What Color is your Parachute?

World's best selling job-seekers hand-book

For 35 years now, What Color is Your Parachute has been the definitive job seeker’s Bible, passed down through several generations, and revised yearly to reflect the ever-changing career landscape.

So influential is the scope of this book, that in 1991 the Library of Congress included it in its list of the “25 Books that have Shaped Readers’ Lives,” ranked right up there with the Bible, Don Quixote, War and Peace and Catcher in the Rye! How has this book endured, withstanding the test of time and adjusting to the ever-changing job market?

With over 7 million copies in print since it was self-published by its author, Richard Bolles, in 1970, What Color is Your Parachute combines humor with practical advice and offbeat tips on finding a job and changing careers. Bolles’ basic strategy? Figure out what you like, what you want to do and what you’re good at and go after it. Contact organizations you’d like to work for, whether or not an opening for what you want to do exists, and let all your friends and family members know what you want to do.

In his book, Bolles dispels some popular myths, and lets readers in on the truth based on his exhaustive research through the years. One such example is the myth that the Internet is a good place to conduct a job search. In actuality, the internet offers only a 4% success rate when used as only means to find a new position.

This much can be said…in this era of unforeseen corporate downsizing and unanticipated layoffs, this is one book that should be on everyone’s shelves!

Click here to review the book.

Dr. Alisha  Asks some important questions of interest to Westerville residents - Chiropractor Westerville Dr. Alisha Asks...

What are the two things drugs do?
Drugs can either speed up (laxatives, amphetamines, caffeine) a bodily process, or slow down (stomach antacids, sleep aids, antihistamines, muscle relaxers) a bodily process. Chiropractic care can produce the same results, but relies on the intelligence of the body. Chiropractors trust your body. Do you?
What is the purpose of pain?
Pain prompts many Westerville folks to begin chiropractic care. But pain isn't the problem! Pain is just how your body alerts you that a limit has been reached (or exceeded), that something isn't working right and that some type of change is needed. As a chiropractor, my job is finding the underlying cause and recommending the changes needed to bring your body back into balance.