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www.LCWomenInBusiness.com | www.c4women.org | www.BestOfMountPleasant.com

10 - WIB

Getting Ready

toWork

The Center For

Women’s R4W Program

G

etting

a job is about

more than

just sending

out resumes;

it’s about

having the

skills, vision and confidence to make

it happen. The Center for Women

focuses on these aspects of the job

hunt in

its free

six-week course – Ready for Work

(R4W). The program starts regularly

throughout the year and helps women

prepare to enter or re-enter the

workforce by giving them the “soft”

skills they need to pursue the career

they want.

R4W, which started as a pilot

program in July 2014, was created to

help a wide variety of women, said

Leigh Ann Garrett, program and events

manager at the Center for Women.

“We’ve worked with female

veterans. We’ve worked with

domestic survivors. We’ve had

women participate who have master’s

degrees,” she said.

No matter how different women

appear on the outside, the objective is

the same: To help them identify and

achieve their goals.

The Center for Women partners

with local organizations to work with a

group of women with similar interests

or challenges, such as teens or women

over 50, and the course content is

tweaked to address each group’s unique

challenges. The program wouldn’t run

without dedicated volunteers, experts

in fields such as human relations and

career development, who give their

time and knowledge.

Though the time commitment is

very manageable – two hours, one day

per week, for six weeks – the women

get a lot done in that time, including

preparing resumes, doing mock

interviews, filling out applications and

choosing appropriate interview outfits.

But R4W goes far beyond that.

“There are other places you can get

your resumes reviewed, but it starts

and ends there,” said Garrett.

In the R4W program, women also

learn about the power of nonverbal

communication and first impressions,

personal goals, how to overcome fears

and how to build confidence.

Diane Sancho, who went through

the program in late 2015, was happy

to discover that it went beyond simply

helping women find a job.

“It was more introspective,” she

explained. “We identified strengths

and weaknesses and how we would

describe ourselves. We focused on

what we want people to know about

us – what we’re proud of.”

Sancho, who has her master’s in

Social Work and had been out of the

workforce for a year after 30 years in

administrative positions, credits the

program for helping her discover what

she truly wanted to do.

What she wanted, she realized, was

to be an entrepreneur. Sancho now

By ErIn DanLy

2700 North Hwy 17

Mount Pleasant, SC 29466

(843) 606-2715

www.NextToNewSC.com

Monday- ursday 10-6

Friday-Saturday 10-5

Remember, it

doesn’t have

to be new

to be awesome!