In order to even be considered for a job position, one must have experience in that field of work.
How does one attain that experience in the first place if nobody will hire those without experience?
The world may never know.
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How did the person who invented the clock know what time it was?
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You don't need experience for entry level jobs. For college educated jobs you need to do personal goals that gives you experience in the field then show it. For example 3d art. Make 3d art of certain things use that to show bosses that you have experience.
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Learn. Not hard. -blam!-ing lazy millennials.
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It's the age-old catch-22. Sucks doesn't it?
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Apply yourself
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You just lie, it's very simple.
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Well with the billions of people working today it shouldn't be too hard
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Interview the interviewer
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[quote]In order to even be considered for a job position, one must have experience in that field of work. How does one attain that experience in the first place if nobody will hire those without experience? The world may never know.[/quote] Lol
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The last interview i went to, i knew the interviewer personally and she gave me the job anyway. Really -blam!-ed the interview up too.
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Edited by Commander Tempu: 1/17/2017 8:27:29 AMFill out application in crayon. Then draw rocket ships on it. Sure they might have you fill one out online. Reality is you fill out application. Have Common Sense. Talk with Manager. Sound like you are intelligent. Have a nice discussion with them. Wait two weeks see if they call you back sometimes. Just the way it works. Work history is a good thing. Being on time ready to work not crying you got to be there. Getting the job done and doing what is asked is how you keep a job. I have done plenty of jobs i did not like. Fast Food In particular. But i did it. Made the best of it. Doing security was a step up. Still a dead end job. Not like i get to work for bungie doing security. Security company's differ. Reality is you do what you are tasked with. If people can trust you to do it without supervision the better. So do the job 110% and people will come to rely on you.
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Not true at all, most entry level jobs don't require experience. For the ones that do you really need to know someone who might be able to get your inexperience overlooked.
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Edited by Catty_Wampus22: 1/17/2017 7:39:00 AMNot everywhere. I've gotten jobs with no previous experience before. Nail the interview and speak with proper grammar and you'd be amazed.
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Volunteer service. Extra curricular activities.
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Having connections to someone at the job you're applying for tends to help.
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Not just experience in the field will get you a job but proof of responsibility. When I told my first employer that I was doing a professionalism class in HS, he hired me on the spot.
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Nepotism
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-Lie -Find a place that doesn't require experience -Don't get a job -Fake your own death, go to Canada and live off the fat of the land -Internship
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-intern -student assistant job (if you're a student...). Also depends on what you're looking to do. -a good ass resume -know some people...
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Kill someone and take their position. Wear their face and clothing as a transitional period. Continue to kill underlings as you work your way up the ranks. Repeat until you are CEO.
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Edited by Britton: 1/16/2017 10:16:54 PMIt's all about how you write the resume. Bag boy? Nah. You've got experience in customer service, equipment maintenance and upkeep, as well as experience as a management liason.
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Blow the interviewer
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Edited by FuzeMainIn2k17: 1/16/2017 7:49:01 PMaccurate
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Unless you get a government job, in which case experience and capability are completely irrelevant
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Know a guy who knows a girl who knows a girl who has an uncle who knows a guy who knows another guy who has a son that knows a girl that knows a guy that's the owner's son.
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Shake hands firmly. But not too firmly.