Tips for Women: How to Be Goal-Setters and Goal-Getters

Strong Women Entrepreneurs

More work opportunities are opening up for women than ever before and when it comes to job selection, increasingly more women have the pick of the crop. It is no surprise why so many females are rising to the top of the corporate ladder.

If you feel you are lagging behind in your career, here are ways you can achieve:

Make sure your resume speaks volumes

If you want to leave a lasting impression on your future boss, you will need a resume that looks professional and layout and prioritize the information that makes your work history impressive. This can be done using a free resume builder that features a library of professional, well designed resume templates. You can customize your resume to reflect your colorful personality by adding photos, images, and colors of your choice.

Don’t be afraid to go alone

Perhaps, you’ve always envisioned yourself as a powerful, independent business owner, but you’ve been hesitant to take that leap and become an entrepreneur. Start your business and build a strong brand that showcases who you are and what you have to offer.

Then, you can focus on generating awareness for your new venture by working on expanding your network and making as many valuable contacts as you can in the industry. Essentially, it is about marketing your business the best way you can by leveraging all the marketing tools you have at your disposal nowadays such as social media marketing, your website, as well as age-old marketing methods too.

Do not back down when it comes to challenges

Maybe you’ve decided that you want to progress in your current career instead of staying in your current position. Take a chance and put your name forward if you feel like you are the best candidate.

Self confidence and assertive actions can help you succeed. Be persistent .

Change Careers

If you do not want to remain in your current profession, concentrate on upskilling yourself in areas that you need to be proficient in order to make a drastic career change. Moreover, there are plenty of opportunities to get ahead by taking advantage of free or paid courses online to significantly boost your chances of getting hired at your next job interview.

Women continue to make their mark in the world, no matter which route they decide to go. What do you have to lose?

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Poppy Apparel Exclusive 10% off your order

Poppy Apparel 10% off code using 'fashiongirl10bcb'

Happy Wednesday Fromgirltogirl readers! Excited to announce we have a new fashion exclusive just for you! Now when you shop at Poppy Apparel, you can use code ‘fashiongirl10bcb‘ to get 10% off your entire order! Best of all, it is no one-time deal! You can use this code every time you shop at Poppy Apparel as a thank you for subscribing and reading Fromgiltogirl.com!

Why We Shop at the Poppy Apparel Shop

We love that Poppy Apparel does not only encourage women empowerment initiatives but also helps elevate growing designers. Know when you order clothes, you truly are giving back to the community.

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Surf Rock listens: ‘Caffeine and Nicotine’ by Blakeley

Blakeley smokes a cigarette and sings her single Caffeine and Nicotine.

Pop star Blakeley has a single called “Caffeine & Nicotine,” out and it’s definitely worth a listen. The single has a bouncy variant of electronic rock and gritty thematic elements. If you enjoy bubblegum pop and surf rock, you’ll appreciate this track. It reminds me of chilling in an alternative culture, coffee shop, quintessentially Brooklyn. And it gets better. Blakeley has a new EP coming out this winter. Fromgirltogirl highly recommends checking it out if you are someone that is looking for an EP to vibe to that isn’t oppressive or over the top topics.  Listen to “Caffeine & Nicotine” on Itunes.

  • She delivers a bold crossover composition that merges elements of folk, EDM, rockabilly pop to present a marriage of confessional poetry, deep house music, and effervescent guitar twanging.
  • She writes, produces, and performs her work in different mediums.

Find more of her music, videos, and galleries on her official website and Facebook. Let us know what you think of Caffeine & Nicotine.

Surf Rock and Feminism
Blakeley and her keyboard.

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Black Community Empowerment: Black Men Lead Our Community

I was talking to some Black women a day ago. I asked what do you think could make Black communities thrive. There was a majority consensus that we need Black men to lead our communities. We need men that help raise our children not just donate sperm or be emotionally distant fathers & spouses( I know it might have been done to us but you should always thrive to do better for your offspring). Yes, the community is bruised but not broken. Change for the better is possible. Greatness starts with courage and persistence. Although Black women can be excellent parents, we can’t do it alone anymore…not if we want to revive these communities. & above all Black women need to respect themselves. A man will walk all over you and disrespect you when you settle for less than love and respect. You do not have to be rude and abuse a man to get love and respect. You just have to appreciate him and also have the courage to respectfully tell him to step up. This is the wake up call and I’m not sugar coating. And trust me… Black men we do want to see , you,the Black men as the real, positive leaders of the Black community. We won’t know greatness until we know your worth & our worth. Stop putting each other down and start working together. Slavery and slave mentality is over.

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The White Minority

 

Aria Peace Corps Volunteer in St. Lucia discusses her experience being the White Minority


 By Aria Grabowski

I am a white girl, born in America. Although I have lived in a relatively diverse area my whole life, I always was in the majority. In many ways this left me oblivious to what it means to be a minority, to be surrounded by people that do not know what it is like to have the hair of a white person. This all changed when I started my Peace Corps service and my new nickname became white girl.
I moved to a community where I was the only white person. For some of the people in the community, I was the only white person they had ever talked to in life.

In my community most people were filled with questions and amazement about my whiteness. Yes, my scalp is really white like paper. No, my hair did not come from a doll. Yes, I turn red if I stay in the sun too long. Yes, if you press my skin it will briefly change color. I do not know why my veins are that color and no I do not poop white.

Aria with the women of St. Lucia
Aria with some of the female teachers at the primary school in St. Lucia.

At first, I found the questions, poking, and petting extremely annoying. I do not think anyone wants a stranger on the bus touching their hair. But then I realized these actions were usually not coming from a place of hate or malice. It was coming from a lack of knowledge.

I quickly realized that I not only represented Americans and the Peace Corps. I also represented white people. I needed to do everything possible to help people understand that all white people are not tourists, rich, greedy, or cheap. Not all white women are easy. We are different from black people physically.  So when people asked me questions, no matter how crazy, I tried to be patient, understanding and answer questions.

Even with all my attempted patience and understanding, I realized in some way it affected how I viewed interactions with people, especially people I did not know well.

 

The Pole Vault St. Lucia Team Aria Grabowski coached during her Peace Corps Volunteering.

I frequently found myself thinking someone was treating me in a certain way because I was white.  If a guy hit on me, I just assumed it was because I was white and a possible visa. This view came from receiving more marriage proposals from strangers than I could count. It also cam from the phrase ‘I like to see your color’ being a frequently used pick-up line. Obviously, every guy I met was not interested in that, but how could I tell?

There were other times people would try to charge me more for things and I always assumed this was because I was white. The people thought I did not know better. They thought I was rich so it was okay to rip me off. But maybe these were honest mistakes?

Then there were times people would ask me to buy stuff for them. Again, I just assumed it was because I was white and by default rich. If I did not buy, I would be labeled cheap and greedy.

As time went on, it occurred to me that their actions may not have had to do with my whiteness.  It may have been based on the fact that it seemed like I had my life together, and by default, must have money.

I started to notice that I had a slight chip on my shoulder about being treated differently just because I was white. I was never certain whether I was treated this way because I was white or I was not white. It made me realize how hard it must be for minorities in the states – always wondering if that interaction was due to race and never being able to know if it was or was not.

Sadly, from my experience it seems like the only thing that can be done, is to get thick skin. Try to be patient and understanding. Try to fight ignorance, no matter how exhausting and hard it may be.  I hope that one day things will be different.  Granted that is easy for me to say because my experience being a minority lasted only 2+ years and for the most part did not have hatred attached to it.

 

By Aria Grabowski

Aria Grabowski wrote this article to discuss her experience being a minority for 2+years.She served as a peace corps volunteer in St. Lucia from Feb 23 2009-May 28 2011.

Fromgirltogirl Discussion: How do you think we can promote more patience, understanding, and acceptance of different cultures and people in communities around the world?

For more lifestyle enrichment tips, news, community empowerment,advice, and freebies visit  our website Fromgirltogirl.com !

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The Year of The Weight Lifter

strongBy Briana Bookerv/strong I came to the realization that I am no longer 17 years old. My body is not as fast as it use to be. My body is not as slim as it use to be. But here I stand as the best woman I have ever been thus far. I guess it is true, looks are not everything. Although I am aging, I still want to keep up my health and appearance. I will never be someone that settles for letting myself go. I love myself. With that said, I would like to push myself to be better than my previous self by dedicating a few hours weekly to weight lifting. I am working on my core, which I notice is not as fit as it use to be. The love of my life ( or I would like to think he is the love of my life) thinks my new found curves are beautiful but I want the 17 year old me to travel with the wonderful woman I am becoming now. Who knows, I might just surpass the 17 year old me. I am up for the challenge. Stay tuned.

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My Thoughts on MLK Day

Happy Birthday Dr.Martin Luther King jr. Thank you for changing America for all people,not just Black people. When I was young people use to call it a black holiday and write excuse notes from ceremonies so their children wouldnt have to attend a black holiday. I hope now these same children pick up a book and learn what was accomplished and still needs to be accomplished. Dont continue the trends your parents promoted. I like to be a trend setter, not a follower. Please do service on Monday. Without the actions that were done I wouldnt have gone to schools i have attended with diverse people , minds and cultures. I wouldnt work around people I am glad I came across in my life. God bless everyone with knowledge. Knowledge is power and kindness is cure for all of mankind. -Briana Booker, founder of Fromgirltogirl

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