Evaluating a Job Offer
Once you receive a job offer, you must decide if you want the job. Fortunately, most organizations will give you a few days to accept or reject an offer.
There are many issues to consider when assessing a job offer. Will the organization be a good place to work? Will the job be interesting? Are there opportunities for advancement? Is the salary fair? Does the employer offer good benefits? Now is the time to ask the potential employer about these issues—and to do some checking on your own.
The organization. Background information on an organization can help you to decide whether it is a good place for you to work. Factors to consider include the organization’s business or activity, financial condition, age, size, and location.
You generally can get background information on an organization, particularly a large organization, on its Web site or by telephoning its public relations office. A public company’s annual report to the stockholders tells about its corporate philosophy, history, products or services, goals, and financial status. Most government agencies can furnish reports that describe their programs and missions. Press releases, company newsletters or magazines, and recruitment brochures also can be useful. Ask the organization for any other items that might interest a prospective employee. If possible, speak to current or former employees of the organization.
Background information on the organization may be available at your public or school library. If you cannot get an annual report, check the library for reference directories that may provide basic facts about the company, such as earnings, products and services, and number of employees. Some directories widely available in libraries either in print or as online databases include:
- Dun & Bradstreet’s Million Dollar Directory
- Standard and Poor’s Register of Corporations
- Mergent’s Industry Review (formerly Moody’s Industrial Manual)
- Thomas Register of American Manufacturers
- Ward’s Business Directory
Stories about an organization in magazines and newspapers can tell a great deal about its successes, failures, and plans for the future. You can identify articles on a company by looking under its name in periodical or computerized indexes in libraries, or by using one of the Internet’s search engines. However, it probably will not be useful to look back more than 2 or 3 years.
The library also may have government publications that present projections of growth for the industry in which the organization is classified. Long-term projections of employment and output for detailed industries, covering the entire U.S. economy, are developed by the Bureau of Labor Statistics and revised every 2 years. (See the Career Guide to Industries, online at ) Trade magazines also may include articles on the trends for specific industries.
Career centers at colleges and universities often have information on employers that is not available in libraries. Ask a career center representative how to find out about a particular organization.
-
商务英语之商务谈判精选用语(1)
导语:如何用商务英语进行商务谈判?下面是本站小编整理的商务英语商务英语之商务谈判精选用语(1),欢迎参考!a:wecanofferyouthisindifferentlevelsofquality.b:istheremuchofadifferenceinprice?a:yes,theeconomymodelisabout30%less.b:we'lltakethatone.a:这产品我...
-
职场英语:是工作让你至今单身吗?
U.S.governmentdatarevealsthatupto44%oftheU.S.workforceissingle--anditmaybebecauseofwork.Herearefourreasonswhyyourjobmightbekeepingyousingleandwhattodoaboutit.美国政府公布的数据显示有接近44%的职场人士是单身,而单身的原因很有可能是工作。以下列...
-
面试英语第七讲:展示个人能力-求职面试
面试时我们最想向面试官展现的就是我们的能力了,那么一个人的能力到底是什么呢?通常我们理解为工作能力,技术能力等等,其实不仅仅是这些。我们先来看看关于个人能力的背景知识:Background:个人能力集中表现在社会荣誉、工作业绩、科研成果、著作等,这里最主要的是著...
-
关于英语书信中最最常用的表达
快来诵读一下这些书信中最最常用的表达吧,说不定你就用得上它们了!因为书信是英语作文中最最常见的考察方式了,亮点句型是你得分的法宝之一哦!问候Howareyoudoing?Howiseverythinggoing?Iamdelightedtoreceiveyourletter.致歉I’mterriblysorryfor...I&rsqu...
相关文章
- A Letter Decling a Job Offer
- 职场英语:Evaluating a Job Offer
- Job Offer Components: What Does A Job Offer
- What constitutes a job offer
- Job Offer Letter...Negotiating and Evaluating The Job Offer
- Evaluating a Job Offer.
- A Letter Declining a Job Offer
- Job Offer Components: What Does A Job Offer Look Like?
- A Letter Declaring A Job Offer
- Accepting A Job Offer