NEWS FLASH! Recommended... Customers who have given us good testimonials recently have purchased these services:
Targeted Email Advertising Quick, safe & cost effective way to send your stand alone email advertisement to one million or more targeted people.
Shopping Mall Web Links Exclusive shopping mall web linking service. Put your site where the buyers are! Get quality backlinks and higher search engine rankings!
Article Marketing Writers create and distribute original SEO content articles about your web business!
Targeted Web Traffic Choose from 160+ targeted categories of high quality expired domain traffic. Targeted visitors are sent direct to your web site!
Banner Advertising Target the exact web customers you need with our fast growing banner advertising network. Build your brand. Buy click-thrus or impressions.
Blog Marketing Build BUZZ for your online business! Professional blog marketing builds permanent web links & can get your company to the next level.
Social Advertising Tweet your ad message to over 425k Twitter followers. Also, your ads reach over 1 million people on Facebook! Affordable & effective!
If You're a Woman, Your Computer Usage Could Cost You Your Job
Despite the advancements of feminism over the past three decades, few would argue that women still face a double standard when it comes to their behavior. While men's borderline-inappropriate behavior is often laughed off as "boys will be boys," women face higher conduct standards - especially in the workplace. That's why it's crucial that, as women, our behavior on the job is beyond reproach.
Small Towns and Big States
For evidence of the double standard, we need look no farther than Arlington, Oregon, where Mayor Carmen Kontur-Gronquist was recalled in a 142-139 vote after the town's denizens discovered that the mayor's MySpace page featured photos of her in lingerie. Although Kontur-Gronquist is alleging election fraud and challenging the returns, and even though the mayoral position was unpaid, no one is arguing that her MySpace page did her in.
Contrast her situation with that of David Paterson, New York's new governor. After Governor Eliot Spitzer resigned amid allegations of engaging the services of a prostitute, Paterson was sworn in and admitted that he had engaged in extramarital affairs and that he had experimented with both cocaine and marijuana while he was in his twenties. It seems odd that the mayor of a small town in Oregon is being held to a higher standard than the governor of New York.
The moral (so to speak) of the story is that, as women, our behavior must be impeccable - both on and off the job. Yes, we can have private lives, but we unwittingly make those private lives public when we boot up a computer, use email, or go online.
To protect yourself in the workplace, the first rule of thumb is never to conduct personal business using your employer's equipment. You have no right to privacy, and your employer can have total access to your record of computer usage, your Internet history, and your email. Resist the temptation to shop online, check the news, or surf the Internet while you're at work. Don't forward that joke or motivational email to your colleagues. And don't email your friends or family members.
The second thing to keep in mind is that the niche of the Internet you've carved out for yourself using your home computer is also visible to your employer. Increasingly, potential employers use tools to screen job candidates' presence on the Internet. That hysterical YouTube video of you dancing with a lampshade on your head at your best friend's bridal shower may prevent you from landing the job of your dreams. Before making a bold rant on your blog or uploading a questionable picture to a social networking site, think about the impact it might have on your career.
Final Thoughts
There's no arguing that computers enrich our lives and provide us with options our mothers never dreamed of. As women, though, computers can also be our downfall at work. It may be acceptable for men to check out the Sports Illustrated website while they're at work (even the swimsuit edition!), but women are held to a higher standard... Just ask Carmen Kontur-Gronquist.
+Chris Robertson is a published author of Majon International. All Rights Reserved. Copyright 2011 (Sat Apr 12 2008) Majon International. Majon International is one of the worlds MOST popular internet marketing and internet advertising companies on the web. Visit their main business resource internet marketing web site at: http://www.majon.com