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  #1  
Vieux 19/04/2008, 00h10
 
Date d'inscription: janvier 2007
Âge: 36
Messages: 253
Par défaut Canada's Top 100 Employers.

Dans l’édition du 9 octobre 2007 du magazine Maclean’s il a été publié le palmarès est des 100 meilleurs employeurs au Canada pour 2008.. Selon les rédacteurs du magazine, les 100 meilleures organisations sont en quelque sorte les meilleurs endroits au Canada pour mener une carrière qui se concilie avec votre vie et vos objectifs

cliquez ici pour Le Palmarès:

http://www.cusm.ca/files/top100/2007...pemployers.pdf

la source:

http://www.macleans.ca/article.jsp?c...ce=srch&page=1
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  #2  
Vieux 19/04/2008, 17h36
Avatar de camillia
 
Date d'inscription: juillet 2002
Messages: 359
Par défaut Re : Canada's Top 100 Employers.

ben je crois que j'ai une petite idée de la place ou je vais envoyer mon cv hahahahahah
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  #3  
Vieux 19/04/2008, 17h55
Avatar de forresterB
 
Date d'inscription: septembre 2006
Messages: 2 505
Par défaut Re : Canada's Top 100 Employers.

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ben je crois que j'ai une petite idée de la place ou je vais envoyer mon cv hahahahahah
Laisse moi deviner, McDonalds?
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  #4  
Vieux 19/04/2008, 18h25
Avatar de camillia
 
Date d'inscription: juillet 2002
Messages: 359
Puce Re : Canada's Top 100 Employers.

j'y travaille déja t'as un problème? J'ai meme été élue employée du mois en février alors tchhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhht... :P
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  #5  
Vieux 19/04/2008, 20h15
Avatar de forresterB
 
Date d'inscription: septembre 2006
Messages: 2 505
Par défaut Re : Canada's Top 100 Employers.

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j'y travaille déja t'as un problème? J'ai meme été élue employée du mois en février alors tchhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhht... :P
C'est bien je te felecite, continue courage
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  #6  
Vieux 19/04/2008, 20h27
Avatar de cuty-pie
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Date d'inscription: septembre 2006
Messages: 14 732
Par défaut Re: Re : Canada's Top 100 Employers.

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Laisse moi deviner, McDonalds?

Don't be too condescending.....Please read this article

Everybody has to start somewhere -- even the rich and famous. Michael Dell, founder and chairman of Dell Computer Corporation was a dishwasher at a Chinese restaurant earning $2.30 an hour; Bill Gates was a Congressional page in the Washington State Capitol; William Watkins, CEO of Seagate Technology, worked the night shift at a mental hospital restraining people who got out of control, while Sidney Kimmel, CEO of Jones New York, worked as a shipping clerk for Morton Manufacturing.

"It was hard work, but I loved the opportunity," Kimmel recalls.

Dell also is grateful for his early experience: "The best part was the wisdom of the restaurant owner, which I could capture if I came to work a little early. He took great pride in his work and cared about every customer who came through his door."

Michael Krasny, chairman emeritus and founder of CDW Computer Centers, says he learned a lot from his first "job" at age 10: clearing scrap wood from the house being built next door to him. "I got a few kids on the block to help me," Krasny recalls. "When we were done, I took them to 31 Flavors for ice cream. I learned you can't do it all yourself. You need to have a team around you."

Many of today's celebrities showed an early entrepreneurial sprit as well. Bill Murray stood outside a grocery store selling chestnuts; Rush Limbaugh shined shoes; Robin Williams performed as a street mime, and when no stores were interested in carrying his jeans, designer Tommy Hilfiger sold them to buyers from the trunk of his car.

Most did whatever it took to pay the bills while pursuing their passion. Early in their careers, Jerry Seinfeld sold light bulbs by phone; Demi Moore worked for a debt collection agency; Van Halen's David Lee Roth fluffed pillows and emptied bedpans as a hospital orderly; Madonna worked behind the counter at Dunkin' Donuts; Jennifer Aniston worked as a waitress; Brad Pitt moved refrigerators, and just months before he set world records in country music, Garth Brooks was still working as a salesman in a boot store
__________________
Never settle for less than the best
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  #7  
Vieux 19/04/2008, 21h34
Avatar de forresterB
 
Date d'inscription: septembre 2006
Messages: 2 505
Par défaut Re : Re: Re : Canada's Top 100 Employers.

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Don't be too condescending.....Please read this article

Everybody has to start somewhere -- even the rich and famous. Michael Dell, founder and chairman of Dell Computer Corporation was a dishwasher at a Chinese restaurant earning $2.30 an hour; Bill Gates was a Congressional page in the Washington State Capitol; William Watkins, CEO of Seagate Technology, worked the night shift at a mental hospital restraining people who got out of control, while Sidney Kimmel, CEO of Jones New York, worked as a shipping clerk for Morton Manufacturing.

"It was hard work, but I loved the opportunity," Kimmel recalls.

Dell also is grateful for his early experience: "The best part was the wisdom of the restaurant owner, which I could capture if I came to work a little early. He took great pride in his work and cared about every customer who came through his door."

Michael Krasny, chairman emeritus and founder of CDW Computer Centers, says he learned a lot from his first "job" at age 10: clearing scrap wood from the house being built next door to him. "I got a few kids on the block to help me," Krasny recalls. "When we were done, I took them to 31 Flavors for ice cream. I learned you can't do it all yourself. You need to have a team around you."

Many of today's celebrities showed an early entrepreneurial sprit as well. Bill Murray stood outside a grocery store selling chestnuts; Rush Limbaugh shined shoes; Robin Williams performed as a street mime, and when no stores were interested in carrying his jeans, designer Tommy Hilfiger sold them to buyers from the trunk of his car.

Most did whatever it took to pay the bills while pursuing their passion. Early in their careers, Jerry Seinfeld sold light bulbs by phone; Demi Moore worked for a debt collection agency; Van Halen's David Lee Roth fluffed pillows and emptied bedpans as a hospital orderly; Madonna worked behind the counter at Dunkin' Donuts; Jennifer Aniston worked as a waitress; Brad Pitt moved refrigerators, and just months before he set world records in country music, Garth Brooks was still working as a salesman in a boot store
"Early in their careers" not with a "university degree"

Ces jobs sont pour les adolescents, des etudiants secondaires, ...
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