HOW TO NAIL THAT
DREAM JOB: SOME TIPS FROM OUR RESIDENT EXPERT
Hello. My name is Mandrake U Cheesyfeet
My job is to apply spray tan Hollywood starlets who happen
to be cruising the Caribbean. I am paid $600 per minute (tax free on account of
the fact that I work in international waters) and I work for approximately half
an hour a week. As a perk of my job I have access to as much spray tan and
cosmetic surgery as I need - and a PlayStation 3
I have been asked by the directors of WorksWonders to
produce a series of articles on how to go about obtaining your dream job. Jane and Angela who run WW said they couldn’t
afford to pay me but that if I didn’t do it they would reveal exactly why I can
only work outside the jurisdiction of most right thinking countries
This Week’s Subject
- Applying For The Job
1.
Where
to look
Do not make the mistake of assuming that your dream job will
be advertised in the local free paper. NASA may not have the financial resources
to take out a classified in the Pukerua Bay Herald Tribune. Additionally some vacancies
are more obvious that others. Politicos might like keep an eye on the news for
the overthrow of dictators in nice sunny countries like The Seychelles. Those
of a sporting inclination might like to check the latest injury list for
cricket teams touring the West Indies. Those with significant experience in the
area of administration should…erm… check the local free paper.
2. Your letter of application
This is an area that is full of potential pitfalls. Let me
advise you from personal experience a few things to avoid
·
Do not claim to have superpowers such as the
ability to fly, become invisible or play the national anthem in bottom burps
(they may ask you to demonstrate them at interview)
·
Do not put people down as referees that you do
not personally know. The Dalai Lama Nelson Mandela and Emperor Napoleon cannot
be relied upon to back you up.
·
Do not claim that when Winston Churchill said “Never
in the field of human conflict was so much owed by so many to so few” that he was
referring to you personally. Some employers have a basic knowledge of history and
you might be caught out.
·
Do not claim to be responsible for things that
can be easily checked on the internet. Remember you were not the one who successfully landed that jet airliner on the
Hudson River nor were you the third man on the moon nor did you advise
President Reagan on his choice of pubic wig (actually that one is quite
difficult to verify)
·
Do by all means make claims that are a matter of
opinion. You can claim to be better looking than Brad or Angelina as beauty is
in the eye of the beholder. You can also claim that if you were playing you
would have holed that putt on the 3 extra hole that would have won the US
masters unlike the useless choker who didn’t.
3. Finishing your letter
A polite "thank you, I look forward to hearing from you
soon” is standard and serves many people well. But have you considered the following; “ Failure to employ me would be
a catastrophe not just for you and your company but for the world as a whole. We are heading
for global oblivion and only you and I - working together - are the people who
have the power save the planet and make Earth the paradise it should always remain”
(No? – me neither)
4. Signing off.
You have 5 options
“Your faithfully” is standard
“Yours sincerely” if you have been intimate with the bosses’
son/daughter
“Yours respectfully” if you have been intimate with the
bosses wife/ husband
“Yo dude, catch ya later” if the job is anything to do with
running a brothel
“Stick your job where the sun don’t shine” if the boss also
happens to be a leading politician
NEXT WEEK
Attending the job Interview and how to pick out lucky underpants
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