CDL Practice Test – Offers practice tests to prepare for the CDL exam.Written by John Lewis
CDL Practice Test – Offers practice tests to prepare for CDL exam.As you take CDL practice test, you do become more familiar with CDL test, and being familiar with test will make actual test much less stressful. In fact, if used correctly, CDL practice test can be an extremely targeted study tool that will precisely pinpoint areas in which you are weakest and then help you to learn how to combat and overcome those weaknesses. What if you take a CDL practice test and get 20 questions wrong, and your errors span a large number of different topics, from General Knowledge to Hazmat? Well, you should take your test and study it. Identify every question you got wrong, figure out why you got it wrong, and then teach yourself what you should have done to get question right. Tips for Taking CDL Practice Test Read question carefully before you begin eliminating answers.
| | Staying in the GameWritten by Nan S. Russell
The message came from Human Resources. There's nothing to worry about with newly announced organizational changes and pending merger, it reassured. The changes will be good for company and good for people who work here it coached.I've seen a couple dozen messages like this during my career. In fact, I've even crafted a few. I've been through mergers, acquisitions, downsizings, organizational changes, personal career set-backs and a myriad of new corporate initiatives. And best lesson I learned from all of them? Stay a player. Granted my tactics for what that meant varied with situation. Sometimes safest play was to keep my head down and do my work exceedingly well until I understood new landscape. Sometimes I rolled with punches long enough to realize what was happening might be great for company, but not a great long term choice for me, so I moved on. Sometimes I helped others acclimate to new direction or culture and found new opportunities emerging along way. Sometimes toll was personal, like when a promotion I'd worked my entire career to reach was given to an outsider. Still, I stayed in game. I'm not saying I didn't yell and complain to friends or go into a woe-is-me victim mode licking my wounds for a time; or require space to sort out divergent directional messages appearing to me like a corporate minefield. I'm not wired to change with immediacy of a remote control. But I am wired to change. I know taking myself out of game, retiring on job, or sitting it out on sidelines is not a viable option if I want to be winning at working. As Charles Darwin reminds, "It is not strongest of species that survive, nor most intelligent, but one most responsive to change."
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