
In the vast majority of cases, however, your decision isn’t going to be so easy.
In the vast majority of cases, however, your decision isn’t going to be so easy.
We’ve already shown you some free sourcing tools in previous videos. Now the question is how to review all the info you end up with. How do you know what’s already been reviewed? How can you be sure you didn’t miss anything?
Our training manager Chen would like to introduce you to two free and simple Chrome add-ons that will make you wonder how you were able to work without them until now 🙂
We are surrounded by so many platforms. Sometimes they can be used perfectly to match our needs and find great candidates and more. We’ve gotten to see how they can be used professionally and have been impressed.
Welcome to our first tip video, covering the topic of sourcing via Google. Chen Domb, our training manager, invites you for a behind-the-scenes look at how to continue quality sourcing in times like these.
On the very day they were supposed to onboard their biggest client ever, they shutdown flights.
TailorMed was founded on two main needs: the inability of patients to pay for medical care (mostly in the U.S.) and the inability of hospitals to accept payment for their services.
After more than a few phone calls and consultation inquiries in the past two months, Neta Fiss (VPHR at Idomoo) sat down to arrange her thoughts and understand the relationship between coronavirus, employer branding and personal branding, approaching these subjects with 5-years of practical experience with employer branding
Water cooler conversations on ZOOM, a virtual wine club and morning standup – Dana Bash Shalah and Dror Davidoff talk about how to adapt to the daily life of the company and why informal communication is just as important as everything else.
“How do you do something that helps everyone?”
This question was the starting point for Henry Chen Weinstein, a venture capital investor and founder of Travel Tech Nation, a platform that helps startups and larger entities in the travel sector cooperate with one another and accelerate the future of the industry together.
A quick response in crises isn’t only important for your employees, but for you as well when you answer to investors.
You’ve probably been getting up in the morning, washing your face and brushing your teeth, getting all dressed up and heading out to… your living room?
He who adapts best to change works best in collaboration with others and gets by with what he has is he who will survive. That all sounds pretty familiar, but according to Ayelet (or “Captain of Change” if you will), “Corona isn’t a change, it’s a crisis.” Humans always experience change, but while some of what we know is in flux, this is balanced by some that remain stable and constant. In a crisis, most of what we’ve become familiar with simply aren’t true any longer and we’re forced to create something entirely new.
We’re committed to leaving organizations and their people in a truly better place –
more changeable, more engaged and better equipped for creating a better future.