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1 - 20 of about 20 for professions [definition]. (1.735 seconds)
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professions?
Wow that is excellent. Thanks for sharing.
Cargo Crane Operator. Nothing gets traded globally unless it can be loaded or unloaded on a ship.
well, there is always prostitution
actually most high paying jobs are stressful. that's one reason they are high paying.
(1) real estate attorney;
(2) corporate attorney;
(3) any type of attorney that deals in transactional matters.
These are, of course, assuming you pass all other licensing requirements to be an attorney.
Blacksmith, made metal tools, utensils, anything made of metal the Colonists needed.
Silversmith, made coffee urns (for serving, not brewing), serving platters, 3 tine forks ( they didn't have 4 tines at that time), spoons, plates, salt pepper shakers,etc., for fine dining. The silversmith also served as jeweler.
Carpenter.
Farmer.
Glassmaker.
Tavern.
Carriage/buggy/wagon maker
Wigmaker/hairdresser.
Miller, ground grains for the colonist.
Seamstress/milliner/dressmaker/hatter, some, also known as weavers, wove cotton wool for making material/cloth.
Printer/Bookmaker, made and bound books, printed the local newspaper and occasionally served as post master.
Cobbler/shoe maker, served as saddle maker, if there wasn't one.
Farrier/shod horses.
Cooper, made wooden barrels, wooden casks and wooden buckets.
Gunsmith.
Papermaker.
Shipbuilders.
Architect.
Potter, made pottery items.
Doctor.
Cabinetmaker.
Tanner, made animal skins into leather.
Because many Colonist could not read, the signs reflected their trade/specialty.
A saddlemaker would have a drawing of a saddle, the milliner would show a dress, the printer would have a book, etc.
It is hard NOT to take things personal or get personally involved especially when your assisting thous with personal and/or emotional situations unless of coarse you are already burnt out.
You are your number one asset and when helping others you must look after your self first or you will not be there to help others! Find the balance in you life look after your own health, diet for nutrition, exercise,look after family so they can be there for you, vacation, and rest often.
Once again I find my self recommending the self help section of library or book store and Seven Habits Of Highly Effective People by Stephen R. Covey
If you have seen some of my answers before you may notice me recommending this book alot. It opens with about 25-30 recommendations by; several Authors, President and CEO of well established companies, Dean's of education, Teachers, Athletes, Astronauts, Artists, Senators Ambassadors ETC... listing them this way does not do them or their comments justice. This book is a well organized tool box for personal growth find it, buy it, steal it, share it, you will not regret it unless you get caught stealing it of course!
Are you kidding me??? You can do anything you want to do. Those careers are good, but add GO-GO dancer, and it's pretty much the same choices women had in the 50's and 60's.
What is your passion? What interests you? People are happiest in doing jobs they love. Lets see, you could be a police officer, a doctor, a lawyer, computer tech, tree trimmer, carpenter, chef, party planner, executive assistant (they're not called secretaries anymore), a groomer, and the list goes on, and on, and on, and on.
Above all, you do what you like, not what your husband says you can do....gimme a break. I haven't heard that attitude in this century.
Tailoring is an excellent profession for a class that wears cloth armour exclusively (priest, warlock, and mage). Other than tailoring, it's really up to you. Enchanting is pretty hard to level, though when you're able to run the SSO dailies, you'll be getting plenty of gear you can disenchant very quickly and easily.
I would suggest dropping alchemy for tailoring, and sticking with herbalism (or switching it to mining or skinning) until you're able to run the SSO dailies when you reach 70.
Off the top of my head, it tends to be those that involve design such as interior designers, fashion designers, makeup and hair designers; and professions in communications such as journalists and reporters. Certainly, they aren't all high paying; only those that stand out from the crowd and make a name for themselves. But men have just as hard a time in these professions as women in order to break into the biz.
Marketing sets you up to pursue a lot of different career paths, including the ones you noted plus the following:
Advertising / Promotions
Public Relations
Pricing Analyst
Product Line Manager
The jobs vary by industry and seniority or role, so you may want to take a hard look first at what industry you want to be in. The roles will be very different for PG versus GE versus Ogilvy Mathers versus Toyota versus Coca-Cola versus Dell versus Marriott Vacation Club versus Wal-Mart versus Mercury Marine, yet all of these firms employ a large number of marketing professionals at all levels of the organization in roles paying US$20,000 to US$500,000 annually.
One side note: don't go directly from undergrad to MBA. You'll waste your time and annoy your classmates if you can get in, but most top programs will not even consider you without 3-5 years of post-undergrad experience. (That experience gives you a basis to understand the professors, which will allow you to take a lot more away from the overall experience.)
http://online.onetcenter.org/
This site has information on nearly every occupation you can think of. It was developed for the U.S. Department of Labor, and it's pretty reliable.
You can obtain an H-1B work visa through, Financial analyst, Computer programmers, systems analyst, just about any analyst really and majority of computer based positions (the most applied For). You can get a work visa for just about any position as long as you have a 4 year degree or the equivalent of a 4 yr degree and the employer can show that he didn't displace anyone to hire you.
Freelancers are loners...but you could be a private tutor and have classes of 3 or 4 people per class and charge each one of them per class. You know many languages you should teach those, besides there's nothing better like working from home. It is a really good source of income.
Well let's look at it this way, someone who is going into the field of criminal justice is probably going to be more conserative. Why? Because those people are fighting to put criminals behind bars, and they tend to want long harsh punishments for them, because that is pretty much what their job consists of. Liberals want shorter terms and a less harsher sentence most of the time. People that are going to become officers or correctional guards do not want people on the streets like that.
In the field of Psyc, they take into consideration that people have mental problems or other issues that need to be addressed. They are more understanding and helpful, therefore they tend to be conserative.
A lot of the farmers and what not, tend to also be conserative because of their strict up bringing, and because the taxes are lower. let's face it, they are not going to want to pay as much taxes as a big business when they are out their busting their butt for what they make compared to some guy who is simply sitting in an office collecting money from his buisness.
Lea is a bit simplistic. Actually some MD salaries would probably rise as they would all be paid for ALL patients as opposed to seeing patients that can't or won't pay at all. But if universal healthcare pays POORLY, everyone's paycheck would adjust accordingly--can't give employees a salary if you aren't earing the $ to begin with.
Medical income is a ratio of billable received income (which may NOT be the amount billed) minus expense such as malpractice, operating capital expense, etc. The backend--malpractice operating expense are HUGE which is why salaries are not as big as people think they are.
Many things would be impacted positively or negatively (depending on the actual reimbursement)--the type, number kind of tests xrays ordered, referrals to allied health such as physical therapy, occupational therapy, etc., home health visits, hospice care, durable eguipment (wheelchairs, walkers, toilets) etc etc ...EVERYTHING THAT WILL OR WILL NOT BE PAID FOR under the plan.
AS you can see, this is very complex--part of the reason a universal plan has not yet be implemented.
Dentists are in a separate category (dental insurance is separate from medical) I think pharmacists salaries would be much less impacted as their salary is not dependent on a billable expense.
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