Infamous Emails Don't Always Kill Careers
Carl Bialik from the WSJ writes "Those oft-forwarded email gaffes don't always lead to career meltdowns for the ashamed senders, Jared Sandberg writes in the Wall Street Journal. In some corners of the business world, preserving a reputation can be less important than acquiring one in the first place. For instance, the 2003 legal summer associate who accidentally emailed 40 colleagues to announce he was 'busy doing jack' ended up getting a job at the firm. More recently, the young woman who told off a lawyer offering her a job -- and saw her email forwarded worldwide -- is quite confident that the notoriety can't hurt, and might even help, her career."
Michael Brown's certainly doing well.
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Evan
"$30 for the One True Ring. $10 each additional ring!" -- JRR "Bob" Tolkien
That thing floating around about how bad ass Chuck Norris is has gotten him more press than he's seen since Walker Texas Ranger.
For some reason I refuse to use either spell check or the spacebar properly.
I am sorry, I didnt notice your post.
Or, to simplify in terms that every male would understand: Shooting yourself in the nuts doesn't always mean you'll lose them. Some really hot chick might even think guys who shoot themselves in the nuts, are sexy. But it's unlikely.
I was told that I could listen to the radio at a reasonable volume from nine to eleven...
I disagree, I posted what I first thought of (the old adage) and then I realized that I could be the 1st poster again. As I've done it before, it is simply no big, but it's just fun to keep up the (1st?) question going. If I had missed 1st it would have setup a bunch of automatic "You fail it!" responses, which I think are quite funny.
Also, since my post was 1st, me mentioning it in the post is ONtopic, not off.
Respectfully,
fak3r
fak3r.com