Blind financial boss earns praise at new ceremony

Posted by on June 29th, 2010

Julie Goehlert, financial director of shipping firm Mercator Cargo Systems, picked up an award at the Hampshire Winning Women awards.

Accompanied by her husband and managing director Paul Goehlert, she took to the stage to collect the Conquering Adversity award.

She said: ‘I’m responsible for all the money in, all the money out.

‘We’ve got all kinds of technology now – a talking calculator, a talking online bank. without that I definitely couldn’t do this.

‘I probably couldn’t have picked a worse job, because I’m relying on sight the whole time; reading the figures, inputting the figures.’

Since she was diagnosed with retinitis pigmentosa 30 years ago, aged just 17, her sight has got slowly worse.

Before the advent of talking stationary, she had to use a x12 magnifying glass to read the figures off the screen.

But she said it made sense for her to keep working in the role, because of her emotional investment in the company.

‘It’s our baby,’ she said.

‘When Paul moved the business from London to Portsmouth 13 years ago, I started thinking: I could do that job.

‘I started, but there are more and more challenges all the time.

‘I don’t know of anyone else in the same boat.

‘I expect there must be, but I don’t know any.’

Her advice to anyone else with a disability who wants to forge ahead in business?

‘I just don’t think about it. I just get on with it.

‘You just have to be very positive.’

Husband and companyfounder Paul, 55, said: ‘She’s the most remarkable person I’ve ever met. Simple as that.

‘The way she just gets on with it and lets nothing get to her. It’s a recognition of her spirit.’

The awards were held at the Langstone Hotel on Hayling Island, and run by business coach Allison Marlowe.

The ceremony, she said, was purely a celebration of women in business.

It was non-profit event, and the first year it has run.

Other winners included the Business Mum award won by Allison Hampshire of Eric Robinson Solicitors, New Business Venture won by Roberta Jerram of Linen at Home, ”WomanPreneur” won by Sam Willoughby of Whatson4.com, and Networking Champion of the Year won by Sheryl Andrews of Step by Step Coaching.

Blind financial boss earns praise at new ceremony

10 Surprising Jobs that Pay Better Than You'd Think

Posted by on June 11th, 2010

Wed, 04/30/2008 – 3:47 am

Are you sick of working minimum wage at fast food places, or stocking shelves for measly pennies? does Zoo Curator, Animator, or Loan Officer sound like a better career move? yes it does, especially if the pay is good.

59% of employees in the United States are paid by an hourly rate. think of how far you could make a pre-tax $800-a-week salary go from working 40 hours.

Check out this list compiled by CNN of jobs, where you don’t have to take your clothes off, and can get paid more than $20 an hour:

1. Subway and streetcar operators –
Annual = $46,180. Hourly = $22.20. I’m not sure where these ‘streetcars’ are located outside of San Francisco, but subway operator sounds doable. Press a few buttons, babble incoherently over a loud speaker, yell at people for holding the doors open. Don’t forget about the intense responsibility of operating a high speed transport vehicle… and the cool hat. (not pictured)

2. Gaming Supervisors – Annual= $42,390. Hourly = $20.38. These are guys sometimes known as the pit bosses at casinos. The guy brooding and pacing around the casino floor making sure none of the dealers are losing too much. This sounds like a sweet job too. how much education and training do you really need to shake down and break the legs of a card-counting cheat in the back room?

3. Multimedia artists and animators – Annual = $58,030. Hourly = $27.90. Toy story, Shrek, Bee Movie and Finding Nemo were all great movies that took years of painstaking digital animation and countless artists to create. Everyone’s seen the ‘making of’ for these movies, and you know they need a guy to run around in a weird black suit with motion capture sensors. That could be you! Besides, wouldn’t it be fun to start sneaking hidden sex messages into Disney movies again?

4. Respiratory therapists – Annual = $46,610. Hourly = $23.37. Teaching people how to breathe?! You’re kidding me. These guys bring home this salary for helping doctors treat patients with breathing disorders. Squeeze a plastic bag here, blow a few rescue breaths there and then call it a day. Done and done, pay me.


5. Curators – Annual = $49,980. Hourly = $24.03. Everyone loves museums. according to the writeup on this, these salaries also include zoos, aquariums, nature centers and botanical gardens. These are places you would love to spend your free time. Imagine having a career hanging out at the zoo all day? and don’t tell me it would smell bad, because you know training monkeys to give high-fives and explaining to little kids why two peacocks are climbing on each other are priceless opportunities that lend themselves to great personal amusement.

6. Health educatorsAnnual = $43,370. Hourly = $21.81. Remember Mr. Smithsburg, the health class teacher in high school? He passed around that prosthetic phallus with the silicone testicles showing everyone how to give themselves a testicular cancer self-exam? well you could do what that guy does and earn a decent salary! Come on, who doesn’t want to be an old creepy guy talking about STDs and prostate exams with young, impressionable, and mortified high school students?


7. Cartographers and photogrammetrists – Annual = $52,600. Hourly = $25.29. These guys make maps and analyze photographs. Seems simple enough, I mean come on, there isn’t really any heavy duty cartography going on these days. those days of traveling the globe on a ship to sketch landscapes are over. Most of the earth has been Google mapped to oblivion. We can even pinpoint where on a map a kid fell off his bike.


8. Arbitrators, mediators and reconcilers – Annual = $58,790. Hourly = $28.27. I think one of the best examples of this profession is from the opening scene in Wedding Crashers where Owen Wilson and Vince Vaughn are mitigating a divorce settlement. If everything were just like in the movies, real life would be great. and if hearing people argue about money and squabble about child custody, isn’t up your alley you could always go into buried treasure mitigation hearings. I demand 40 gold doubloons and 3 pirate skulls.


9. Urban and regional planners – Annual = $58,940. Hourly = $28.33. There are people who get their Masters and Doctorate degrees in studying this kind of stuff for city planning, but I’m gonna sum it all up for your so you can start making money in this career. Don’t put the paper mill next to the tire fire yard, and keep the sex offender prison away from the elementary school. now get planning, we need New New Jersey mapped out by Tuesday.


10. Loan officers – Annual = $61,930. Hourly = $29.77. Want to feel like you’re making a difference with a career? well jump on the bandwagon and continue to worsen the credit and housing markets by tricking people into high-interest loans they can’t afford. At least you will be able to make your monthly payments, with this sweet new job.

Any other professions that do surprisingly well for themselves? let us hear it in the comments section.

CNN: Ten jobs that pay $20 an hour, April 23, 2008

Tags: dream jobs, good salary, Lists

10 Surprising Jobs that Pay Better than You'd Think

Europe tries to calm fears over Greek debt crisis

Posted by on May 7th, 2010

BRUSSELS — French President Nicolas Sarkozy and German Chancellor Angela Merkel announced early Saturday that the 16 eurozone nations will set up a financial defense plan by the time markets open next week to shield their shared currency against further attack.

With Spain and Portugal’s fragile financial systems already pounded by markets in the wake of the Greek debt crisis, Sarkozy and Merkel laid out a plan to defend all euro nations against aggressive market movement.

“The euro is an essential element of Europe. We cannot leave it to speculators,” Sarkozy said following nine hours of emergency talks by leaders from eurozone nations.

“We will not let others undo what generations have created,” said Sarkozy.

Eurozone chief Jean-Claude Juncker underscored the urgency of the threat by saying that even the staunchly independent European Central Bank was on board to help out with the operation after Jean-Claude Trichet huddled with Sarkozy and Merkel just before the summit.

“The ECB will want to contribute” to the mechanism, he said.

“We are talking about a global attack against the euro, and the eurozone must react as one,” Juncker said.

Sarkozy said European finance ministers will hold another emergency meeting Sunday to work out specifics of the anti-speculation plan.

The urgency of Sunday’s hastily arranged Ecofin meeting is the first clear indication that fears of contagion are coming true, with the crisis that emerged from Greece starting to affect other eurozone countries.

The fighting words from Sarkozy and Juncker were another.

Spain and Portugal are beginning to show the same signs of trouble that Greece was three months ago, with borrowing costs increasing, talk of speculative attacks and increasing concern among European partners that some form of help could be required.

“There’s no reason, no fundamental reason in the economy to make such suspicions about our sovereign debt,” said Portuguese Prime Minister Jose Socrates.

The summit, originally called to sign off on a bailout plan for Greece and draw lessons for the future, turned into one of crisis management amid market turmoil.

Financial markets have continued to sell off the euro and Greek bonds even as EU leaders have insisted for days that the Greek financial implosion is a unique combination of bad management, free spending and statistical cheating that doesn’t apply to other euro-zone nations.

Beyond immediate measures to protect the euro, several leaders at the meeting said they want to impose punishing budgetary rules which would force member nations walk a tight budgetary line and avoid the kind of cheating and overspending that led to Greece’s problems.

Several leaders, including Sarkozy and Merkel, insisted the near-collapse of Greece and subsequent market moves against other eurozone nations underscored that the framework of rules for managing the euro needed revamping, according to officials close to the talks.

To deal with the crisis, some also wanted a deeper involvement of the European Central Bank.

“We must sharpen the edge” of the rules to keep wayward governments in line, Merkel said, adding the 16 eurozone leaders should also consider changes to the 1992 treaty that laid the groundwork for the shared currency. “Otherwise, it won’t work, in my opinion.”

Opening the evening summit among visibly tense dinner partners, Sarkozy and European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso insisted the crisis now had gone beyond Greece itself and affected the very roots of the currency.

Canadian Finance Minister Jim Flaherty chaired a G-7 telephone conference of finance minister and central bankers on the Greek debt situation and he urged European countries to move quickly with a strong response.

“The sooner the better,” said Flaherty, who declined to talk about the details of the talks. “The key is that we move toward a resolution. This has to be resolved. It cannot go on indefinitely.”

Flaherty said discussions are continuing and he expects there will be further discussion this weekend.

“Every one understands the need for a clear, timely and strong response,” Flaherty said.

The euro has rules to stop governments from undermining it with reckless spending, limiting deficits to 3 percent of gross domestic product. those rules were shown to lack teeth when even big countries such as Germany and France broke them for years without serious consequences.

Merkel, whose country holds the key to any solution, spoke Friday with President Barack Obama, who said he supported the effort to deal with the financial crisis in Europe.

They said the bailout should keep the problem from spreading to other countries by giving Greece three years of support and preventing a default when it has to pay euro8.5 billion in bonds coming due May 19. All leaders confirmed the support for Greece, and Sarkozy said the money would arrive on time.

“We are determined to move forward. but there is unprecedented volatility throughout the world, in the world economy,” said Greek Prime Minister George Papandreou.

So far, the markets have taken little heed of leader’s reassurances. Stocks, Greek bonds and the euro plunged even after the head of the European Central Bank, Jean-Claude Trichet, tersely underlined that “Portugal is not Greece. Spain is not Greece” on Thursday. the euro fell to $1.2520, its lowest in 14 months, but recovered to $1.2721 later.

Along with the eurozone meeting, the G-7 finance ministers were holding a teleconference Friday on the crisis.

After struggling to get ahead of the crisis for weeks, European governments are now underlining their determination to act by speeding approval of their contributions to the a euro110 billion ($140 billion) emergency loan package for Athens.

The consequences of failure could be dire.

Many economists think Greece will eventually default anyway, which could deal a sharp blow to the euro and lead to sharply higher borrowing costs for other indebted countries in Europe.

Default, or market contagion to other countries could lead to panic, intimidating consumers from spending and making banks fearful to lend money to businesses and consumers.

In Germany, where bailing Greece out is unpopular, both houses of parliament approved the package Friday and sent it to President Horst Koehler for his signature. with Italy and France, that accounts for over two-thirds of the European part of the bailout package. the International Monetary Funds adds euro30 billion on its own.

Greek lawmakers approved drastic austerity cuts Thursday worth about euro30 billion ($38.18 billion) through 2012 — that will slash pensions and civil servants’ pay and further hike consumer taxes. the measures were a prerequisite needed to secure international rescue loans.

European stocks fell but recovered most of their losses by early afternoon Friday. but in early action in New York, traders looked past a surprisingly strong report on the U.S. jobs market and focused instead on Europe’s spreading debt crisis. the Dow fell 139.89 points, or 1.33 percent, to 10,380.43.

Associated Press writers Slobodan Lekic in Brussels, Pierre-Yves Roger in Paris, Barry Hatton in Lisbon, Ciaran Giles in Madrid and Rob Gillies in Toronto contributed to this report.

Europe tries to calm fears over Greek debt crisis

February 2010 Sees Consumer Spending Rise, Incomes Stay The Same …

Posted by on May 7th, 2010

All economists and investors are looking at the data coming out of the Commerce Department related to consumer spending. As well, there is a lot of attention being paid to income levels in the United States in February. Investors want to get more confidence in the market, and with higher consumer spending that is easier to come by, but with stagnant income growth, there is still a clear problem with the economy.

Consumer Spending Keeps Rising

For the fifth straight month, consumer spending rose in February, while income levels stayed the same, consumer savings fell to their lowest levels since October 2008. Spending increased by .3 percent, which is .1 percent below the rise seen in January. This is the exact increase that most economists were theorizing. In the fourth quarter of 2009, a 1.6 increase in the annual rate was seen, which is 2.8 percent below what was seen in that quarter the previous year.

For personal income, January had seen an increase of .3 percent, but in February only had an increase of .1 percent. Payrolls of goods and services fell in February as well, by $3.5 billion, which is well below the $5.2 billion increase seen previously. Manufacturing also slipped by $1.4 billion, after gaining over $5 billion.

Disposable income was flat in February, after it fell by .4 percent in January. Since there was no income growth for most consumers, savings fell to a new annual rate of $340 billion. The rate of savings also slipped to three percent, which is puts the savings rate down to its lowest rate in over a year. One thing that rose was the personal consumption expenditures price index, which does not include food or energy. It rose by 1.3 percent in the 12 months leading up to February 2010.

Economy is Recovering at a slow pace

This means that it the economy is recovering, but very slowly. Consumer spending is highly important to the economy and in many ways it drives the American economy. When consumer spending increases, investors will have more confidence in the stock market. As a result, it is very important that the consumer spending figures continue to rise up as time goes on. with a steady increase for the past five months, there is clearly a better economic picture coming.

February is a very important month in terms of consumer spending. It is well after Christmas and if consumer spending is still going up during the month of February, that bodes well for the economy. This is often a month where people do not spend very much, but in the past five months there has been a constant growth in consumer spending. while income levels have been flat, that may change as the year goes on since increases in income usually do not come during the first months of the year.

None the less, growth in consumer spending bodes well for the economy.

Further Reading

Future Of US Economy

LightSpeed Trading Reviews

Zecco Reviews: Free Stock Trading

Tags: , , , , , ,

This entry was posted on Wednesday, March 31st, 2010 at 8:51 pm and is filed under 2009 Recession, Consumer Confidence, Economy, Uncategorized. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

February 2010 Sees Consumer Spending Rise, Incomes Stay The same …

Why Penny Stocks Are a Bad Move

Posted by on February 26th, 2010

2

Small stocks can offer opportunities for big rewards. but with really small stocks — also known as penny stocks — the risks involved often outweigh any benefits.

Penny stocks aren’t the kinds of shares that can make you a millionaire. You’ll find many of them trading for less than $1 apiece — hence the name. unfortunately, they usually fetch such tiny prices for good reason. Typically, penny stocks have relatively few shares outstanding, making it easy for fraudsters to buy shares, hype up the company, and thereby drive up the price as others flock in. then they’ll sell their shares, sending the stock cratering again — a classic example of “pump and dump.”

Engage in resistance training
Even if you know that, you can still get lured in by the hype. here are some choice excerpts from a dubious email that recently urged me to buy into an energy company:

  • The company supposedly controls some 150 square miles of “key petroleum leases” near the oil-rich North Sea. Note that the company’s not boasting that it’s actually discovered oil — just that it’s near the place where billions of barrels “discovered by BP (NYSE: BP) and now operated by Apache (NYSE: APA)” were found.
  • In a single paragraph, the company claims that its four license blocks are estimated to contain a prospective resource of approximately 236 million barrels of oil. this “pending discovery-size” is apparently good, because it puts the company’s supposed prospective oil holdings in the “highest potential” areas in the U.K. did you catch any certainty there? Any specificity? Any proven assets?
  • The company is actually producing oil in Texas, via a lease near some oil discovered by Royal Dutch Shell (NYSE: RDS-A).

That’s all classic penny-stock stuff. the hypesters get you excited with possibilities — possible cures for cancer, possible gold mines, possible billions of barrels of oil. but why take such wild chances with your money, when you can invest in proven companies that can dominate their peers?

Lying low
To check the email’s claims, I looked up the company. Until recently, you wouldn’t have found much information on it. Before the email spurred investor interest, the stock went days without trading at all. even now, days where more than 50,000 shares trade are rare. at just more than $1 a share, that’s not very significant — especially when you compare it to the hundreds of millions of shares traded daily for active stocks such as Citigroup (NYSE: C) and Bank of America (NYSE: BAC).

Don’t let yourself be tempted. While the stock hyped in the email I received has skyrocketed since this marketing push, in the long run I think it’ll more likely trade for $0.10 than $10. Focus instead on powerful companies with compelling advantages.

Why Penny Stocks are a bad Move

Bad Credit Credit Cards » Do You Know The Secrets of Credit Card …

Posted by on February 9th, 2010

Today, almost everyone can get a credit card. most people accept the offers by mail, because they are all the time! Many of these cards have a low introductory rate, but then resumed later on, often without realizing it themselves! After all, who goes to all the fine print on the back of the application to read? not many people! somehow it seems almost to deceive.

The lowest fares for a credit card can be found in the size medium –regional banks. if a person has a decent credit history, he or she applied for a rate of “better” card – even if the bank is out of the state. Will not come to you, but to apply you must go to them.

start with a view to medium sized banks in your area. if all their prices are too high, you can explore the other banks at low interest rates in other states. in these states, you can go to your bank and check the list American Financial Services Association Annual StateThe laws on consumer credit and rates. “Alternatively, you can also go online to explore. One thing to note is, if not start your search for that countries with low interest rate, the fact that each of the banks in these countries give a credit card low rate. sometimes the banks will move their credit card to a higher rate states that the less restrictive standards for the treatment of interest. you will find that credit card has a lower price after the bank!

Another “secret” thatPeople credit you do not want to know is that many of the high taxes attract strong interest from banks in an attempt to enroll potential credit card holders, thanks to the advances of credit card special. These additional services can be started almost everything, from insurance and discounts at numerous shops catalog for travel services and discounts on car hire. They also offer “deals” on everything you can imagine, new cars for pest control!

The reality of these offersyou just found is that good or better prices in the city where you live. People could live in rural areas, like the idea. But these people can travel in general, the nearest town or shop online to save himself. These credit enhancements are generally not worth it, and continue to pay high interest rates!

Remember, credit card, cash, which is the most expensive if you use the card for a cash advance. not receive the “float” orPeriod (in which the card or loan is effectively interest-free) and an extra fee will be tacked on to calculate the interest on your usual! if you really need the money, it would be more convenient to take the long term, a bank loan guaranteed, even though it may be more difficult to organize.

use these tips to relax after an interest rate lower by a low interest rate transfer credit cards. not only for each credit card, in particular by bidsreceive e-mail, without having to learn what interest rates are. if you are careful and look around, you should be able to credit at a rate that is possible to live with security.

Thanks To : sanydslr.blogyai http://hdtvsony.blogyai.com/ Guaranteed Credit Card Secured Credit Cards

Leave a Reply

Bad Credit Credit Cards » Do you know The Secrets of Credit Card …

Computer customers keep repair shops buzzing

Posted by on January 25th, 2010

globegazette.com Privacy Policy: (hide)
Welcome to the web sites of the Globe Gazette, a media company located in eastern Iowa. we believe in your right to know what information is collected during your visit to our web sites and how the information is used and safeguarded.

Information Gathered by Voluntary Submission
to make use of certain features on our websites (such as contests, story comments, personalized web pages and other interactive forums) visitors need to register and to provide certain information as part of the registration or participation process. (We may ask, for example, for your name, email address, sex, age, and zip code, and we might request information on your interest in sports, personal finance, the performing arts, and the like.)

the information you supply will help us to offer you more personalized features, to tailor our sites to your interests and make them more useful to you. the more you tell us about yourself, the more value we can offer you. Supplying such information is entirely voluntary. but if you don’t supply the information we need, we may be unable to provide you with services we make available to other visitors to our sites. of course, even if you want to remain completely anonymous, you’re still free to take advantage of the wealth of content available on our sites without registration.

Information Automatically Gathered about all Visitors
we collect aggregate and user-specific information on what pages consumers access or visit. This information is used to generate reports that help the Globe Gazette assess the value of and interest in the various web sites. the information we collect is used by us to improve the content of our web page. we can build a better site if we know which pages our users are visiting and how often.

Our web servers automatically collect limited information about your computer’s connection to the Internet, including your IP address but not the e-mail address, when you visit our sites. your IP address does not identify you personally. we use this information to deliver our web pages to you upon request, to tailor our sites to the interests of our users, and to measure traffic within our sites.

to help make our sites more responsive to the needs of our visitors, we may utilize a standard feature of browser software, called a “cookie”. the cookie doesn’t actually identify the visitor, just the computer that a visitor uses to access our site. a cookie can’t read data off your hard drive. Our advertisers or content partners may also assign their own cookies to your browser, a process that we cannot control. we use cookies to help us tailor our site to your needs, to deliver a better, more personalized service. it is a cookie, for example, that allows us to deliver your personalized stock quotes each time you visit a site.

Information Shared with Other Organizations
When we present information to our advertisers — to help them understand our audience and confirm the value of advertising on our websites — it is usually in the form of aggregated statistics on traffic to various pages within our sites. we will not share individual user information with third parties unless the user has specifically approved the release of that information.

Special Attention to Children
Children should always get permission from their parents before sending any information about themselves (such as their names, email addresses, and phone numbers) over the Internet, to us or to anyone else. we do not specifically collect information about children. we encourage parents to review and share safety tips with their children participating in the online experience.

A final note:
the Globe Gazette is affiliated with other online companies, some of which feature our branding. This policy statement does not apply to those companies’ web sites; please refer to these affiliated sites to obtain information on their privacy policies. if you can’t find the privacy policy of any of these sites via a link from the site’s homepage, you should contact the site directly for more information.

the Web is an evolving medium. if we need to change our privacy policy at some point in the future, we’ll post the changes before they take effect. of course, our use of information gathered while the current policy is in effect will always be consistent with the current policy, even if we change that policy later.

(hide)

Computer customers keep repair shops buzzing

Scammers Try to Cash In On OiNK Misery

Posted by on December 20th, 2009

There are always people who are happy to try to cash in on the misery of others. the OiNK shutdown is no different. Sites are appearing thick and fast asking for donations and promising relaunches. None of these are sanctioned by OiNK – don’t give them any money!

Mere hours went by after the OiNK takedown before sites started springing up claiming to be collecting money for OiNK’s legal defense or soliciting donations in connection with a revival of the site.

Some are displaying the amount of donations they have received and these seem sizable in some cases. Although there is no doubt that some generous supporters have already given to these funds, its likely the amounts of donations shown have been inflated to imply that this is the correct fund to donate to.

Fact: NONE of these sites are sanctioned or set up in collaboration with OiNK, so please, please, please – don’t give them your money! this has been confirmed by TorrentFreak directly with OiNK himself.

This means ALL sites claiming to try to raise funds for OiNK should be considered dubious. It’s entirely possible that some good natured individuals are trying to genuinely raise money but it’s impossible to separate the scammers from the tiny minority of honest people.

There may not even be a fund in the end, this hasn’t been decided yet so in the meantime, please keep your money safe.

Potential donors are advised to wait until we make an announcement about the correct fund to donate to. we will do that here on TorrentFreak.

Previously: the Pirate Bay To Bring Back OiNK

Next: OiNK Domains Now Point To the Pirate Bay DNS

Scammers try to Cash In on OiNK Misery