Surprised in Job Page

Member for

19 years 3 months

R. Catalan,



I’ve forwarded and appreciate your help. Thanks & God Bless



Tagay!

Chris

Member for

19 years 1 month

In God We Trust, So Help Me God.

Member for

20 years 3 months

Kabayan,



I always pray to my GOD. I will include you in my prayers.



My advice is for you to acknowledge the presence of GOD in your life every seconds of your life.



Then believe that GOD have a wonderful plan for you.



And you can start your prayers every moments that you feel down, you feel happy, in your solitude. Follow ACTS, that is A - Acknowldgement, C - Confession, T - Thanksgiving, S - Supplication.



On a practical keep reading the forum in PP. With open mind, feel what you really wanted as a carreer: Planning and Scheduling or Forensic Planning Analysis or Both.



After you are clear on what you want, update your resume and give a clear advertisement on your expertise.



Now the time to surf the net and send your resume. It may take one month, two months, three months, for me that is the only way I know.



Hope this will help.



Cheers,

Happy Planning and Scheduling

Member for

19 years 3 months

Chris,



Its already lodged on PP Job Page but unfortunately till now no response, let me try Bixee.com. By the way I appreciate your response.



Chris

Member for

21 years 5 months

Chris,



I don’t know whether this will be any use to you but you might get something from Bixee.com



If you haven’t done it already, make sure you’ve got your details lodged with the recruiters on the Planning Planet Job Page



Chris Oggham

Member for

19 years 3 months

Kabayan! Include me in your prayers, coz our project just get stopped by the Client. And now looking for new employment, Charles do you happen to know someone who is looking for Planning/Control Engineer to join their team? Appreciate if you could give me referrals.


Member for

20 years 3 months

In addition to the above,



We need to pray for those unfortunate to be affected by the financial crisis.



In addition it is high time for those planning and scheduling engineers to get involved in the forum to seek help that may give them confidence to face the future.



Cheers

Happy Planning and Scheduling

Member for

20 years 2 months

Rav,

Good article but very alarming.



All,

I have learned that a lot of Engineers were affected in Dubai, and moving to Abu Dhabi to find jobs. Families sent back home (children education are sacrificed), and others saw rush of leaving the Emirate to avoid hold orders at airports due to unpaid loans.



I pity those families who are affected by this global financila crisis. My heart and prayers are with them.



R. Catalan

Member for

18 years 5 months

Below is an article from one of the magazines in western world. Must read for all guys in this gulf region as no new projects propping up in the area with major companies laying off people left-&-right.







Dubai is soon headed for a crisis of such huge proportions that its expatriate population has never seen ever.



A double whammy of weak crude prices - down from $150 to $50 a barrel - and weaker US currency- petrodollars - will make its ruling Executive council scour high and low for ideas on how to fund the highly leveraged property market balloon it has created and what to make of asset depreciation.



For expatriates, especially those who made laughable investments believing that Las Vegas could be created around the fringes of conservative culture, this could be the wake-up call for a long dreary nuclear winter.



The role of Dubai has never been understood; why is Dubai so powerful within the Emirates - even though it does not have oil, no manufacturing base, nor has it been able to achieve Singapore’s status as a port of repute. Yet, it has been able to hold up to Abu Dhabi, which owns 90 percent of the UAE’s oil, and whose rulers, although more powerful, are far more low profile.



One reason that comes to mind is that Dubai is a refiner for Iran’s oil, and a lot of refining margins are tied to the price of oil, which means the last four years were a bonanza for Dubai. This perhaps explains its clout. With clout, comes ambition, and with ambition a penchant for breaking rules, and Dubai has had all of it. In fact its direction toward becoming a tourism hub for Middle East revelers has always been watched closely by the Islamic right.



Dubai has no choice, because tourism in desert cannot takeoff without prostitution, alcohol or gambling. There is always talking about how activities in Dubai are frowned upon by the conservative countries. Some time in 2005 there was a rumor of some threats by extremists to bomb City Center, a shopping mall in Dubai, all of which was well-handled and overcome without alarm. Clearly, it had become evident even then that Dubai’s success was getting increasingly uncomfortable for some, and sooner or later there was bound to be trouble.



With bright ideas and some really grandiose schemes indeed being delivered, it was western & asian money, and speculation drove up the market in Dubai. There was a time in 2007, when financial executives from New York, speculated on villas in Jumeirah, booking a villa one week, and selling it out the next for a profit. It was this false sense of a bullish market that encouraged lesser mortals among the expatriates to participate in the orgy. Until of course, it all blew up last week in their faces.



Finally, as the sand settles, people will begin to see Dubai what it really is - a city of imagination but very little last ability: without natural resources, like water and fertile soil l, and no oil, it looks like this time the devil has come to stay.



Without the sins of the West - alcohol, prostitution, gambling - Dubai would have certainly found it a challenge to sustain its tourism story.



THE BURJ DUBAI TOWER



Speculators in Dubai’s Burj Tower - the tallest tower in the world - are in for a rude shock. They have woken up to find that their property values have plummeted up to 50 percent, that too in just 3 weeks. According to brokers, most properties in the Burj Tower district have slumped by at least 22 percent. These were same apartments and commercial establishments that had risen 88-200 percent in the year until September 2008.



Zero premium and even discount sales have become rampant as investors rush out of sand castles and in to cash. Prices outside the tower fell from an average of AED 3,500 ($952) per square foot to AED 2,700, and on 8 Boulevard Walk, for instance, dropped from AED 3,300 per sq ft to AED 2,500 per sq ft in three weeks – a 24 percent decrease.



Price fluctuations in the Burj Dubai tower had been far more volatile because of the high percentage of speculators owning these properties, according to brokers. Some had since been sold at significant losses to generate cash. However, they said, the most expensive floors, such as those branded by Armani, sold at about AED 14,000 per sq ft and were holding much of their value.

Member for

20 years 3 months

My prayers that company will give NOC (No Objection Certificate) so that sacked employees from Dubai may be able to transfer to Abu Dhabi or elsewhere in the Emirates.



Regards,

Happy Planning and Scheduling

Member for

18 years 5 months

aBU dHABI IS ok, But Dubai is worse.



All the guys in Dubai who have been sacked by companies r in search of jobs still after two months and i believe is WORSt in the world as of now.



It may take at least 2-3 months for market to be stable and major projects to commence.



Till that time, no new jobs for planning engineers.



Pray to GOD :-)