Work around the World

Work around the World

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27/12/2021
03/07/2021

Poland 🇵🇱

11/05/2021

Work in Poland 🇵🇱 and EU

11/05/2021

Work in EU

05/05/2021

Work In Europe: [email protected]

21/04/2021

Best wishes to Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II’s on her 95th Birthday today Wednesday 21st April, 2021.

Sadly she will be spending this significant Birthday without her beloved Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh. However, she is to be congratulated on reaching this great age and thanked most sincerely for her dedication to duty before and after she ascended the throne 69 years ago.

God save the Queen and long may she reign over us !

12/04/2021

This is one of the best and one of my personal favorite photos of modern medicine, and goes way back to 1987, A then young Polish Cardiac Surgeon named Dr. Zbigniew Religa watching his patient's vital signs after a 23 hours Heart transplant surgery, which was considered impossible back then. In the right corner is his assistant surgeon young colleague sleeping after exhaustion.
The heart transplant surgery on this patient named: Tadeusz Zytkiewicz was successful even though Dr. Religa only learned this surgery ONLY from books in English, and was the pioneer of heart transplants in Poland regardless of the fact that he never participated in such surgeries before doing his first one.

23/03/2021

The Duke of Sussex has joined Silicon Valley startup BetterUp as its chief impact officer

22/03/2021

😉😊

19/03/2021

Wald bombers.
Have you ever wondered why popular books about becoming a millionaire don't make any of their readers a millionaire? Or why do successful companies like Microsoft, Google or Facebook appear once a decade, although their success story is shelved, studied and even screened in big movies? The answer is simple: any success story is always luck, while the most valuable information remains in the heads of those who could not succeed.
This phenomenon was first described during World War II. Mathematician Abraham Wald studied the location of the breakdowns received by American bombers during the combat mission. Most often, wings, stabilizers and fuselage were struck by enemy fire, the pilot's cabin, engines and fuel system:
It would seem that the places that were most damaged should be strengthened, but Wald decided differently. He correctly suggested that the plane could return with such damage to the base indicates that they are not critical, and that parts of the case remained intact. This conclusion was confirmed after the end of the war, when from forests and swamps began to raise broken planes. Turns out they had damaged exactly the places that Wald said - engines, fuel system and pilot's cabin. With such damage, the plane could not fly - either the pilot died, or all the fuel leaked, or the engine was fired, but they did not know about it and could not know about it at the base, as the plane just did not reach it. As a result, all statistics on the damage were collected by engineers from returning planes, and there was no information about the lost vehicles.
We see the same mistake in the environment of business. People strive to thoroughly study the biographies of successful businessmen, go to their trainings, buy their books on how to succeed, but even by following all these tips, they fail to succeed. The reason is the same as in the case of Wald bombers, the books of millionaires have gathered the most useless part of information - what to do and how to behave when conditions are as favorable as possible. There is not a word about what to do when everything turns against you in these books. The most useful information is people who tried to build a business and burned down, but they don't write books, and if they wrote, no one would buy them.
Statistics are inexorable, from 90 to 95 % of all businesses are broke in the first five years, with another 80 % left afloat in the next five years. As a result, only 1-2 % of the stable business are in 10 years. % of startups, the rest are broken. At the same time, 1-2 % remained afloat not because they made everything better, or calculated all the risks ahead, but simply because they were in the right place at the right time. They can't repeat their own success from scratch, while in science an experiment that cannot be repeated, doing the same sequence of actions is called accident.
The moral of this fable is: ANALIZE SOMEONE'S MISTAKES, reader, you won't get someone else's success, but you can still EXPRESS THE PROBABILITY OF SUCCESSFUL FOR YOURSELF. 🙃

16/03/2021

35 years ago today, Microsoft went public. If you bought $10,000 worth of MSFT at its IPO, today you'd make $300k a year from dividends alone. So imagine what it did for the employees and company founders...

09/03/2021

Shahid Khan Moved To The U.S. With Nothing, Today He's Worth $9 Billion

We first learned about billionaire Shahid Khan in late 2011, when he emerged as the surprising new owner of the NFL's Jacksonville Jaguars. Khan was born in Pakistan and is the first ethnic NFL owner in the history of the sport. He's also a really inspiring rags-to-riches story. Long before he was a billionaire NFL team owner, he lived in a $2 a night room at a YMCA and made $1.20 per hour washing dishes. Needless to say, he's come a long way.

Khan moved to the U.S. from Pakistan as a 16-year-old engineering student at the University of Illinois. He arrived in Champaign in the middle of an Illinois winter, with a blizzard swirling around him. He had just $500 to his name, which was his family's entire life savings. The dorms weren't open yet, so he found a room at the YMCA and got a job in that facility's kitchen washing dishes so that he wouldn't burn through his $500 too quickly. Once Khan moved into the dorms, he embraced American college life by joining the Beta Theta Pi fraternity. He graduated in 1971 with a degree in industrial engineering and took a job with a local aftermarket auto parts company called Flex-N-Gate. Khan oversaw production at Flex-N-Gate for seven years and during that time observed that the company's bumpers were not manufactured efficiently. He tinkered with the process to make it less complicated and in the process, revolutionized the business.

In 1978, Khan founded his own company with a small business loan. Customers flocked to his Bumper Works venture. Khan came up with a design that made bumpers from a single piece of steel rather than a number of different parts. General Motors contracted with him for bumpers that would slim down their popular Chevy LUV pickup truck to meet weight requirements. Chrysler contracted with Khan to lighten up its Dodge D50 truck. Unfortunately, Flex-N-Go sued Khan for stealing trade secrets. Khan hired the cheapest attorney he could find and then spent nights in the law library at his alma mater, crafting a defense after long days overseeing production at Bumper Works. The legal battle went on for two years. Khan won each case. Eventually, the Illinois Supreme Court refused to hear Flex-N-Gate's second appeal. In 1980, Khan bought his former employer. Khan combined Bumper Works and Flex-N-Gate and made a list of his competitors. He carried this list of 19 companies around until one by one, they all went out of business.

Khan's deal with GM fell apart but the automaker introduced him to executives from Isuzu, who was just starting to import cars and trucks to the U.S. He gained the trust of the Isuzu executives. The car company needed suppliers and Khan was their man. As the Japanese import market grew, Khan's business grew with them. After he landed Isuzu, Mazda soon followed. Then, he hit the big time, landing Toyota as a Flex-N-Gate client. By 1989, he was their sole bumper supplier. Khan is Flex-N-Gate's sole shareholder. By 2001, the company's sales were topping more than $1 billion per year.

As Khan'swealth grew, he started checking the valuations of NFL teams to see if he was rich enough yet to buy one. In 2010 he won the bidding for a 60% stake in the St. Louis Rams. Unfortunately, minority owner Stan Kroenke exercised his right to match any offer and decided to do just that. Nearly as soon as Khan lost out on the Rams, Wayne Weaver, the then-owner of the Jacksonville Jaguars approached him and told him he wanted to sell the team. Khan learned a lot from the Rams deal and when the opportunity to purchase the Jaguars was presented, he moved fast. In October 2011, the final price for the Jacksonville NFL franchise was hammered out on a cocktail napkin in the bar of the Omni Jacksonville Hotel. Khan agreed to an all-cash deal of $620 million plus he would assume the $150 million of Jags' debt. He took out $300 million in loans against Flex-N-Gate to make the deal happen.

Khan is the epitome of the American dream. He worked hard, tenaciously created his own luck, and built a $9 billion dollar personal fortune. Shahid Khan's experience is one of the greatest American rags-to-riches success stories of all time.

20/12/2020
15/12/2020
28/06/2020

This young man was on his way to a job interview and had a bit of trouble with his tie. The lady in the red coat noticed him struggling and nudged her husband with her elbow. She then blocked him to help him evade any embarrassment. What a beautiful photo!

Don’t let the evil in this world stop you from showing love and compassion to one another

Let’s hope that the young man got the job!

Photos from Work around the World's post 02/05/2020

Poland’s 🇵🇱 Flag Day

20/04/2020

The Best Team
Will find best staff for your business
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19/04/2020

Работа в Англии [email protected]

14/04/2020

We are looking for architects and diseigners to work for our clients: [email protected]

11/04/2020

Thinking about working in EU ? Apply today on: www.job247.org or [email protected]

05/04/2020

Workers needed to work on farms in United Kingdom 🇬🇧
[email protected]

15/03/2020

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