The Ken Coleman Show - Highlights

The Ken Coleman Show - Highlights

Join Ken Coleman, two-time national bestselling author, as he delivers practical advice to help you win in work at life. Do you feel stuck in your job? Do you dread going to work on Monday mornings? Do you want to do work that matters? The Ken Coleman Show is for you. Through the years, Ken has interviewed leading experts in business, sports, entertainment and politics. Now, he’s here to help answer your questions about career, passion and talent so you can maximize your potential. If you have a question for Ken, call 844.747.2577 and subscribe to The Ken Coleman Show today. Call Ken at 844-747-2577 or email [email protected].

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Should I Give 2 Weeks Notice?

Should I Give 2 Weeks Notice?

Пікірлер

  • @ewaoconnor7013
    @ewaoconnor701328 минут бұрын

    Hard work does pay off for some people, but those who are very wealthy usually start with a huge inheritance or a significant financial gift from their parents…

  • @rickbishop3426
    @rickbishop3426Сағат бұрын

    My family history is different than Ben’s. My mom did not work outside the home. My dad worked until 65, to secure more joint SS benefits, along with his pension. Both mom and dad lived to be 82 and were more active in church. Mom always said “ you’ve got to have a goal”. My father in law retired at 62. He’s now 96. Mother-in-law is 89. I also recall that Pat Robertson suggested we don’t retire. Find something else to do.

  • @irenez7439
    @irenez74392 сағат бұрын

    Im a housewife mother of 10. I will never retire. So, it's not fair. My husband will retire soon, but my work never ends.🤦

  • @irenez7439
    @irenez7439Сағат бұрын

    I should add that my husband has worked super hard all his life.

  • @titolovely8237
    @titolovely82372 сағат бұрын

    most people dont realize how many jobs exist that are truly unnecessary. you could lay off around 30% of the workforce and almost nothing would change.

  • @rsamra
    @rsamra2 сағат бұрын

    Absolutely delusional. What these Valuetainment guys don't realize is people pay into Social Security it's their right to get benefits. Small changes to Social Security in terms of taxation and how we can fund it can have a massive positive impact on society as a whole. If you clowns don't think Republican's rely on Social Security, you are going to be in for a shock.. just look up SSI recipients by State. If you follow Valuetainment keep in mind most of these people exploit labor and its in their best interest for you to work yourself into the ground with no benefits or hope to ever retire.. they simply will tell you to work harder or blame political Affiliation to the left for your plight.

  • @infinteuniverse
    @infinteuniverse2 сағат бұрын

    South Korea "work ethic" and their world class declining birth rate.

  • @HarryPotterFan1307
    @HarryPotterFan13072 сағат бұрын

    Anybody bragging about a 3% mortgage can do bleep themselves. Next time I’ll be sure to be born 15 years earlier and not in poverty so I can have one too. 3% mortgages have broken the system and this guy is bragging about it like “look how smart I was to take cheap money.” No duh. Everybody who was in position did the same thing. Nothing special here.

  • @user-vm6ck7lt6v
    @user-vm6ck7lt6v4 сағат бұрын

    The government needs you to stay at work so they can fund the replacement population of illegals on your retirement benefits that you forfeited.

  • @s.m.whiteII
    @s.m.whiteII4 сағат бұрын

    That’s not the ONLY statistic the Government is fudging 🙄🙄🙄🙄🙄

  • @forestpepper3621
    @forestpepper36214 сағат бұрын

    Companies are trying to replace white-collar workers by "Chat GPT" artificial-intelligence. And this will probably be a successful strategy in many cases.

  • @markharris5437
    @markharris54375 сағат бұрын

    Remember this phrase if you are thinking of retiring, Retire with a purpose and you will never be out of things to do.

  • @seemagrover4228
    @seemagrover42285 сағат бұрын

    Got much better personally but has the pay check increased???? Not at all????

  • @LastOne155
    @LastOne1558 сағат бұрын

    You have basically ruined your life by joining the military. 8 years in the military and 6 years of college have led me to a labor job that makes all those years a waste of time. It took me ten years to get that work. I will never allow anyone in my family to join the military

  • @JacobCano-mq1qv
    @JacobCano-mq1qv8 сағат бұрын

    I am 37 and Happily Retired. I spend my time traveling the world and volunteering. I am very happy. No rAgrets!

  • @snusnu2249
    @snusnu224910 сағат бұрын

    33 here and I’ve been working a warehouse job for almost 9 years I have no degree and I feel stuck I don’t like anything

  • @rayvenshyann5147
    @rayvenshyann514711 сағат бұрын

    My new job showed me a board of all of the staff. 90 percent of them are no longer at the company. I was like wow I feel set up.

  • @vladimirofsvalbard9477
    @vladimirofsvalbard947714 сағат бұрын

    It's not a conspiracy; the job market is worse than 2008. The only people getting by are largely people in a medical profession, policing/fire, or contractors for state contracts/infrastructure. If you're in retail, gig, warehousing, or even anything CDL; things are rough.

  • @octaviocali4697
    @octaviocali469714 сағат бұрын

    Union carpenter in bay area california 62 an hour with full benefits,retirement,and we get a bump every july 1st till we hit 70 bucks an hour working 6 days 10hrs monday to friday and saturday 8hrs bring home 3000 plus a week i make more money working 3 or 4 months than working 12 months non union with no benefits..

  • @consumerdebtchitchat
    @consumerdebtchitchat14 сағат бұрын

    White collar jobs: They want you out when you turn 50. They want to replace you with someone cheaper. For many women, it's still near impossible to get promoted to HIGH level leadership. Don't even mention minorities who are trying to get ahead in white collar jobs. Lots of nepotism - etc. Why would anyone look for other work = LOL.

  • @roshinobi
    @roshinobi15 сағат бұрын

    Always amazing to me that employers are so quick to teach all the other employees not to give two weeks notice.

  • @Sonicmask
    @Sonicmask15 сағат бұрын

    This is the luckest guy alive.

  • @titolovely8237
    @titolovely823716 сағат бұрын

    everyone wants to be a tradesman, right up until they become a tradesman and realize working outside and physical labor is really hard.

  • @chiphoward8565
    @chiphoward856516 сағат бұрын

    Make Social Security optional!!!

  • @Fairfuego
    @Fairfuego16 сағат бұрын

    Work in a niche market and be specialized. Harder to replace white collar jobs that are hard to replace.

  • @anthonyfazio9979
    @anthonyfazio997916 сағат бұрын

    A man should know how to use his hands

  • @Recuper8
    @Recuper817 сағат бұрын

    A.I. will take all white collar jobs soon anyway.

  • @TigerTT
    @TigerTT17 сағат бұрын

    I can already predict the future. Amazon warehouses on every block and millions of delivery trucks everywhere and at every street light. That sums up the real world demand.

  • @andoverwarren6392
    @andoverwarren639217 сағат бұрын

    Are you affiliated with the Dave Ramsey organization?

  • @icecold8974
    @icecold897417 сағат бұрын

    The only way to not get caught up is to never apply. I quit because I was salary, still worked about 64/hrs a week unpaid. Doing BS to prop up fake numbers. It was never 9-5. Now I’m a MRI tech making almost double. Working 7-330 M-F, and more time with my family.

  • @underconstruction6624
    @underconstruction662417 сағат бұрын

    I've been making 6 figures a year at trucking companies like Sygma, Sysco and US Foods for the past 7 years. My best year was 130,000 - and i was home everyday 🤷🏿‍♂️

  • @AyakoTachi
    @AyakoTachi17 сағат бұрын

    Most public school teachers don't get to teach very often. Time is heavily consumed by managing behaviors, working on basic skills, testing, meetings, admin stuff, trainings, and doing stuff that's not teaching.

  • @Liz-wz8dh
    @Liz-wz8dh17 сағат бұрын

    You can get a good start on saving up if you're young, smart and willing to work in the trades. You may not stay in that lane forever but it's a better start for many of these young people than going to college only to work at Starbucks for the next five years afterward.

  • @ewanfraser
    @ewanfraser17 сағат бұрын

    No one who is able to retire from investments is in tears because they need an employer to pay them. They can’t retire from their investments hence the tears.

  • @MrBrewman95
    @MrBrewman9517 сағат бұрын

    Amazing how most complaints about white collar jobs are fixed by working remote.

  • @youssefhamidi8152
    @youssefhamidi815217 сағат бұрын

    Living on this earth plane is just getting exhausting. Ive learned the lessons ive needed to learn and now im ready to relax and just enjoy myself living instead of this bs known as the daily grind.

  • @Tregphx
    @Tregphx17 сағат бұрын

    Trade work sucks.

  • @nenecastillo7497
    @nenecastillo749718 сағат бұрын

    The parents are just as horrible as the damn demons. Who would want to be a teacher? I saw a video of a drunk teacher in a classroom. It wasn't right, but can I blame her? If it's that bad, then it's time to leave. The politics, the parents, the kids that don't have no home training, is enough to make teachers either quit or not go into the profession in the first place. No amount of money is worth the mental strain. Let the parents home school their kids.

  • @Omikoshi78
    @Omikoshi7818 сағат бұрын

    Maybe we should make Ken Coleman like chatbot. What would Ken do when he’s automated away?

  • @winglam6438
    @winglam643818 сағат бұрын

    This is pure dribble. In other news the sun will rise tomorrow, so pull yourself by your bootstraps and make something of yourself.

  • @aldwinjones8985
    @aldwinjones898518 сағат бұрын

    Love the glasses great report

  • @user-nw3gk4qo3p
    @user-nw3gk4qo3p18 сағат бұрын

    It’s hard to be a interior designer with $70K in student debt when a plumber makes three times what you make

  • @quychang4471
    @quychang447118 сағат бұрын

    BS. Ken is another millennial with no clue. The trades are almost full. There is very little work for the trades right now.

  • @rl1271
    @rl127118 сағат бұрын

    I worked retail, labor, military and corporate. Corporate is generally less rewarding and stable but FAR more comfortable and higher paying. I’ll live the corporate life till I die

  • @slick5favorite
    @slick5favorite18 сағат бұрын

    I worked construction through college and let me tell you I thank my lucky stars that I work a cushy office job at 38. People I used to work with are physically broken.

  • @photofocus964
    @photofocus96418 сағат бұрын

    Quality content, thank you for this value.

  • @modernman7576
    @modernman757618 сағат бұрын

    Blue collar work does a number on your body but its worth it. Everyone always needs construction.

  • @javaskull88
    @javaskull8818 сағат бұрын

    I’m a white collar worker (accountant). I like office work, the pay & benefits are good, and I don’t have to work after 5 or on weekends. What’s not to like?

  • @SomeUserNameBlahBlah
    @SomeUserNameBlahBlah17 сағат бұрын

    Don't have to work after 5? That's rare for white collar.

  • @wyattmichaud46
    @wyattmichaud4618 сағат бұрын

    I’m blue collar and it’s overall terrible as well. Need to find a niche or switch back to white collar.

  • @sewnsew6770
    @sewnsew677018 сағат бұрын

    White collar easy to offshore But I like it so I do it To each his own

  • @Robertking1996
    @Robertking199619 сағат бұрын

    It's a blood bath out here