Wow, I am 28 and would love to teach, I am currently starting a family so I will have to wait until my kids are older to have the time to return to school for a teaching degree. So I would love to be in your shoes.
Every time I change jobs/careers, I make sure I have accepted a job at another company before quitting my current job. SO I feel you made a mistake by quitting to early.
My husband just went through this and he left a well paid job because of his boss and it has taken additional education and 4 additional months to find a new job.
One of the problems he ran into you may see also. When interviewing for new jobs, do not include your pizza career experience, interviewers may look down on that, because you took a step back.
It takes time to find a new job, but everything happens for a reason, so keep pursing your career and the right thing will come at the right time.
2006-08-07 06:02:09
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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The trick to life is figuring out what you love to do and then finding a way to get paid to do it. The pizza shop is temporary. You might consider looking into sales and/or marketing. Your general business background will help you there and there are numerous opportunities for someone that can add value to a company on the revenue side through effective communication and business understanding. If you have a hobby, see if you can find a sales role in that field and learn the ropes. You might not make a mint early on, but it shouldn't be any less than the pizza shop. I help people in this arena all day long. Good luck.
2006-08-07 05:53:07
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answer #2
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answered by John H 3
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The trick to making a job or career change is usually to have something in place and negotiated prior to leaving your current job. While the current job may not be what is ideal to you, it does pay the bills and provide you with insurance. In some cases, you have benefits like matching 401k programs working in your advantage too.
So, my guess is that you probably shouldn't have left your teaching job without have first lined something else up to go to. You can always negotiate a later start date if you want to take a week or two off between jobs to get a little R&R in there.
2006-08-07 06:01:39
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answer #3
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answered by BAM 7
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I were given married at 20, and had Stevie at 22 and that i'm waiting for yet another at 23. so that you receives no condescending comments the following! Kudos to you that you comprehend you want to be a mom and are planning round that. i imagine a occupation as a instructor is an surprising idea because college platforms are tremendous about operating round households and schedules. you may even proceed your training and develop right into a professor. I had a professor once that delivered her toddler to classification daily and wore her in a sling for the time of training. It changed into astounding!
2016-11-23 14:22:30
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answer #4
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answered by ? 4
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You should consider a career as a Recruiter. Go to hotjobs or monster.com and search under entry level recruiter. I was a recruiter and loved it. My company relocated to a bigger city and I am looking for other recruiting opportunities.
You basically work with companies to fill their staffing needs. You can be an IT recruiter, office administration recruiter, etc. You interview people all day, search resumes and work the phones. You are paid about $32K to start.
2006-08-07 05:57:31
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answer #5
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answered by Sal G 4
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someone never enjoy his job, if he doesn't like it..... You only be able to concentrate in a job that you want.. If you don't like to be a teacher...that's right you left it... And as a pizza boy..you have to make it sure that work as a pizza boy is your hopely job...So you are nearer with the success..... Do a job like you love your life...
2006-08-07 05:58:17
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answer #6
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answered by alexander19 2
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