive vice president of client services for Massachusetts-based contingency placement firm Winter, Wyman and Companies.

But when the country plunged into recession in 2001 and tightened the job market, fewer companies offered signing bonuses to new employees.

Now that the economy is improving, Sanford says he is seeing this incentive start to trickle back into compensation packages. But although hiring bonuses are up across most industries, they’re still the exception.

Sanford estimates that around 5 to 10 percent of his clients are offering sign-on bonuses, up from about 2 to 3 percent a few years ago.

“We were in such a deep recession in 2001 and 2002 that companies have been very conservative about throwing money around,” he says. “Even now that the market’s getting better, they don’t want to be reckless. Everybody’s still watching their bottom line.”

The decision to offer a sign-on bonus often boils down to supply and demand. Working in a hot industry or in-demand position can boost a candidate’s likelihood of getting a bonus upfront.

For example, the 2006 Culpepper Trends Survey on Hiring Bonuses indicated that half of all technology and life sciences companies use signing bonuses to attract candidates, with payouts ranging from $1,000 to $10,000.

Other times, hiring bonuses are offered when a candidate would have to leave something behind to join a new employer, says John Touey, a principal with Philadelphia-based retained executive search firm Salveson Stetson Group.

“(An example would be) if they are leaving mid-year or later in the year and feel they have earned a significant amount of the annual cash bonus, or they have options coming due in the near future that they will forfeit,” he says. “…In other cases I have seen signing bonuses as a one-time consideration when the hiring company cannot match the annual base salary of a candidate.”

To improve your chances of landing a signing bonus, heed the following tips:

1. Know what to expect.
Research the company and your industry to see whether your position or company frequently awards hiring bonuses. The Internet, industry contacts and current workers at your future employer are valuable sources of information.

2. Delay the money talk until after you get an offer. Wait until you have a written job offer before negotiating a sign-on bonus. Asking too early could make you appear difficult or greedy.

3. Be upfront. Employers are more likely to offer a sign-on bonus if accepting the offer would cause a candidate financial hardship. If you would have to forgo your year-end bonus or triple your commuting costs, say so.

4. Make sure you understand the terms.
Employers are increasingly tying a longevity clause to hiring bonuses. Find out if you will need to pay back part or all of the signing bonus if you leave before a specified period of time.

5. Remember that a signing bonus is a one-time deal.
If a company is offering a salary that seems too low, a signing bonus will only make up the difference for one year. Negotiating a more reasonable salary will have a long-term impact.

New York Jobs Today 8.29.06

Filed under: Uncategorized — newyorkjobs @ 3:46 pm

Hi everyone. It feels like fall already the weather is getting cooler. September is a great time to find jobs in New York. Everyone is busy and its before the holidays get rolling. (which distract everyone) I hope the job search is going well. I am pretty well settled in my new job but I find there are still interesting jobs out there. I hope I chose the right job :) Anyway, here are more jobs I found through my alerts that I still have set up. Happy job hunting :)

1. Lending Specialist Job – JP Morgan Chase New York

2. Executive Assistant Job - Glocap Search New York

3. Fit Model – Assistant Buyer Job (Clothing Fashion Job) – Joyce Leslie New York Women’s Apparel

4. Key Account Sales Manager Job – Nestle Waters America New York

5. Administrative Assistant Secretary Job – Phillips New York City

6. Cocktail Servers Bartenders Waitstaff Needed – Hyatt Hotel New York City - Hotel Jobs

7. Assistant Project Accountant Job – Tishman Construction Corp New York

8. Sales & Marketing Administrative Assistant Job Edison Schools New York Job

9. Financial Analyst Job – New York – McGraw Hill Companies

10. Senior Project Manager Job – Trammell Crow New York City

August 24, 2006

New York Jobs Today 8.24.06

Filed under: Uncategorized — newyorkjobs @ 3:58 pm

August 22, 2006

Seven Things to Tell an Interviewer

Filed under: Uncategorized — newyorkjobs @ 3:28 pm

Many years ago when I hated what I was doing for a living, I was encouraged by my career coach to write down several short stories about times and events in my life where I influenced the outcome. I was stumped at first, but after a few days, I came up with more than 15 pages of stories of times in my life where I influenced the outcome and either grew myself and/or bettered the existence of either myself or others around me.

So what does this have to do with a job interview?

If you read other books on job interviews, you’ll notice they feed you lists of interview questions and answers to memorize. An interview is not an interrogation, however it’s a conversation. To make it that way you need to come armed with a multitude of small stories about both your business and personal lives.

When you go into an interview, you need to leave your nerves at the door. The best way to prepare is to be yourself. The best way to be yourself is to tell your own story (or stories).

This is especially great for the competency-based interview being used more today. In a traditional interview, the interviewer will ask you questions focused on whether you have the skills and knowledge needed to do the job. A competency-based interview goes further by asking you additional questions about your character and personal attributes that can better determine whether you fit their corporate culture. These are called “behavioral competencies.”

A competency-based interviewer will spend about half the interview on your job skills, and about half on your behavioral competencies. He or she will be looking for evidence of how you have acted in real situations in the past.

An employer wants to find out:

  • Are you an asset or liability? In other words, will you make money or save money for the company?
  • Are you a team player? Will you fit into the corporate hierarchy or be like sand in the gears? Can you take and give (if appropriate) orders?
  • Will you fit into the company culture? They don’t want prima donnas.

The best way to show these traits is to take the initiative and have several personal stories that you can tell, taking maybe 30 to 90 seconds each.

You may want to start by developing your stories around these seven areas:

1. Times where you either made money or saved money for your current or previous company.

2. A crisis in your life or job and how you responded or recovered from it.

3. A time where you functioned as part of a team and what your contribution was.

4. A time in your career or job where you had to overcome stress.

5. A time in your job where you provided successful leadership or a sense of direction.

6. A failure that occurred in your job and how you overcame it.

7. Any seminal events that happened during your career to cause you to change direction and how that worked out for you.

I want to emphasize that an interview should not be an interrogation. It should be a conversation between two equals. When you accomplish this you come away a step closer to your goal of landing the job you really want, because…

It’s the conversation that wins an interview, and it’s the conversation that wins the job

To have a conversation, have your stories ready.

August 14, 2006

New York Jobs today 8.14.06

Filed under: Uncategorized — newyorkjobs @ 4:16 pm

Hello, happy Monday!  Did you know that Monday is the best day of the week to search for a job? It is because most employers post jobs on Mondays in the beginning of the week. That doesn’t mean you shouldn’t check back during the week also, it’s just that you may not see as many new jobs then. I recommend checking daily to know what’s new within the last 24 hrs on the internet. If you are one of the first to apply to a job and your resume is a good fit, you have a good chance of getting an interview. That’s just my opinion. Anyway, here are the jobs I’ve found that look good in New York today.

1. Training Specialist Assistant Vice President Job JP Morgan Chase
New York City

2. Retirement Consultant Private Equity Mergers & Acquisitions Job Mercer Human Resources Consulting
New York City

3. District Sales Leader Job Frito-Lay, Inc.
New York

4. Culinary Supervisor Job Hyatt Hotels Corporation
New York

5. Technology Support Specialist Job Crain Communications
New York

6. CAI – Human Resources Specialist Job Citigroup Corporate Center
New York

7. Manager Customer Care Job Operations ESPN
New York

8. Account Manager – New York Construction Job the McGraw-Hill Companies
New York

9. Global Delivery Excellence Process Industrialization Manager Job Accenture Inc.
New York

10. Junior Developer Job UBS Investment Bank
New York

11. Marketing Analyst Job Scholastic Books
New York

12. Respiratory Therapist Job New York-Presbyterian Hospital
New York

13. Compensation Analyst Job Foot Locker Corporate
New York  

14. Campus Recruiting Manager Job PricewaterhouseCoopers
New York

15. Business Development Information & Knowledge Manager Job Financial Division Ernst & Young
New York

August 11, 2006

New York Jobs Today 8.11.06

Filed under: Job Search, New York Jobs — newyorkjobs @ 3:55 pm

August 9, 2006

RSS New York Jobs 8.9.06

Filed under: Uncategorized — newyorkjobs @ 6:33 pm

Ever want to get Jobs delivered to you the moment they are posted? There is a new way to get updates on job postings. Its is an RSS feed. You don’t have to know what RSS is to use a feed. If you use Bloglines, Pluck, or Newsgator you can read these feeds as they update online. You can also read them through FireFox browser. Bookmark the feed in Firefox and come back to read it a few times a day to get updates of new jobs.

This is the feed you would need to see jobs in new york:

New York Jobs RSS Feed

Check back on the feed often, it updates on the hour. Happy job hunting :)

August 8, 2006

Highest-Paying Jobs in the US

Filed under: Career Advancement, Career Advice, Job Search, New York Jobs, first jobs — newyorkjobs @ 5:05 pm

Do what you love and the money will follow is great in theory, but the truth of the matter is, certain jobs and fields simply pay more. The Bureau of Labor Statistics National Compensation Survey showed, for example, that white-collar earnings, which averaged $21.85 per hour, were the highest among occupational groups. Blue-collar pay averaged $15.03 per hour, while the hourly pay of service occupations averaged just $10.40.The jobs that pay the most require at least a four-year college degree. According to the Employment Policy Foundation, the nation’s 12 top-paying jobs — and the mean annual income reported in 2003 for each — were:

Top Paying Jobs Overall

  • Physicians and surgeons: $147,000
  • Aircraft pilots: $133,500
  • Chief executives: $116,000
  • Electrical and electronic engineers: $112,000
  • Lawyers and judges: $99,800
  • Dentists: $90,000
  • Pharmacists: $85,500
  • Management analysts: $84,700
  • Computer and information system managers: $83,000
  • Financial analysts, managers and advisors: $84,000
  • Marketing and sales managers: $80,000
  • Education administrators: $80,000
  • Though many of these occupations require an advanced degree, there are jobs at every education level that pay more than other jobs for workers with similar levels of schooling. Here, courtesy of the Employment Policy Foundation, is a look at the best- paying occupations at varying education levels:

    Top Paying Jobs That Do Not Require a High School Degree
    These jobs tend to require substantial on-the-job training and work experience rather than formal education and schooling:

  • Industrial production managers: $36,000
  • Bailiffs, correctional officers and jailers: $36,400
  • Legal assistants: $36,400
  • Drafters: $36,000
  • Construction manager: $33,600
  • Electricians: $31,900
  • Top Paying Jobs for High School Graduates
    These occupations emphasize work experience and on-the-job training rather than formal education:

  • Computer software engineers: $58,900
  • Computer/information systems managers: $56,400
  • Computer programmers: $55,000
  • Network systems and data communications analysts: $49,000
  • General and operations managers: $48,000
  • Database, network and computer systems administrators: $48,000
  • Top Paying Jobs for a Two-Year College Degree
    The following jobs tend to be technical in nature, emphasizing skills developed on the job as well as job-specific training and certifications:

  • Healthcare practitioners: $66,000
  • Business analysts: $58,000
  • Electrical and electronic engineers: $57,000
  • Mechanical engineers: $56,800
  • General and operations managers: $54,000
  • Computer and information systems managers: $50,400
  • “A look at expected earnings over a lifetime shows the economic benefit of higher education attainment,” says Tony Carnevale, who chaired President Clinton’s National Commission for Employment Policy and authored several books, including “America and the New Economy: How New Competitive Standards are Radically Changing American Workplaces.”A person with a doctoral or professional degree, for example, is expected to earn about $3 million over the course of his or her working life while a person without a high school diploma is expected to earn less than $1 million.

    “Despite an increasing supply of well-educated workers, the college wage premium has nearly doubled since 1980, largely because of the added value of a college education in the new knowledge economy,” Carnevale adds.

    The Employment Policy Forum concurs, but stresses that these numbers are only averages. Individual earnings depend on many factors inducing geographic location, employer size (average hourly earnings ranged from $15.06 in organizations employing between 1 and 99 workers to $24.09 in those with 2,500 workers or more), industry (workers in goods-producing industries earned $18.46 an hour vs. those in service-producing industries who earned $16.44 an hour) and the worker’s skills and characteristics.

    August 7, 2006

    New York Jobs 8.7.06

    Filed under: Job Search, New York Jobs — newyorkjobs @ 5:38 pm

    August 4, 2006

    25 Breakout Jobs & Salaries

    Filed under: Career Advancement, Career Advice, Job Search — newyorkjobs @ 3:29 pm

    We live in an aging, technology-hungry society — and the jobs of the future prove it.

    According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, one-in-four new jobs will be in the healthcare and social assistance or the private educational service sectors, and computer occupations account for five of the 20 fastest-growing occupations.

    These 25 careers are expected to be among the hottest jobs in the fastest-growing industries in the United States through 2012. Some of them need applicants with a college degree. Some need people willing to learn on-the-job. All promise excellent job growth.

    1. Computer Software Engineers — $74,980 (applications); $79,740 (systems software)*
    Computer applications software engineers analyze users’ needs and design and maintain computer applications software. Computer applications software engineers coordinate and maintain companies’ computer systems.

    2. Detectives — $53,990
    Detectives gather facts and collect evidence for criminal cases.

    3. Home Health Aides — $18,330
    Home health aides perform health-related services, including administering oral medications, to allow elderly or disabled persons to live at home instead of in a health facility.

    4. Programmers — $65,910
    Computer programmers write, test, and maintain the programs computers follow to perform their functions.

    5. Pharmacists — $84,900
    Pharmacists dispense drugs prescribed by physicians and other health practitioners and provide information to patients about medications and their use.

    6. Security Consultants — around $45,000 (specific salary data not available)
    Security consultants work to secure the safety of an organization against natural or man-made threats such as theft, earthquakes, computer hackers or terrorists.

    7. Employment, Recruitment and Placement Specialists — $41,190
    Employment, recruitment and placement specialists recruit and evaluate applicants and attempt to match them with client firms.

    8. Social and Human Service Assistants — $24,270
    Social and human service assistants aid the community in a variety of ways, including helping individuals establish their eligibility for benefits and services and providing emotional support.

    9. Computer Systems Analysts — $66,460
    Systems analysts help solve computer problems, design new systems and add new software applications to help organization get the most from their technology.

    10. Social Workers — $39,440 (all other)
    Social workers help individuals improve their relationships, living environments, personal and family problems.

    11. Education Administrators — Ranges from $35,730 (preschool) to $74,190 (elementary and secondary)
    Education administrators serve as instructional leaders and manage the day-to-day activities of schools, preschools, and colleges and universities.

    12. Database Administrators — $60,650
    Database administrators determine the most effective ways to organize and store data, such as setting up computer databases.

    13. Occupational Therapists — $54,660
    Occupational therapists help people with disabling conditions become better able to perform daily living and occupational tasks.

    14. Childcare Workers — $16,760
    Childcare workers care for and teach children of all ages in childcare centers, public schools, private households and other facilities when parents are away.

    15. Fitness Trainers — $25,470
    Fitness trainers help clients to assess their physical fitness levels, demonstrate exercise techniques and help their clients set and reach their fitness goals.

    16. Management Consultants — $63,450
    Management consultants analyze and propose ways to improve an organization’s structure, efficiency or profits.

    17. Physical Therapist Aides — $21,380
    Physical therapist aides help make therapy sessions more efficient by keeping the treatment area clean and organized and helping transport patients from one area to another.

    18. Speech-Language Pathologists — $52,410
    Speech-language pathologists assess, diagnose, treat and help prevent speech, language, voice and other related disorders.

    19. Dental Hygienists — $58,350
    Dental hygienists examine patients’ teeth and gums, remove deposits from teeth, teach patients good oral hygiene, and provide other preventive dental care.

    20. Hazardous Materials Removal Workers — $33,320
    Hazardous materials removal workers identify, remove and dispose of various hazardous materials such as asbestos, lead, and radioactive materials.

    22. Network Systems and Data Communication Analysts — $60,600
    Network systems and data communication analysts design, test and evaluate network systems including local area networks and the Internet.

    23. Preschool Teachers — $20,980
    Preschool teachers use methods adapting to children’s play to further language and vocabulary development, improve social skills and introduce scientific and mathematical concepts.

    24. Registered Nurses — $52,330
    Nurses observe, assess and record patients’ symptoms, administer medications and assist in rehabilitation.

    25. Environmental Scientists — $51,080
    Environmental scientists measure and observe air, water and soil to identify sources of pollutants, and recommend the best ways to clean and preserve the environment.

    * May 2004 BLS data 

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