What Color Is Your Parachute 2007 by Richard N. Bolles, , 1580087949 Search discount cheap book, Compare Book prices, Find Lowest Price
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What Color Is Your Parachute 2007, cheap new, used books  What Color Is Your Parachute? 2007: A Practical Manual for Job-hunters and Career Changes (What Color Is Your Parachute?)
Author: Richard N Bolles  
ISBN: 1580087949   /   Paperback
Publisher: Ten Speed Press   /   2006-09
List Price: £14.99
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Customer Reviews:
Useful - coud do without God     
I wonder why authors think declaring their belief in imaginary beings enhances their credibility when selling product which is supposed to be truthful.

It is heavily padded like most self help books but the book is worth a read if you are looking for work.

Using some of the techniques in this book got me a job a couple of years ago. On that basis it was worth buying. If you are one of those people who posts on job sites or is 1 of 500 in job applications and wondering why ignore the god stuff and read the first couple of chapters of this book.
pretty good     
The Christianity additions are out-of-place, the acknowledgements are gushing and retch-inducing, and the quotes from satisfied customers are immodest . . . which simply proves that I'm a typical secularist, self-conscious european who finds it incomprehensible why the author doesn't re-read his text and cringe . . .

That said, I found the content very readable - what could have been heavy-going content was actually made pretty enjoyable, so I'll forgive a lot.

The advice is practical - of course it is US-centric, but the basic principles he advocates are still sound.

In short: I would recommend this book.
Single best job-hunting/career management guide     
I've known about this book for years, but always disregarded it because I've been fortunate enough to do work that I love. I'm now with an HR consultancy that includes amongst its offerings outplacement programmes. As this is a new area for me I thought I should become familiar with the 'industry standard' - Parachute.

This is a brilliant book, not just for job-hunters; but for anyone who'd like to take stock of their career.

Bolles' 'life-changing job hunt' process is a well thought out, practical and effective methodology for finding a role that you love. It's best summed up using a metaphor he's borrowed from travel writers. They say: lay out all the clothes that you think you'll need and all the money you think you need to take. Now pack half the clothes and take twice the money. Bolles suggests taking all the information you think you'll need about the job market and all the information you think you'll need about yourself, and finding out half that information about the market and twice that information about yourself.

His writing style is homespun wisdom like that of Dale Carnegie. Given that Bolles has revised the book every year since 1970, and has sold over 8 million copies, I think he's entitled to some eccentricities. I think other reviewers' comments about his Christian views and his quirkyness are short-sighted. The conversational writing style reads like advice from a favourite uncle, and as with such advice, you don't have to take all of it.

The front cover says the 2006 edition is "stunningly revised". Not having seen any previous editions, I can't comment on what those revisions are, or whether they are stunning. I can comment on what I liked about the layout. Printed in red and black ink, the red is used for titles, subtitles and highlighting - much like you'd use a highlighter pen. I found much of the red highlights were exactly what I would highlight myself, so useful for future reference.

The book also contains dozens of old pen-and-ink drawings, the subjects of which don't seem to bear any relevance to the surounding text. They do serve to break up the 400-odd pages (which at first can look intimidating) and communicate something of Bolles' unique character, which is quite endearing. Don't take that to mean that this is an old fashioned book - far from it. This seventy-something author (I'm guessing) is perfectly at home writing about Coldplay, Blackberries and recent events like hurricane Katrina and the economic resurgence of China and India.

Whilst Bolles acknowledges his international readership, one slight disappointment is the US focus on all the web references. However, the overall content is excellent.

After some great context setting and research findings about job hunting, Bolles job-hunt methodology starts off, logically enough, by posing the question 'Where on Earth do you want to live?' He then works through the process to identify your favourite interests, people environments, working conditions, values, salary, level of responsibility and skills. Throughout, there are plenty of diagrams, exercises and grids to complete, to help you identify what you need to know (so I don't know what the '...Parachute Workbook' offers in addition to this).

There's a great section on 'Identifying Who Has the Power to Hire You for the Job You're Looking For', along with 'Ten Interviewing Tips' and 'Six Secrets of Salary Negotiation'.

Regardless of whether you're thinking of looking for a job or a career change NOW, this book is valuable for getting you thinking about all the possible career options you have ahead of you. If you are currently looking, I would say this book is far more valuable than all the 'Create a Great CV', 'Great Answers to Difficult Interview Questions' and 'How to do an Internet Job Search' books put together.

Idiosyncratic and very American     
This book is highly idiosyncratic, giving free rein to the egotistical author to present himself as much as his material. For example, it opens with a two-page digression on his approach to grammar and punctuation, continues with an account of his Christian beliefs (first of many), and is regularly interrupted by anecdotes based on quotes from delighted readers whose lives were changed by previous editions of the book.

The style is All-American-folksy-egomania, as found in a certain genre of US self-improvement books. If this sort of thing makes you eat the carpet, avoid.

There is some good material within, but you have to search for it. A good editor could extract a decent 100-page book from these 400 pages. Unfortunately the author's first draft seems to have gone straight into print.

First Book To Buy For Job Hunting     
"What Color Is Your Parachute" is the first book you need if finding a job is your goal. If you've not bought this yet, you haven't started looking.

Richard Bolles is the expert. His books sell because they are fresh each year with insight, purpose and ideas for determining what job you should do, and how to get it.

I used "Parachute" to get my first job. It continues to influence me today, as I job hunt again.

Thoroughly practical, Bolles asks you questions about your mission in life. His belief is that just getting a job -- even ones you are good at -- won't be a wise decision in the long haul. He helps you see your passions mixed with skills and experience, and guides you to getting their. Though it is hardly a self-help book, it is far more useful than the ones clogging up the Top 10 list.

He keeps you accountable. Finding a job is your job if that's what you say you want. And if you aren't working, he won't let you make excuses -- you've got the time. Either you are looking or you aren't. Dr. Phil could take a note from Bolles' direct yet congenial style.

Don't bother with the hardcover. You need the paperback. This is not a sit-on-the-shelf book, but a get-down-to-business book, and you'll appreciate the flexibility while at work or on the train.

I fully recommend, "What Color Is Your Parachute" by Richard Nelson Bolles.

Anthony Trendl
editor, HungarianBookstore.com

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