When does your job search begin and how do you start?
What will be an ideal response?
It doesn't matter if you are a freshman or a senior, or anywhere in between. Your job search begins now. During your last two semesters in college, you should be working with your career services office to practice interviews, attend résumé and cover letter writing workshops, and sign up for interviews. Freshmen and sophomores should also be thinking about their first job after graduation. Your education is a means to an end, that end being not just any job, but your dream job. You want to acquire the skills early enough in college to make the most attractive candidate to the organization that has your dream job.
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Which item is not considered cash and cash equivalents on the balance sheet?
A) unrestricted funds on deposit with the bank B) money market funds C) post dated checks D) bank drafts
Given the position of the 3D printer in the growth stage of its life cycle, which of the following OM Strategy/Issues should the makers of 3D printers be least concerned with at the current time?
A) forecasting B) cost cutting C) increasing capacity D) product and process reliability E) enhancing distribution
If the only information you are given about Ryan Corporation, a large public company in business for many years, is that it has a current ratio of 2.9, what could you infer from this?
A) It can meet the short-term obligations without any difficulty. B) You could determine that Ryan has a liquidity problem because Ryan's current ratio is greater than 2 which is the rule of thumb for the current ratio. C) Nothing, you would also need the current ratio's from the last few years of the S&P 500 Index. D) You could determine that Ryan has an activity problem because Ryan's current ratio is greater than 2 which is the rule of thumb for the current ratio.
Sue Thompson received a home "cold-canvas" sales call at her home from a representative of the Enlightened Encyclopedia Company. The salesperson, after a rather aggressive presentation, convinced Sue to order a $1,200 Deluxe Encyclopedia set for her two
children. Sue was impressed with the quality of the books, but shortly after signing the contract, she realized that she could not really afford to make the required monthly payments. What rights, if any, does Sue have in this situation?