Guest publish by Larry Benesh, Microsoft China
Ni hao from Shanghai! In case you are questioning,
Office 2010 Professional 32bit, ni hao is “hello” in Mandarin which was fairly significantly the extent of my Chinese language skills when I arrived right here a bit more than per month ago from Redmond. For all those of you who could acknowledge my name from MS recruiting inside the past, you’ve possibly attended university sometime within the last 7 decades. Most not too long ago I was shelling out a great deal of my time at MIT and Harvard helping Microsoft recruit pc science, income and marketing talent for our new grad recruiting system. The opportunity came as much as help our Server and Developer Tools’ expanding improvement center in Shanghai for six months so here I'm in China. I must say that it is a seriously vibrant location to be and I’ve cherished my time here to date.
Even internally at MS, not all that significantly is known about our advancement center right here and the folks from the jobsblog were kind enough to let me use this forum to support get the word out. I thought I’d talk a little bit about what we do and the kind of job candidates we are actively seeking. Plus, I’ll give you the run down on what the office itself is like.
First, the most important thing to know is that we’re doing real improvement work here for a complete bunch of exciting products. We’ve got teams right here working on high performance computing, web services, identity access and determine management tools, enterprise management and security, data access, development tools, and Windows Server solutions. People right here made major contributions to the not too long ago released Windows Personal computer Cluster Server item, and we even have a team of people working on a secret V1 item. Can’t say anything else about it other than I know there are certainly some of you out there that will want this product down the road and will be excited about the features they are developing. So the bottom line is that we have a great number of relevant and useful products being built right here in collaboration with teams in Redmond and elsewhere within the world. We also have remarkable commitment to this site and are rapidly expanding. After all, it wouldn’t make a lot sense to send me all the way here if we weren’t.
How do you know if this site might possibly be for you? Properly, let me comment a bit on what types of candidates I think would be successful here. First off, if you’re not from China originally or living there now, you really should know that Shanghai is very modern city and there are people living here from all over the world. We are most certainly open to considering candidates from outside of China. Shanghai has countless of the things you’d expect of a world class city and in particular it has fantastic restaurants, shopping and nightlife. Still, you shouldn’t expect that everything right here will be exactly the same as your current living situation. I think you want to become flexible to live right here and be happy. Of course, if you don’t speak Mandarin or Shanghainese, it’s very useful to have an interest and experience in learning new languages. They aren’t completely necessary for day to day work in the office, but they can definitely come in handy when you’re venturing outside of places that aren’t as focused on the English speaking community here. I think any kind of experience where you have lived in a country other than the one you grew up in is a superior thing to note if you decide to apply. It's also important that you’ve got experience working with people from a variety of backgrounds and cultures. Obviously work styles can vary in different places and we want candidates who are willing to modify their styles but can still feel comfortable and be themselves. Another point I’ll make is that we’re doing a great deal of recruiting for lead and manager candidates proper now since our teams are still very a lot in start up mode. We’ve only been at this site for little more than a year. So we want software engineering leaders who are passionate about building the site into something great and who are excellent at developing junior talent.
What’s the office like? We’re in a brand new building south of the city middle near the Shanghai Jiaotong University Min Hang campus. We’ve got a ping pong and pool table that are both in nearly constant use. There are a couple massage chairs, a treadmill,
Office Pro Plus 2010 Activation Key, and even an Xbox 360 that we use to play with each other on a big projection screen. We have an open office approach,
Office Professional Plus 2010 Serial Key, and we have space to work out problems on a big white boards and a large number of conference rooms. There is an onsite cafeteria (most employees get a monthly meal allowance), a convenience store to buy snacks, and a gym that you can join if you interested in that. We also have a convenient shuttle to the Shanghai Xu Jia Hui area that makes a bunch of free trips a day so it truly is easy to get to work from the downtown area or the subway station there. All and all, it’s an incredible environment.
So,
Office Pro Plus 2010 Serial Key, how do you apply? First, give it some thought and ask yourself if you’re ready to join a start up team, live in Shanghai, and want to take on the responsibility of helping create a world class improvement center here. Be honest and make sure you want to become a situation with a great deal of ambiguity and with a tremendous learning curve. Make sure that the people in your life that you’re close with are supportive as properly. If it all looks very good and you are a top software engineering talent and interested in our products,
Office Home And Business 2010 32bits, send me your resume at Lbenesh@microsoft.com
Larry