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1) think of fellow workers
2) consider where you want to end up
3) evaluate the rewards
4) make a list


could anyone possibly help me out with insulting me or telling me that i should do my home work FYI its called yahoo ANSWERS

2007-09-19 11:37:22 · 3 answers · asked by Schnickyyy 1 in Science & Mathematics Engineering

3 answers

"could anyone possibly help me out with insulting me"

i have a feeling you didn't really mean to say that. Anyway, perverse as ever, I will refuse to insult you and instead point out the most important thing in any planning, the thing which you must never, EVER forget.

0) Include some patsy to take the blame for you when it all goes wrong (as it inevitably will). Because, lets face it, if we could plan these things properly, what the hell would we be doing here?

2007-09-19 12:33:58 · answer #1 · answered by LabMonkey 3 · 0 1

I am torn between 2) and 3) .... rewards are as yet unknown, and the idea is to aim at something, so I'll choose 2)

P.S. In all fairness, there is just something about these questions that makes me, for one, want to frolic and play! I hope I have not dug myself into a hole by my answer to anoither of your questions. I promise to be serious! I need to pass "Manners" and "Charm School", too.

2007-09-21 03:01:10 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

Forget it. This is the kind of b.s. that is taught in survey courses in sub-par engineering schools. "action plans", "mission statements" and similar buzzwords are useless concepts in real world engineering careers. The way to get to higher levels of responsibility and salary in Engineering is to be an agressive, vocal and successful problem solver.

2007-09-20 14:08:45 · answer #3 · answered by squeezie_1999 7 · 0 2

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