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Learning Jargon for Your Job Columbus MS

In order to be successful transitioning from one industry to another, you’d better be able to sling the jargon and use the right acronyms as appropriate. When the interviewer tosses out some acronyms you better know exactly what they’re talking about.

Experience Works
(662) 328-2477
1425 10th Ave N
Columbus, MS
Key Staff Source, Inc.
(662) 327-8230
117 9th St N
Columbus, MS
URW Local Union No 748
(662) 327-2455
106 Yorkville Rd E
Columbus, MS
Safety Equipment Corp
601-939-3313
403 Towne Center Blvd
Ridgeland, MS
Jackson WIN Job Center
601-321-7931
5959 I 55 N. Frontage Road
Jackson, MS
Golden Triangle WIN Job Center
662-328-6876
5000 North Frontage Rd.
Columbus, MS
Plumbers And Steamfitters Local 714
(662) 327-1011
2216 Short Main St
Columbus, MS
Insulators Workers Local Union 114
(662) 327-9057
1136 Old Yorkville Rd S
Columbus, MS
Batesville WIN Job Center
662-563-7318
103-16 Woodland Road, Tylertown Plaza
Batesville, MS
IBEW Local Union
(601) 372-4650
I-55 S
Jackson, MS
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Learning Jargon for Your Job

So, you want to change verticals; financial services is no longer your cup of tea — maybe you are thinking of moving to a role in healthcare. Or maybe you spent your whole life working in engineering and think it might be good idea to work for an investment bank. Certainly, it is not uncommon to change jobs or industries multiple times throughout your professional career. But, you better make sure you can talk the talk as well as walk the walk. It is not just enough that you can get the job done. When you walk into the interview, the first thing the interviewer thinks is “Wow this person’s background is impressive but he has no experience in <insert vertical here. >

In order to be successful transitioning from one industry to another, you’d better be able to sling the jargon and use the right acronyms as appropriate. When the interviewer tosses out some acronyms you better know exactly what they’re talking about.

If you are thinking about moving healthcare to financial services, you better know what CLO, CDO, RMBS, ADR, IMF, FX, and M&A mean. If you have worked in engineering firms since you graduated college and you think that life in healthcare might be more fulfilling and interesting you better know what HIPAA, FDA, JCAHO, MMIS, NHS, ICU, and OSHA are. Moving from financial services to engineering firm TQM, AI, JIT, and RFID better be in your glossary. There are others too, too numerous to count.

You may think that acronym soup is useless when you try to find a job. This is anything but true; acronyms and industry jargon are kind of like the ticket to get into the exclusive party without waiting on line in the cold.

So, how do you close the gap between what you know now and what you need to know to get that new job? Research, research, and more research. Every industry has countless websites devoted to discussing the ins and outs and the pros and cons; and these sites will be replete with acronyms and jargon that at first glance seem to be Greek. Read and learn — if you find a word that is unfamiliar or appears to be out of context look it up. Keep reading. If you see an acronym, even if you think you know what it is look it up and make sure that you have context when you do so. Searching for an acronym and the industry in which it is used will yield much better results than just searching for the acronym.

Any if any of the above acronyms seem foreign to you, I have provided a bouillabaisse of...

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