Tuesday, February 12, 2008

Earning Green html


Public Service Month 2008



Earning Green by Turning Green: Environmentally Friendly Careers


Wednesday February 20 at 7:00 pm
Chancellor's Suite, University Center

Speakers Include:
Janine Bauer, Environmental Lawyer
Charles Harman, Principal Ecologist, AMEC Earth and Environmental
Hank Stewart, Vice President of Green Team Advertising

Refreshments will be served

SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 16TH

All Practice Exams are in the Arts & Sciences Building at Seton Hall University. Each practice exam takes 3.5-4 hours, except for the GRE, which is 2 hours.

PCAT - Pharmacy College Admission - 10:00 AM, Rm. 110
GMAT - Business Graduate School Admission - 10:30 AM, Rm. 101
MCAT - Medical School Admission - 11:00 AM, Rm. 106
LSAT - Law School Admission - Noon, Rm. 102
DAT - Dental School Admission - 12:30 PM, Rm. 105
GRE - General Graduate School Admission - 2:00 PM, Rm. 107
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Wednesday, February 27th 4:00-5:00 pm
Attend a Graduate School Workshop hosted by Kaplan

OPEN TO: All sophomores, juniors, and seniors interested in attending/applying to Graduate School
WHERE: Beck Room C (Lower Level of the Library) at Seton Hall University
WHY: Learn more about graduate school, admissions, and test prep.

Monday, February 11, 2008

CD 101.9 is now 101.9RXP- The New York Rock Experience

INTERNSHIP PROGRAM
Description
101.9 RXP – The New York Rock Experience represents a new Adult Rock station in the New York tri-state area which merge New Music, Classic Rock, Alternative, & Local Rock into a new blend called “The New York Experience.”

The 101.9RXP Internship Program is for students that are looking to get their foot in the door in the New York radio industry. We are looking for college students that are hard working and motivated with a Communications, Marketing or similar concentration. Intern responsibilities include but are not limited to general office duties, working one-on-one with listeners and contest winners, hands on experience of writing copy, writing public service announcements, updating press releases, participation in the planning and execution of on-site events, and learning the day to day operations of the radio business.

Contact Anne De Santis for application instructions and requirements
desantan@shu.edu

Thursday, February 7, 2008

Public Service is for every major. Find out what it can offer YOU!

Nonprofit and governmental agencies are coming to
recruit Seton Hall University students for internships or full-time professional positions!
Public Service and Nonprofit Career Fair
Thurs. Feb. 28, 2008
5:00 pm – 6:30 pm
Main Lounge, University Center
Employers Include:
World Youth Alliance, Atlantic County Prosecutor’s Office, Center for Hispanic Policy, IRS, DEA, Peace Corps, NJ State Police, FBI, CityYear Rhode Island, Department of Children and Families, Secret Service, ARC of Union County, CARES Foundation, NJ Environmental Federation, Youth Advocate Program, NJ Prevention Network,
Superior Court of NJ, US Marine Corps, US Pretrial Services Agency, US Public Health Service, Citizen Schools, Professionals for Nonprofits,and MANY more….
Dress professionally and bring plenty of resumes!!
For more information, please contact Carol Ann Koert at koertcar@shu.edu

Monday, February 4, 2008

Full Time Opportunities

For complete listing contact Anne De Santis at desantan@shu.edu

Account Executive with WMTR/WDHA/WWTR

IT, Interactive Content Manager and Account Executive positions with WRAT-FM/ WJRZ-FM

Summer 2008 Internships-Apply NOW!!

Sirius Satellite Radio

WABC-TV - Recruitment Night April 2, 2008

CBS Sports- Applications Due by March 14

For more information come by to see Anne De Santis during "drop in hours" on Wednesdays from 2-4 pm in the Career Center, Bayley Hall Second floor

Want to see the latest Broadcasting positions?

Want weekly postings for professional positions in broadcasting?

All positions are posted in this complete list
Contact Anne at desantan@shu.edu

Graduating? Want a position with USA, or USA Today

Gannett Co., Inc. (www.gannett.com) is accepting applications for the 2008 class of its award-winning Talent Development Program.


Participants will receive career guidance, feedback, mentoring and multiple layers of work experience. Our goal is to build a long-term program that provides a pipeline of diverse and exceptional talent by recruiting, hiring and developing a select group of the nation's 2008 top graduating seniors (graduate and undergraduate).

Gannett Co., Inc. is a leading international news and information company that publishes 85 daily newspapers in the USA, including USA TODAY, the nation's largest-selling daily newspaper. The company also owns nearly 1,000 non-daily publications in the USA and USA WEEKEND, a weekly newspaper magazine. Gannett also operates 23 television stations in the United States and is an Internet leader with sites sponsored by its TV stations and newspapers including USATODAY.com, one of the most popular news sites on the Web.

The 2008 training program will begin with an orientation at Gannett's headquarters on June 5 - 6. Participants will be placed in fulltime positions at Gannett locations nationwide.

We are looking for graduating seniors interested in advertising sales, television/print/online reporting, circulation, finance and broadcast producing opportunities. We place a premium on students who are bilingual and possess strong multimedia skills.

Applications are due by February 29, 2008 for consideration for the program. All applicants will be notified by April 18, 2008 of their selection status.

Apply in Navigator http://setonhall.erecruiting.com/er/security/login.jsp
Can't log on? Contact the Career Center 973-761-9355

There is more to Public Service than you know. Find out what

Talk to employers about opportunities in the nonprofit and public service sectors.

Click on the logo for all events during Public Service Month!


Web Content Intern

Web Content Intern at Hey! Nielsen

We are looking for web and entertainment savvy interns to assist with many facets of our growing (45,000+ members) new community/opinion site, Hey! Nielsen. At Hey! Nielsen, people from around the world connect and sound off on their favorite music, TV, movies, and more. Since it's powered by Nielsen, the biggest, most prominent names behind the scenes will be listening. Get hands on experience in the world's leading provider of marketing information, audience measurement, and business media products and services. Check out the site at http://www.heynielsen.com!

Intern duties will include:
- Data entry to Hey! Nielsen database of movie titles, bands, games, TV shows, etc.
- Update images and object info on the site.
- Generate weekly reports of basic data and Hey! Nielsen coverage on the web.
- Compile web research on competing sites and communities.
- Help maintain H!N community sites (Facebook, MySpace, etc.)
- Participate in H!N Team brainstorm meetings.

Apply in Navigator. http://setonhall.erecruiting.com/er/security/login.jsp

No access to Navigator? Contact the Career Center 973-761-9355 or email us at careers@shu.edu

Friday, February 1, 2008

Summer Internships

Exciting Internship Opportunities for the following majors

Communications
Journalism
Photography
Broadcasting

Business Administration
Marketing
Public Relations
Media Arts
You’ll gain tremendous hands-on work experience while
having fun with
New Jersey’s biggest radio stations!
98.5, 99.7, 106.3, 106.5 107.1 FM and 1410 AM


Contact Anne De Santis at the Career Center to apply
desantan@shu.edu

The Job You Want

The Job You Want

Salary.com


If you're looking for the perfect job, you might as well stop right now: there's no such thing. But armed with the right information, you can get a good deal in a good place. Negotiating the job you want begins after you've learned how to be your own agent - after you've answered the tough personal questions and researched the company thoroughly.

If you're looking for the perfect job, you might as well stop right now: there's no such thing. But armed with the right information, you can get a good deal in a good place. Negotiating the job you want begins after you've learned how to be your own agent - after you've answered the tough personal questions and researched the company thoroughly.

Listen and answer first, ask questions later
Like the salary negotiation that follows it, the interview is a two-way process. The interviewer is gathering as much information about you as you are about the company. And a good interviewer will allow you to do most of the talking, so learn the difference between a quick question and one that requires a longer answer. In addition to listening to your answers, the interviewer may also be paying attention to how you budget your time in the interview.

In leading the conversation, the interviewer will cover essential information about the company, the responsibilities of the job, and other relevant material. Assume that the interviewer will answer most of your questions before you ask them, but ask your own questions at the end if anything is left hanging. Feel free to take notes and refer to them later.

Whatever you do, don't talk about money until the prospective employer puts an offer on the table. Until then, you have to convince them that you're a hot commodity. Once they're convinced, they will pay the fair amount it costs to get you. Let them make the first offer. Some interviewers will put pressure on you to disclose your current earnings, in the interest of determining whether they're in the right range. As your own agent, you should just keep stalling - remember that you are never required to give a salary history. Money talk is the subject of Part 4.

Steer toward a better job
If, in the middle of an interview, you realize the job isn't right for you, you have a choice. You could continue the interview, wasting both the interviewer's and your time. Or you could cut the interview short, leaving halfway through, and going home wondering "what if."

There is a third alternative. You could always try to steer the conversation toward something closer to the job you want, or encourage the organization to restructure the job so that it will appeal to you more. You have nothing to lose, especially if your skills are highly in demand. Companies with an entrepreneurial culture are especially likely to be receptive to this kind of win-win maneuver.

Focus on your contribution
As the agent of your own career, keep your focus on the contribution you can make to an organization. In the selling stage of your conversations with a prospective employer, you have an opportunity to show how your work will help create more value for the company and its shareholders. Your contribution will stand out if, in addition to meeting the basic criteria for the position, you also have added skills or experiences. Examples include a well developed network of contacts, direct industry experience, and specific technical expertise.

Check the fit
You might want to do research to find out what a company is like. You can also see for yourself, once you get to the interview, whether the company walks the way it talks. One way to judge what kind of candidate a company is really looking for is to ask some pointed questions, like:

* What kind of management style is most rewarded in this environment?
* How can I be sure I'm achieving the company's objectives here, as well as my own?
* How do you view work/life balance?
* Why is this position open? What happened to the person who previously held the job?
* What is the turnover rate for the position or department?
* How does the company communicate to its members? How often?
* When can I expect a performance review? What is the process?
* What professional qualities are most valued in team members?


Turn them into a buyer
The goal of the interview process is to make the prospective employer conclude not only that they want to hire you, but that you are exactly the candidate they are looking for. Every answer that creates this impression - every point you score in an interview - makes you more valuable to that employer, and thus more expensive. The interview not only sells your candidacy, but also lays the groundwork for the salary negotiation.

- Linda Jenkins, Salary.com contributor

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