So, where do you start?
It's not always as easy as it would seem for a teenager to get a job. There are laws restricting when you can work and what you can do. Teens hired for nonagricultural employment (which is just about everything other than farm work) must be at least fourteen. Other restrictions also apply:
Ages 14 and 15: During the school year, work hours for teens are limited to 3 hours a day and 18 hours a week. On days when there's no school and in the summer, working hours increase to 8 hours a day and 40 hours a week. There are limits on when you can work, too - no later than 7 p.m.
During the school year and no later than 9 p.m. between June 1 and Labor Day.
Ages 16 and 17: There's no limit on hours, but, if you're under 18 you can't work in a job that the Labor Department
You can even Search & apply for a teen job anywhere in the U.S.
at snagajob.com
Most people start with the big employment sites such as Monster, but they are not the only or the best place
to look. Smaller, more focused sites can often be much more useful to you. Below are some ideas for your job search.
Search the Internet - You are doing that now! The "Internet" will not hire you,
so use it for what it is -- an excellent source of job information.
Employer Web Sites - get a list of local companies and visit the web site. Believe it or not, many
employers do not use some of the more popular job services.
To find some employer Web sites, you can visit:
- Academic360 - a directory of college and university Web site employment sections
- Business.com - a searchable directory of businesses in the USA, organized by type (e.g. accounting, etc.).
- USAjobs - the job site for Uncle Sam, if you want to work in the U.S. Federal Government.
Professional Association Sites - If you have been in the work force for any length of time, you will be
aware of the associations related to your area of expertise.
Recruiter/HeadHunter/Staffing Firm Web Sites - Careful here. There are good and there are BAD. Talk with you
friends and get recommendations for ones they have dealt with before and have been both professional and successful in
helping your friends find a job.
Networking - Still the best. Always has been and always will be. According to experts, only 10% to 15% of
all job openings are posted on the Internet or other publication. The trick to being successful through networking is contact,
contact and contact. You have to meet... call... visit... and you have to be persistent -- otherwise your network of contacts will cease to grow!
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Atlanta Business, Development and Jobs
Atlanta has always been a commercial city. It is the major center of regional commerce and jobs and boasts an especially strong convention and trade show business. Several major national and international companies are headquartered in Atlanta or its nearby suburbs, including United Parcel Service in Sandy Springs and home-grown Home Depot. Rubbermaid has recently moved to the area as well. Looking to the future, Home Depot founder Bernie Marcus is donating more than 200 million dollars to build the new Georgia Aquarium. Atlanta also has its own Flatiron Building, built before (1897) the better-known one in New York City (1902).
On the north side of the city near Midtown, the former Atlantic Steel plant is being redeveloped as Atlantic Station, a mixed-use urban renewal project combining housing, retail, and office space, and promoted as one solution to Atlanta's ever more serious traffic and summer smog problems. The metro area has one of America's longest daily commutes, and is one of the most car-dependent cities on the planet, both due to suburban sprawl, and lack of large nearby lakes or mountains to compress growth. It also has a notorious reputation as being one of the most dangerous for pedestrians, as far back as 1949, when Gone With the Wind author Margaret Mitchell was struck by a speeding car and killed while crossing Peachtree at the corner of Thirteenth near the apartment that she referred to as 'The Dump' (now a museum open to the public). Other significant attractions include Underground Atlanta and Centennial Olympic Park.
The city is a major cable television programming source; the CNN Center headquarters of the Cable News Network is in Atlanta, where it was founded, and The Weather Channel broadcasts from just outside of town. In addition to CNN, Ted Turner's (and now Time Warner's) other networks from Atlanta include Cartoon Network/Adult Swim and companion channel Boomerang, TNT, Turner South, CNN International, CNN Headline News, CNNfn, CNN Airport Network, and TBS. Atlanta's WTBS channel 17 (originally WTCG) was Turner's start in television in the 1970s, after he bought the struggling UHF TV station, turning it into a profitable venture which still broadcasts "Superstation" TBS locally and nationally.
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