Popular Materials

The Advantages of Career Coaching

 


Translation as a career

There are two main types of translators: translators who work with anything written or published, and interpreters, who listen and translate a voice as it is being spoken. Translators may work on software, internet related materials or a variety of documents, including legal, business-related, technical, or ň€śliteraryň€ť texts, and is generally paid by the word. Interpreters are normally paid by the hour at business conferences, courts or government proceedings. Simultaneous interpreting is probably the most difficult discipline of translation as the interpreters need to be highly trained and fluent to interpret the voice of the speaker in real time. While translators can find their profession very challenging, it can also be quit tedious churning through word after word of, for example, technical texts. Translators, on the other hand, on the other hand have significant advantages in that they have time to polish their final product revising their translations with dictionaries, glossaries and other reference tools. A variety of working environments exist for translators such as various translation environments for software translation and website translation that include translation memories and glossaries. It can often take significant training for the translator to get fully up to speed with these tools.


How To Do Well In An Interview

BUT (yes there is a good but here)

A key to get through the interview is also your mind set at that moment, your attitude.

Itň€™s simple,

Confident and positive ň€“ ň€śHow much pay hike are you looking forň€ť

Negative and jumpy ň€“ ň€śweň€™ll give you a call if you are selectedň€ť

To gain a positive mental attitude before and during the interview, here are a few basic things you can work on.

Work on that adrenaline ň€“ Try getting good exercise before the interview, will pump up your brain cells. Please donň€™t land up in office directly out of bed! Do breathing exercises, take yoga sessions. Healthy body, great mind. (Which will be the most important tool in any interview)

Appearance is deceptive ň€“ even if you are in your most nervous state, but dressed well, and smelling good. The interviewer will definitely appreciate it. I donň€™t think itň€™s the most important aspect but it does create a favorable first impression. You would also end up feeling a lot more confident by this small act.

Rehearse ň€“ Start bugging your friend or father or mother to help you practice the interview. Make up a set of mock questions and create an interview environment. Take feedback and work on improving.

If itň€™s in resume, it should be by heart ň€“ Make sure you make a resume that is true and not boastful. Youň€™ll be surprised to see almost 70-80% of the interview being conducted based on things mentioned in resume. If you have mentioned reading as a hobby, you should know everything about your reading and the books. Your resume is your key to control the interview. Lot of people over-look this fact. You better donň€™t.

Keep the nerves on the back seat ň€“ always stay calm in an interview. When you answer a question, take it slow. Donň€™t rush into answering anything. If you are asked a question and you donň€™t know about it, itň€™s always better to say ň€˜I am sorry I donň€™t know about it, but Iň€™ll look it upň€™ then giving vague and wrong answers.

Be prepared ň€“ Never leave for an interview without a hard copy of your resume, credentials and portfolio (if any). Itň€™s just bad manners to expect the interviewee to take a print out of that soft copy you sent earlier. Remember, you have to take care of the details. It will take you a long way.

These small tips will be helpful in creating a favorable impression, but as I said earlier, your work & capability is the key. If you donň€™t have that, you canň€™t expect to do well in any interview of life.






Add your comment:
Your name:
Site Address: http://
Your message:
Enter todays date, 2 digits
(spam):