what"s your occupation - vertaling naar grieks
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what"s your occupation - vertaling naar grieks

BOOK BY RICHARD NELSON BOLLES PUBLISHED IN 1970
What Color is Your Parachute?; What Color Is Your Parachute; What Color Is Your Parachute? (book); What Color is Your Parachute

what's your occupation      
ποιο είναι το επάγγελμά σας
so what         
WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
So what; So what (disambiguation); So What (disambiguation); So What? (album); So What (album); So What (song); So What? (song); So What?
και λοιπόν
what time is it         
WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
What time is it; What Time Is It? (soundtrack); What Time Is It? (disambiguation); What Time Is It; What time is it?
τι ώρα είναι

Definitie

Occupier
·noun One who occupies, or has possession.
II. Occupier ·noun One who follows an employment; hence, a tradesman.

Wikipedia

What Color Is Your Parachute?

What Color Is Your Parachute? is a self-help book by Richard Nelson Bolles intended for job-seekers. It has been in print since 1970 and has been revised annually since 1975, sometimes substantially. Bolles initially self-published the book on December 1, 1970, and it has been commercially published since November 1972 by Ten Speed Press in Berkeley, California. As of September 28, 2010, the book is available in 22 languages and used in 26 countries around the world. Over ten million copies have been sold worldwide. It is one of the most highly regarded career advice books in print. In the 2014 edition of the book, Bolles writes about how to adapt one's job search to the Internet age.

The book recommends networking to find "the person with the authority to hire you", rather than sending out resumes in bulk, shotgun fashion. It also recommends carefully figuring out what one is best at and what one enjoys most, which Bolles asserts tend to coincide. The Flower Exercise is a key element of the book, featuring seven ways that job seekers can define themselves in order to inform their job search.

Years later, Bolles explained the book's memorable title as his response at a business meeting in 1968 when someone told him that he and several co-workers were "bailing out" of a failing organization, prompting Bolles to joke, "What color is your parachute?". "The question was just a joke," he said. "I had no idea that it would take on all this additional meaning."