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Job Interview Tips

Job Interview Tips

An interview gives you the opportunity to showcase your qualifications to an employer, so it pays to be well prepared. The following information provides some helpful hints.

Preparation:

  • Learn about the organization.
  • Have a specific job or jobs in mind.
  • Review your qualifications for the job.
  • Be ready to briefly describe your experience, showing how it relates it the job.
  • Be ready to answer broad questions, such as “Why should I hire you?” “Why do you want this job?” “What are your strengths and weaknesses?”
  • Practice an interview with a friend or relative.
  • Personal appearance:

  • Be well groomed.
  • Dress appropriately.
  • Do not chew gum or smoke.
  • The interview:

  • Be early.
  • Learn the name of your interviewer and greet him or her with a firm handshake.
  • Use good manners with everyone you meet.
  • Relax and answer each question concisely.
  • Use proper English—avoid slang.
  • Be cooperative and enthusiastic.
  • Use body language to show interest—use eye contact and don’t slouch.
  • Ask questions about the position and the organization, but avoid questions whose answers can easily be found on the company Web site.
  • Also avoid asking questions about salary and benefits unless a job offer is made.
  • Thank the interviewer when you leave and shake hands.
  • Send a short thank you note following the interview.
  • Information to bring to an interview:

  • Social Security card.
  • Government-issued identification (driver’s license).
  • Resume or application. Although not all employers require a resume, you should be able to furnish the interviewer information about your education, training, and previous employment.
  • References. Employers typically require three references. Get permission before using anyone as a reference. Make sure that they will give you a good reference. Try to avoid using relatives as references.
  • Transcripts. Employers may require an official copy of transcripts to verify grades, coursework, dates of attendance, and highest grade completed or degree awarded.
  • Source: Occupational Outlook Handbook, 2010-11 Edition

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    Your Resume ~ No One Really Reads Them So Why Are Resumes So Important?!

    by Bill Golden CEO, USAJobZoo.com, IntelligenceCareers.com and USADefenseIndustryJobs.com

    Resumes & Jobs / The Rare Find: Reinventing Recruiting – Businessweek http://ow.ly/70OF1 … BusinessWeek writes:

    “A new era of talent hunting has begun. It’s happening not only at high-tech companies such as Facebook, but also at Army bases, ad agencies, investment banks, Hollywood studies, corporate boardrooms, college admissions offices, and even at nanny agencies. In all these fields, experts don’t just sort résumés. They pick people and build teams in a profoundly different way. Traditional measures of past achievement, such as test scores and academic degrees, are losing power, and companies are getting better at looking for those future superstars who deliver many times the value of someone who is merely good.”

    BusinessWeek’s article is a good read … yet while it sounds all good and futuristic the methods discussed really apply to probably less than 1% of the 1% of people that find jobs.

    For really, really unique jobs this has been true for awhile ~~ testing of individuals and creative interviews with current staff. (I once worked in a technology company where every potential hire was voted upon by current employees before they were hired, circa 1998). However, the 99.99% of the rest of the workforce world needs to stay focused on getting found ~~ and that still requires a resume.

    Getting found requires a good resume and an understanding of how those resumes get found.

    Best approach on the planet: network. Meet people or let folks know that you are searching for a new career challenge. Make your resume for them to pass along. This method probably accounts for 50-60% of all hires in the technical and professional world. Many companies even pay their employees bonuses for recommeding someone that eventually gets hired ~~ but a resume is still very much required as the person recommending you must submit a resume to the HR department to get the process started.

    Second best approach (works for the few): be good at what you do. Employers often do the reverse of the above ~~ they ask others ‘who do you know that does …?’ Once you get approached, you may be asked to meet but your resume will need to accompany you.

    Next second best approach (works for the many): don’t send out resumes willy-nilly. It just costs postage and they rarely get read. If you are lucky you will get a note in email that says please visit our website and add your resume. You need to get your resume in a resume database appropriate to your skillset and interests. There are many niche and specialized resume databases on jobboards, plus you need to add your resume to the corporate websites resume databases.

    Your resume being in a database is very important. The overwhelming majority of recruiters do not read resumes. They use search statistics to identify candidates.

    How a resume database gets used: a set of job criteria entered into a resume search system returns a statistical value as to the probability that you are a person that should be considered as matching their needs (kinda like dating services). If there is a high degree of match then only then does your resume ever get read ~~ assuming that you were probably a 90-95% or higher match.

    Your resume and having a resume is very important, and will be for a long time to come. So you may find yourself in some interesting interview situations but it will all begin with a resume for a very long time to come.

    We want your resume at USAJobZoo.com !

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    Which is the greater threat? Terrorists or Narco~Terrorists and Cartels? Texas is the gateway.

    Excerpts from ‘TEXAS BORDER SECURITY: A Strategic Military Assessment’

    During the past two years the state of Texas has become increasingly threatened by the spread of Mexican cartel organized crime. The threat reflects a change in the strategic intent of the cartels to move their operations into the United States. In effect, the cartels seek to create a “sanitary zone” inside the Texas border ~~ one county deep ~~ that will provide sanctuary from Mexican law enforcement and, at the same time, enable the cartels to transform Texas’ border counties into narcotics transshipment points for continued transport and distribution into the continental United States.


    The authors of this September 2011 report are retired four-star Army General Barry McCaffrey and retired Army Major-General Robert Scales, both retired senior military executives bring more than 80 years of military and governmental service to their perspective on Texas border security viewed in terms of the classic levels of conflict: strategic, operational and tactical.

    General Barry McCaffrey is the former Director of the Office of National Drug Control Policy under President Bill Clinton and former Commander of all U.S. troops in Central and South America. Major-General Robert Scales is the former Commandant of the United States Army War College.

    The report offers a military perspective on how to best incorporate strategic, operational and tactical measures to secure the increasingly hostile border regions along the Rio Grande River. It also provides sobering evidence of cartel criminals gaining ground on Texas soil.


    To achieve their objectives the cartels are relying increasingly on organized gangs to provide expendable and unaccountable manpower to do their dirty work. These gangs are recruited on the streets of Texas cities and inside Texas prisons by top-tier gangs who work in conjunction with the cartels.

    America’s fight against narco-terrorism, when viewed at the strategic level, takes on the classic trappings of a real war. Crime, gangs and terrorism have converged in such a way that they form a collective threat to the national security of the United States. America is being assaulted not just from across our southern border but from across the hemisphere and beyond. All of Central and South America have become an interconnected source of violence and terrorism.

    Drug cartels exploit porous borders using all the traditional elements of military force, including command and control, logistics, intelligence, information operations and the application of increasingly deadly firepower. The intention is to increasingly bring governments at all levels throughout the Americas under the influence of international cartels.

    At the tactical level of war the cartels seek to gain advantage by exploiting the creases between U.S. federal and state border agencies, and the separation that exists between Mexican and American crime-fighting agencies. Border law enforcement and political officials are the tactical focal point. Sadly, the tactical level is poorly resourced and the most vulnerable to corruption by cartels. To win the tactical fight the counties must have augmentation, oversight and close support from operational and strategic forces.

    History has shown that a common border offers an enemy sanctuary zone and the opportunity to expand his battlespace in depth and complexity. Our border with Mexico is no exception. Criminality spawned in Mexico is spilling over into the United States. Texas is the tactical close combat zone and frontline in this conflict. Texans have been assaulted by cross-border gangs and narco-terrorist activities. In response, Texas has been the most aggressive and creative in confronting the threat of what has come to be a narco-terrorist military-style campaign being waged against them.

    Texas as a Narco-Sanctuary

    A successful sanctuary permits insurgents to move freely and operate on whichever side offers greater security. In a curious twist of irony, the more successful the Mexican military becomes in confronting the cartels, the greater likelihood that cartels will take the active fight into Texas as they compete against each other in the battle to control distribution territories and corridors Federal authorities are reluctant to admit to the increasing cross-border campaign by narcoterrorists. Until lately, denial has been facilitated by a dearth of evidence that an organized and substantial campaign exists inside Texas.

    Evidence collected for this report, principally from Texas border counties, reveals a palpable sense of frustration concerning the effectiveness of U.S. federal border operations.

    Accounts of this violence, both data driven and anecdotal, compiled by federal agencies, Congressional testimony and the Texas Department of Agriculture underscores the daily activity and constant threat of a larger presence of narco-terrorists than previously thought.

    The Federal Department of Homeland Security (DHS) does not attribute many narco-crimes to the cartels. Many cross-border crimes are routinely not reported by border farmers and ranchers due to fear of retribution from cartels. The cartel’s foot soldiers who fight the tactical battle in Texas are “transnational gang” members many of whom are drawn from prison gangs such as the Mexican Mafia, Texas Syndicate, Tango Blast, Barrio Azteca and others that formed in U.S. prisons for self preservation and protection from other gangs.

    These transnational gangs not only have continued to expand in Texas and the nation but constitute a very tightly knit network of cooperation and connectivity that has been growing between prison gangs and Mexican cartels.

    Read the full report: http://tinyurl.com/3eawkyn

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    FYI Tidbits – Seven Tips For Finding the Job You Want

    It’s tough to find a job these days, much less the job of one’s dreams, in the slowly-healing economy. Long gone is the era when a good resume and a few interviews did the trick. Yet too many of us still chase our dreams in the same old ways. Says contrarian headhunter Nick Corcodilos, “If you don’t believe America’s employment system is broken, ask yourself why your resumes don’t lead to interviews, and why interviews don’t lead to job offers. “ Corcodilos, publisher of Ask The Headhunter, says the problem is automation. “Job offers don’t come from job postings; they come from people. Your gut tells you that, but your behavior suggests you’re wasting too much time waiting for a job to come along.” Here, he offers some actionable tips to landing a position, even in these trying times. Corcodilos’s “Ask The Headhunter” books—including “Answer Kit: How Can I Change Careers?” and “How to Work with Headhunters. . . and How To Make Headhunters Work For You offer more in-depth ideas for getting or changing jobs.

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    http://tinyurl.com/3gxhj2a

    FYI Tidbits – DHS “pre~crime” detectors draw criticism

    A plan by DHS officials to use automated machines to identify people before they commit a criminal or terrorist act is drawing sharp criticism from privacy advocates; DHS is currently developing intention detectors under the Future Attributer Screening Technology (FAST) program; the FAST security checkpoints are outfitted with a sophisticated suite of sensors that are designed to identify several physiological indicators like heart rate or the steadiness of a person’s gaze.

    ===============

    http://www.homelandsecuritynewswire.com/dhs-pre-crime-detectors-draw-criticism

    Salary Negotiation as a Crisis Intervention Moment

    Salary Negotiation as a Crisis Intervention Moment

    Unless you are working for a non-negotiable hourly wage then your salary is ALWAYS negotiable.

    Employers will put the task of outlining your salary on YOU!

    It is possible that employers will pay different individuals doing the same exact job very different amounts. The difference can be several tens of thousands of dollars.

    The article below was originally written for very different purposes. As you read it, keep in mind that your goal is to make the other person (the employer) both cooperative and a participant in the negotiation. If they ask all the questions and you only focus on giving answers then you lose.

    Rule Nr. 1: Never go into a negotiation not knowing the basic groundrules. Curious how much your current market value is? Visit us at http://tinyurl.com/453bf7g and we can give you a quick estimate ~~ a fairly accurate estimate since the data are collected from others already working in that industry.

    Rule Nr. 2: See Rule Nr. 1: Know your value before you ever start a negotiation. If an employer starts low then be prepared to walk or to accept their number. But if the offer is low then the numbers that we provide are available elsewhere. It is your decision.

    If the employer offers a much higher salary then ask yourself: why? Be sure to ask about how long the assignment is or how long the contract has remaining on it. Some employers pump up the salary because their current workforce has seen the writing on the wall and are leaving before it is too late. Since the work must get done then some employers pump up salaries beyond what should be normally expected. Be aware!

    Best regards, Bill Golden CEO, IntelligenceCareers.com aka USAJobZoo.com and USADefenseIndustryJobs.com

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    Crisis Intervention: Using Active Listening Skills in Negotiations

    By Gary W. Noesner, M. Ed. and Mike Webster, Ed. D.

    Source: Law Enforcement Bulletin – August 1997, Published on USAF Air University at http://tinyurl.com/3p3vklm

    Negotiators can use active listening skills to help resolve critical incidents involving expressive subjects.

    Special Agent Noesner is the chief negotiator with the FBI’s Critical Incident Response Group, Crisis Management Unit, at the FBI Academy. Dr. Webster, a former member of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, heads a private law enforcement consulting firm in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.

    When responding to a critical incident involving a hostage taker or barricaded subject, crisis negotiators generally confront one of two types of behavior-instrumental or expressive. Instrumental behavior is characterized by substantive demands and clearly recognizable objectives that, if attained, will benefit the subject. Negotiators can best address this goal-directed behavior through the strategies of bargaining or problem solving.

    Expressive behavior, on the other hand, is designed to com-municate the subject’s frustration, outrage, passion, despair, anger, or other feelings. The actions of a subject who is in an expressive mode often appear illogical and highly emotional, given the lack of sub-stantive or goal-oriented demands. Moreover, the critical incident itself may be of a self-destructive nature. Expressive behavior stems from the subject’s need to ventilate and is best addressed through a strategy of active listening.

    Although these two very different modes of behavior represent opposite ends of a continuum, subjects often exhibit elements of both types during an incident. In other words, a subject’s behavior, while predominantly one type or another, may slide along the continuum between instrumental and expressive, making it difficult for responding law enforcement personnel to develop a negotiation strategy.

    Still, the majority of critical incidents to which law enforcement responds involve subjects who are motivated primarily by emotional needs and exhibit mainly expressive behaviors.1 These incidents may involve jilted lovers, disgruntled employees or students, mood-disordered or psychotic subjects, suicidal individuals, or individuals who, for whatever reason, believe that they or their beliefs have been threatened or demeaned by society.

    Although they may make limited instrumental demands, these subjects are more concerned with expressing their anger, hurt, despair, or beliefs of being treated unfairly than they are in bargaining in a rational manner. They have lost their equilibrium and are experiencing heightened levels of arousal that interfere with their ability to function normally.2 While all critical incidents pose distinct problems, negotiators often find it particularly difficult to accommodate subjects who act out of emotional rage and appear to lack a clear sense of purpose. Although expressive subjects might do a good deal of talking during negotiations, they generally have difficulty articulating their true needs in an understandable way.

    Therefore, negotiators must be able to guide expressive subjects into clearly stating the nature of their dilemmas and articulating their demands so that law enforcement can address them. In recent years, the FBI’s Critical Incident Response Group (CIRG) has adopted a negotiation technique designed to elicit such information by providing negotiators with the skills to help expressive subjects sort out their often-scattered thoughts and feelings. By using active listening skills, negotiators control the tone of negotiations while they build the empathy necessary to win subjects’ confidence and to resolve tense situations.

    In order to employ these listening skills successfully, negotiators first must understand the nature of crises. Indeed, when negotiators arrive at the scene of a critical incident to begin negotiations, they must remember that the subject is already in the midst of considerable internal turmoil. To lead the subject out of crisis, negotiators must appreciate the factors that created the situation in the first place.

    THE NATURE OF CRISES

    A crisis overrides an individual’s normal psychological and biological coping mechanisms.3 Several features of critical incidents account for the overwhelming and bewildering nature of a crisis.

    As people grow and develop, they continually meet new demands. These demands could be intellectual, employment-related, economic, or rooted in relationships with other people. Individuals meet these demands and practice resolving them so often that they form coping mechanisms, or “cognitive maps,” to deal with them. These maps assist people who face a potential problem to categorize it, determine the resources needed to overcome it, choose a solution, and set a goal for the problem’s resolution.

    Occasionally, however, individuals confront situations they have seldom or never encountered in the past. As a result, they have not developed adequate coping mechanisms to deal with them. These crises leave individuals feeling overwhelmed and powerless. For many people, these crises cause their heightened emotions to impair their ability to think rationally.

    As a consequence of feeling powerless and helpless, individuals may experience extreme levels of physiological arousal in the form of anxiety~~the natural human response to threat and danger. This anxiety serves to disrupt further their ability to think clearly. Consequently, when individuals face a crisis, their increased levels of arousal interfere with attempts to cope with an already incomprehensible circumstance.

    During situations of crisis, people spontaneously turn to others for comfort, support, understanding, and protection. Some research suggests that people possess a biological need for attachment.4 Crises, however, have the potential to disconnect individuals from necessary sources of support.5 When the cry for attachment and support is not answered due to others’ misunderstanding of, fear of, anger with, disappointment in, or disagreement with the individual in crisis, that person feels utterly abandoned.

    The absence of support during a crisis represents the loss of the primary human coping resource. Without the sense of security provided by others, the troubled individual’s already extreme state of physiological arousal is exacerbated further. As a growing feeling of despair sets in, the person feels unable to escape the crisis. When all roads back to equilibrium seem blocked, the individual’s ability to cope becomes overwhelmed.

    As every attempt to deal with the perceived threat seemingly meets with failure, the individual learns to do nothing.6 This state of “learned helplessness” is characterized by constricted thinking and an inability to see even the most obvious solutions. Instead, the individual focuses on moment-to-moment survival. This shift in thinking only complicates the individual’s situation, serving to undermine the sense of personal competence and effectiveness while increasing anxiety even more.

    BREAKING DOWN DEFENSES

    Individuals whose heightened state of anxiety and reduced self-esteem cause them to react recklessly to crisis situations usually come in contact with law enforcement. For responding negotiators, crisis intervention generally involves an intense effort, within a relatively short period of time, to lower physiological arousal and return subjects to equilibrium, or at least to a more normal functional level. Negotiators can help subjects in crisis return to a more rational state by providing them with support during a time of confusion. Active listening represents a powerful tool to stimulate positive change in others.

    Despite the popular notion that listening is a passive behavior, abundant clinical evidence and research suggest that active listening is an effective way to induce behavioral change in others.7 When listened to by others, individuals tend to listen to themselves more carefully and to evaluate and clarify their own thoughts and feelings. In addition, they tend to become better problem solvers, growing less defensive and oppositional and more accepting of other points of view. Subjects who are met with an empathetic ear also become less fearful of being criticized and grow more inclined to adopt a realistic appraisal of their own position.

    Through the course of their development, people construct a set of beliefs. In a very general sense, the interaction between beliefs related to self and those related to the world determine an individual’s behavior in any situation.8 However, viewpoints related to self-that is, a person’s self-image-represent the most cherished and vital components in the belief system.

    Accordingly,mpeoplemfeel threatened by any direct attempt by others to challenge or change their self-images. These perceived threats cause subjects in crisis to defend even more strongly their image of themselves and deny any challenges to it. Objective observers might view these efforts as constricted thinking and rigid behavior. To subjects in crisis, however, they represent the only avenues open to preserve a sense of themselves amidst the chaos in their lives. Because active listening poses no threat to an individual’s self-image, it can help a subject become less defensive. Thus, active listening creates fertile ground for negotiation and, eventually, change.

    If negotiators hope to change a subject’s behavior-that is, restore the individual’s equilibrium and increase the subject’s ability to think more clearly and act less violently~~they must remove themselves as threats. As long as the subject perceives the atmosphere as threatening, no meaningful communication can take place. Without communication, negotiators cannot build the rapport necessary to bring about behavioral change in the subject.

    Accordingly, negotiators must avoid intimidating, demeaning, lecturing, criticizing, and evaluating subjects. They must create an atmosphere of empathy and respect. Only in this climate will subjects feel safe enough to consider alternate perspectives and become receptive to positive suggestions from negotiators. By employing active listening skills, negotiators help create an environment for positive change.

    ACTIVE LISTENING SKILLS

    In recent years, the FBI and a growing number of law enforcement agencies have used active listening to resolve volatile confrontations successfully. These positive results have led the FBI to incorporate and emphasize active listening skills in its crisis negotiation training. The following seven techniques constitute the core elements of the active listening approach the FBI teaches. Together, these techniques provide a framework for negotiators to respond to the immediate emotional needs of expressive subjects, clearing the way for behavioral changes that must occur before negotiators can resolve critical incidents.

    Minimal Encouragements

    During negotiations with a subject, negotiators must demonstrate that they are listening attentively and are focused on the subject’s words. Negotiators can convey these qualities either through body language or brief verbal replies that relate interest and concern. The responses need not be lengthy. By giving occasional, brief, and well-timed vocal replies, negotiators demonstrate that they are following what the subject says. Even relatively simple phrases, such as “yes,” “O.K.,” or “I see,” effectively convey that a negotiator is paying attention to the subject. These responses will encourage the subject to continue talking and gradually relinquish more control of the situation to the negotiator.

    Paraphrasing

    Paraphrasing consists of ne-gotiators’ repeating in their own words the meaning of subjects’ messages back to them. This shows that negotiators are not only listening but also understanding what the subject is conveying.

    For example, the subject might say, “What’s the use in trying to go on anymore. I’ve lost my job of 18 years, my wife has left me for good, I have no money and no friends. I’d be better off dead.” In response, the negotiator might express understanding by paraphrasing the subject’s words, “You’ve lost your job and your wife, there is no one to turn to, and you’re not sure if you want to go on living.”

    Emotion Labeling

    Because expressive subjects operate from an almost purely emotional framework, negotiators must address the emotional di-mensions of a crisis as the subject sees them. Emotion labeling allows negotiators to attach a tentative label to the feelings expressed or implied by the subject’s words and actions. Such labeling shows that negotiators are paying attention to the emotional aspects of what the subject is conveying. When used effectively, emotion labeling becomes one of the most powerful skills available to negotiators because it helps them identify the issues and feelings that drive the subject’s behavior.

    A negotiator might say, “You sound as though you are so angry over being fired from your job that you want to make your supervisor suffer for what happened.” In response, a subject might agree with the negotiator’s statement and thereby validate the assessment. Or, the subject could modify or correct the assessment: “Yes, I’m angry, but I don’t want to hurt anyone. I just want my job back.” Either way, negotiators have learned something important about the subject’s emotions, needs, and contemplated plans.

    Mirroring

    By mirroring, negotiators repeat only the last words or main idea of the subject’s message. It serves as both an attending and listening technique, as it indicates both interest and understanding. For example, a subject may declare, “I’m sick and tired of being pushed around,” to which the negotiator can respond, “Feel pushed, huh?”

    Mirroring can be especially helpful in the early stages of a crisis, as negotiators attempt to es-tablish a nonconfrontational presence, gain initial intelligence, and begin to build rapport. This technique allows negotiators to follow verbally wherever the subject leads the conversation. Consequently, negotiators learn valuable information about the circumstances surrounding the incident, while they provide the subject an opportunity to vent.

    This technique also frees negotiators from the pressure of constantly directing the conversation. Under stress, negotiators may find they are unsure of how to respond to the subject. Mirroring enables a negotiator to be a full partner in the conversational dance without having to lead. Using this skill also helps negotia-tors avoid asking questions interrogation-style, which blocks rapport building.

    Open-ended Questions

    By using open-ended questions, negotiators stimulate the subject to talk. Negotiators should avoid asking “why” questions, which could imply interrogation. When the subject speaks, negotiators gain greater insight into the subject’s intent. Effective negotiations focus on learning what the subject thinks and feels. If negotiators do most of the talking, they decrease the opportunities to learn about the subject. Additional examples of effective open-ended questions include, “Can you tell me more about that?” “I didn’t understand what you just said; could you help me better understand by explaining that further?” and “Could you tell me more about what happened to you today?”

    “I” Messages

    By using “I” messages, a negotiator ostensibly sheds the negotiator role and acts as any other person might in response to the subject’s actions. In an unprovocative way, negotiators express how they feel when the subject does or says certain things.

    For instance, a negotiator might say, “We have been talking for several hours, and I feel frustrated that we haven’t been able to come to an agreement.” This technique also serves as an effective response when the subject verbally attacks the negotiator, who can respond, “I feel frustrated when you scream at me because I am trying to help you.”

    While employing this skill~~and all active listening techniques~~negotiators must avoid being pulled into an argument or trading personal attacks with a subject. An argumentative, sarcastic, or hostile tone could reinforce the subject’s already negative view of law enforcement and cause the subject to rationalize increased resistance due to a lack of perceived concern on the part of the police. Use of “I” messages serves to personalize the negotiator. This helps to move the negotiator beyond the role of a police officer trying to manipulate the subject into surrendering.

    Effective Pauses

    By deliberately using pauses, negotiators can harness the power of silence for effect at appropriate times. People tend to speak to fill spaces in a conversation. Therefore, negotiators should, on occasion, consciously create a space or void that will encourage the subject to speak and, in the process, provide additional information that may help negotiators resolve the situation.

    Silence also is an effective response when subjects engage in highly charged emotional outbursts. When they fail to elicit a verbal response, subjects often calm down to verify that negotiators are still listening. Eventually, even the most emotionally overwrought subjects will find it difficult to sustain a one-sided argument, and they again will return to meaningful dialogue with negotiators. Thus, by remaining silent at the right times, negotiators actually can move the overall negotiation process forward.

    NEGOTIATION TOOLS

    In combination, active listening skills can help negotiators demonstrate that the negotiation team sincerely wants to help the subject out of a difficult situation. No set formula exists for using these skills, however. The application of some or all of the skills should depend upon the specifics of the situation confronting negotiators.

    Negotiators should look at these skills as tools to be applied as deemed appropriate during a crisis situation. Like all tools, they should be used only to perform the jobs for which they are intended.

    THE CHANGE PROCESS

    The application of active listening skills helps to create an empathic relationship between negotiators and the subject. Demonstrating this empathy tends to build rapport and, in time, change the subject’s behavior. This approach to crisis intervention represents an effort over a relatively short period of time to stabilize emotions and restore the subject’s ability to think more rationally.

    However, when dealing with expressive subjects, negotiators should avoid the standard law enforcement inclination to resolve the problem as rapidly as possible. Even the most well-orchestrated negotiations take time.

    People tend to listen to and follow the advice of individuals who have influence over them. Negotiators generally achieve peaceful resolutions only after they demonstrate their desire to be nonjudgmental, nonthreatening, and understanding of the subject’s feelings. By projecting that understanding, negotiators show empathy and lead the subject to perceive them, not as the enemy, but as concerned individuals who want to help.

    Applying active listening skills and showing empathy establish a degree of rapport between negotiators and subjects that can lead to the discussion of nonviolent alternatives to resolve incidents. The rapport creates an environment where negotiators can suggest various alternatives that the subject previously could not see or would not consider.

    Subjects who turn to negotiators and say, “I’m so confused and scared. What should I do to get out of this situation?” have reached a point where, due to the rapport-building efforts of negotiators, they are ready to accept advice on the best way to resolve the situation. Such a query provides an opening that negotiators can use to influence the actions of the subject by suggesting alternatives and offering solutions.

    CONCLUSION

    Crisis negotiators must respond to critical incidents involving individuals who display a variety of behavioral traits. However, during the majority of critical incidents, negotiators confront subjects who manifest predominantly expressive behavior.

    Expressive subjects are in a state of crisis that blocks their normal coping mechanisms for handling stress. Their thinking becomes highly constricted and disorganized, making it difficult for them to deal logically with their problems and exercise good judgment. Skilled and patient negotiators can significantly influence such a subject’s behavior by being supportive and nonconfrontational.

    By applying active listening skills, negotiators demonstrate that they are not a threat to the sub- ject and that their goal is to help rather than harm. When negotiators demonstrate empathy and understanding, they build rapport, which, in turn, enables them to influence the subject’s actions by providing nonviolent problem-solving alternatives. In short, by demonstrating support and empathy, negotiators often can talk an expressive subject into surrendering largely by listening.

    Footnotes

    1 This information is based on the authors’ experiences and consultations with crisis negotiators around the world.

    2 R.M. Yerkes and J.D. Dodson, “The Relation of Strength of Stimulus to Rapidity of Habit Formation,” Journal of Comparative and Neurological Psychology, 18, 1908, 459-482; E.R. Hilgard et al., Introduction to Psychology, 6th ed. (New York: Harcourt, Brace, Jovanovich, 1975).

    3 J.A. Saporta and B.A. van der Kolk, “Psychobiological Consequences of Trauma,” in Torture and Its Consequences, ed. M. Basoglu (Cambridge, MA: Cambridge University Press, 1992).

    4 M. Eagle, Recent Developments in Psychoanalysis: A Critical Evaluation (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1987).

    5 J.L. Herman, Trauma and Recovery (New York: Basic Books, 1992).

    6 S.F. Maier and M.E. Seligman, “Learned Helpnessness: Theory and Evidence,” Journal of Experimental Psychology [Gen] 105, 1976, 3-46.

    7 C.R. Rogers and R. Dymond, Psychotherapy and Personality Change (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1954).

    8 A.T. Beck et al., Cognitive Therapy of Depression (New York: Guilford Press, 1979).

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    U.S. Secret Service ~~ Meet Recruiters in

    U.S. Secret Service recruiters are excited to meet with you to discuss your career choices and opportunities in more detail, as well as answer questions pertaining to the application process and eligibility requirements.

    Please do not bring application packets or copies of your resume to our events. These sessions are primarily meant as a forum to meet with you to discuss career growth with the Secret Service and available opportunities that fit your goals. All candidates must first identify a suitable position and follow the application procedures detailed in each vacancy announcement. To view a listing of available positions, click here.

    We strongly encourage you to attend one of the events listed below. If the Secret Service is not holding a recruiting event in your immediate area, please contact the Secret Service field office closest to you.

    For the latest update on locations and dates: http://www.secretservice.gov/join/apply_events.shtml

    >> Los Angeles, California NAACP National Convention Diversity Career Fair Dates: July 26 – 27, 2011 Date/Time: July 26, 2011 at 12:00 pm – 6:00 pm Date/Time: July 27, 2011 at 10:00 am – 4:00 pm Location: The Los Angeles Convention Center 1201 South Figueroa Street Los Angeles, California 90015 Open to Public Los Angeles Field Office: (213) 894-4830 Human Resources and Training Recruitment Division: (202) 406-5830

    >> San Jose, California MilitaryStars Date: July 14, 2011 Time: 12:00 am – 4:00 pm Location: TBD Open to Military, Veterans and Dependants San Jose Field Office: (408) 535-5288 Human Resources and Training Recruitment Division: (202) 406-5830

    >> Washington, DC DC Veteran Administration (VA) Medical Center CWT Job Fair Date: July 11, 2011 Time: 9:00 am – 4:00 pm Location: DC Veterans Administration Medical Center 50 Irving Street, NW Washington, DC 20422 Open to Veterans and general public

    2011 Greater Washington DC Career Symposium Date: July 30, 2011 Time: 9:00 am – 4:00 pm Location: J.W. Marriott Hotel 1331 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW Washington, DC 20004 Open to: public

    Congresswoman Eleanor Holmes Norton’s 2011 Job & Opportunity Fair Date: August 9, 2011 Time: 11:00 am – 3:00 pm Location: Washington Convention Center 801 Mount Vernon Place, NW Hall C Open to Public

    Washington Field Office: (202) 406-8000 Human Resources and Training Recruitment Division: (202) 406-5830

    >> Jacksonville, FL

    MilitaryStars Date: August 11, 2011 Time: 12:00 am – 4:00 pm Location: TBD Open to Military, Veterans and Dependants

    Jacksonville Field Office: (904) 296-0133 Human Resources and Training Recruitment Division: (202) 406-5830

    >> Miami, FL

    Phi Iota Alpha Convention Dates: July 23, 2011 Time: 8:30 am – 3:00 pm Location: Miami Marriott Biscayne Bay 1633 Bayshore Drive Miami, FL 33132 Open to Fraternity Members

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    Leading cyber security expert highlights cyber criminals’ impact on global enterprise, financial institutions and governments

    Entrust President and CEO Bill Conner Joins Senator Jay Rockefeller and Secretary Janet Napolitano at West Virginia Homeland Security Summit & Expo

    DALLAS, TX /PRNewswire/ ~~ Entrust, Inc., a global leader in securing online identities and information, played a high-profile role at the West Virginia Homeland Security Summit & Expo, June 1-2 at Marshall University in Huntington, W.V. Entrust President and CEO Bill Conner, along with U.S. Government leaders including West Virginia Sen. Jay Rockefeller and Secretary of Homeland Security Janet Napolitano, presented keynote addresses to the gathering of security experts. In Conner’s keynote luncheon address on Thursday, he discussed the evolving cyber security threat landscape and its impact on our nation’s security as well as the security and stability of our nation’s business community.

    “Solutions and capabilities are available today to help banks and governments stem the rising tide of cyber crime. But in many cases we are seeing that the banks need to be pushed or regulated to implement these capabilities,” Conner said. “Unfortunately, individuals and businesses are the real victims that have to deal with the financial and even larger nonfinancial costs of these breaches.”

    The West Virginia Homeland Security Summit & Expo is a two-day conference sponsored by the Discover the Real West Virginia Foundation in partnership with the West Virginia Department of Military Affairs & Public Safety and Marshall University. The event’s speakers and panel discussions focused on a variety of national security topics including critical infrastructure and public health preparedness, protecting business from cyber security attacks, and advances in emergency communications including the impact of federal broadband funding and 4G deployment. West Virginia Sen. Jay Rockefeller played a key role throughout the event, and U.S. Secretary of Homeland Security Janet Napolitano also presented a keynote dinner address on Wednesday evening.

    In addition to his keynote address, Conner also shared his insight and expertise in a panel discussion, “Protecting Your Business from Cyber Attacks & Crime/Privacy of Electronic Data,” led by Karen S. Evans, National Director of US Cyber Challenge (USCC).

    Entrust enables organizations and governmental agencies to easily and effectively manage security across a range of users and applications. The company offers a range of authentication and credentialing capabilities that cover physical, logical and mobile access.

    About Entrust

    A trusted provider of identity-based security solutions, Entrust empowers enterprises, governments, financial institutions, citizens and websites in more than 4,000 organizations spanning 60 countries. Entrust’s customer-centric focus is the foundation to delivering organizations an unmatched level of security, trust and value. For strong authentication, credentialing, physical and logical access, mobile security, digital certificates, SSL and PKI, call 888-690-2424, email entrust@entrust.com or visit www.entrust.com. Let’s talk.

    Entrust is a registered trademark of Entrust, Inc. in the United States and certain other countries. In Canada, Entrust is a registered trademark of Entrust Limited. All Entrust product names are trademarks or registered trademarks of Entrust, Inc. or Entrust Limited. All other company and product names are trademarks or registered trademarks of their respective owners.

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    SOURCE Entrust

    Photo:http://photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20060720/NYTH074LOGO http://photoarchive.ap.org/ Entrust

    CONTACT: Lindsey Jones, Media Relations of Entrust, +1-972-728-0374, lindsey.jones@entrust.com

    Web Site: http://www.entrust.com

    Employees Will Stay For The Work But Leave For Career

    BlessingWhite’s recently released 2011 Employee Engagement study provides insight into the factors that drive employees to stick with – or quit – their current job.

    PRINCETON, NJ /PRNewswire/ ~~ In a global study by consulting firm BlessingWhite, the top reason employees worldwide give for staying with their employer is “My work. I like the work that I do.”

    What is the most important factor influencing your plans to stay?

    ~~ My Work. I like the work that I do. 30%

    ~~ My career. I have significant development or advancement opportunities here. 17%

    ~~ My organization’s mission. I believe in what we do. 11%

    ~~ No desire for change. I am comfortable here. 10%

    ~~ My job conditions. I have flexible hours, a good commute, etc. 10%

    ~~ My finances. I expect a desirable salary, bonus, or stock options. 7%

    ~~ Other (The Economy, My Manager, My Colleagues) 15%

    In contrast, the top reason employees of all age groups give for jumping ship: “My career. I don’t have opportunities to grow or advance here.”

    What is the most important factor influencing your thoughts about leaving?

    ~~ My career. I don’t have opportunities to grow or advance here. 26%

    ~~ My work. I don’t like what I do or it doesn’t make the most of my talents. 15%

    ~~ My finances. I want to earn more money. 15%

    ~~ My desire for change. I want to try something new. 12%

    ~~ My manager. I don’t like working for him or her. 10%

    ~~ Other (The Economy, Job Conditions, Org. Mission, Colleagues) 18%

    “Business leaders are right to be concerned about retention of top talent,” said BlessingWhite CEO Christopher Rice. “And while raises may encourage some workers to stick around, our findings suggest that employees – especially high performers ~~ will remain in jobs that challenge them, utilize their expertise, and provide meaning.”

    The Employee Engagement Report 2011 explores workplace attitudes among employees on four continents and is based on survey responses of nearly 11,000 employed professionals. Among the study’s other findings:

    After enjoyable work, career advancement is the second most important retention factor in India, China, Australia/New Zealand and Southeast Asia. In North America and Europe, favorable job conditions (e.g., a good commute or flexible hours) ranks second.

    Although workers across generations agree on their top reasons for staying and leaving, the youngest workers (Generation Y or Millenials) place higher priority on career opportunities than they do their work. Likewise, Gen Y employees are more likely to leave in pursuit of more money. Baby Boomers, on the other hand, seek more interesting work and change (something new).

    Rice advises business leaders to help their workforce rethink career notions. “When employees understand that today’s career is all about creating a portfolio of assignments and projects, not necessarily promotions and new titles, they’re better prepared to concentrate on finding work that they enjoy – and work that can help the organization achieve its goals.”

    Intended for line executives and HR leaders, Employee Engagement Report 2011 presents five levels of engagement: Engaged, Almost Engaged, Honeymooner & Hamsters, Crash & Burners, and Disengaged. The recommendations focus on the roles and responsibilities of executives, managers, and individuals in driving engagement every day. The report can be accessed at http://www.blessingwhite.com/eee__report.asp.

    The engagement survey was conducted between July 2010 and October 2010, and results were compared with pre-recession data (gathered December 2007). 27% of the 10,914 survey respondents reside in North America. More than half of respondents hold executive, management, or supervisory titles.

    About BlessingWhite:

    BlessingWhite is a global consulting firm in Leadership Development and Employee Engagement. Based in Princeton, NJ, with locations in London, Chicago, San Francisco and Melbourne, the firm has worked with nearly three million professionals in thousands of organizations. www.blessingwhite.com

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    SOURCE BlessingWhite

    Contact: Christopher Rice, President & CEO, BlessingWhite, 908-904-1000, ext. 8000, chrisr@bwinc.com, or Mary Ann Masarech, Employee Engagement Practice Leader, 203-368-6694, maryannm@bwinc.com.

    Web Site: http://www.blessingwhite.com

    SAIC Wins Contract to Provide Security and Force Protection Services to Department of Defense

    Company to Develop and Maintain Electronic Security Systems and Automated Control Systems

    MCLEAN, VA /PRNewswire/ Science Applications International Corporation (SAIC) (NYSE: SAI) announced today it was awarded a contract by the U.S. Army, Engineering and Support Center, Huntsville to provide physical security and force protection systems in support of the Department of Defense (DoD) and other government agencies. The multiple award, indefinite-delivery/indefinite-quantity (IDIQ) contract has a three year base period of performance, one two-year option and a ceiling value of $650 million dollars for all awardees.

    Huntsville Center provides a wide range of security system-related services to U.S. Government agencies worldwide. These services embrace physical security, force protection, anti-terrorism, and vulnerability reduction. Under the contract, SAIC will develop, procure, install and maintain electronic security systems and automated control systems as required, helping meet physical security and force protection requirements. SAIC is one of five awardees that will compete for task orders under this contract.

    “SAIC has a demonstrated track record of delivering world class physical security and force protection capabilities to our customers,” said John Thomas, SAIC senior vice president and business unit general manager. “We look forward to working with the Huntsville Center to provide critical protection capabilities for people, assets and information.”

    About SAIC

    SAIC is a FORTUNE 500® scientific, engineering, and technology applications company that uses its deep domain knowledge to solve problems of vital importance to the nation and the world, in national security, energy and the environment, critical infrastructure, and health. The company’s approximately 45,000 employees serve customers in the U.S. Department of Defense, the intelligence community, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, other U.S. Government civil agencies and selected commercial markets. Headquartered in McLean, Va., SAIC had annual revenues of $10.8 billion for its fiscal year ended January 31, 2010. For more information, visit www.saic.com. SAIC: From Science to Solutions®

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    SOURCE SAIC

    CONTACT: Melissa Koskovich, +1-703-676-6762, Melissa.l.koskovich@saic.com, or Laura Luke, +1-703-676-6533, laura.luke@saic.com

    Web Site: http://www.saic.com