Friday, 23 November 2012

Professional Photography



Source (Google.com.pk)
Professional Photography Biography This page provides guidance on how to write a professional biography. The term refers to a short summation of your professional life.1 It should be less formal than a resume. It should be engaging and easy-to-read. And it should be carefully crafted to present your best self to potential employers and future colleagues or clients.

A professional biography is often your first and best introduction to potential employers. This document should be less rigid than a resume and more engaging or conversational. Make sure to write for your intended audience in a natural voice with an appropriate tone of medium formality. In an increasingly networked world, consider a web-published version of your professional biography as a major asset. Follow the steps outlined in this guide carefully in order to present your best professional self-image.

Writing and publishing a professional biography may seem like a lot of work, but the basics are very simple. In addition to everything presented in this guide, you have the advantage, hopefully, of being the world's leading authority on the topic: yourself. Take no short-cuts in creating a document that presents the best possible representation of your professional history, aspirations, and abilities.

Frank Hecker is a sales engineer for the Federal sales group of Infoblox, supporting the sales of Infoblox products enabling business agility through network automation.

Previously at IronKey Frank supported sales of IronKey Enterprise mobile secure storage products and the IronKey Trusted Access product to help prevent online banking fraud and provide secure online access to web applications. Prior to that Frank was Director of Grants and Programs with the Mozilla Foundation, a nonprofit organization promoting choice and innovation on the Internet through its support of the Mozilla project (home of the Firefox web browser) and related initiatives.

Prior to joining the Mozilla Foundation Frank was a sales engineer with Opsware supporting sales of Opsware IT automation software and services to the Federal government. He has also worked for CollabNet, supporting sales of CollabNet services relating to open-source and other collaborative software development, and for Netscape and America Online as Director of Systems Engineering for the Netscape government sales group in Bethesda, Maryland. At Netscape he was sales technical lead for the Netscape/DoD worldwide site license, the FORTEZZA, FIPS 140-1, and Netscape Security Services projects, and many other sales activities; he was also a key contributor to Netscape’s decision to release source code for the Netscape browser, and was appointed one of three Netscape Fellows.

His professional interests include information systems security, web and Internet technology, the technical, business, and public policy aspects of open-source software, assistive technologies, and online education. He was the winner of the 2009 Catalyst Award for his work in promoting open source accessibility, was named one of Washingtonian Magazine’s "top 100 leaders of Washington’s tech world", and was featured in the documentary film Revolution OS. He blogs at frankhecker.com; see frankhecker.com/writings for other essays on various technical topics.
Professional Photography
Professional Photography
Professional Photography
Professional Photography
Professional Photography
Professional Photography
Professional Photography
Professional Photography
Professional Photography
Professional Photography
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