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KYOON GRIFFEY JR posted:bro it's monday chill the gently caress out I mean, yeah, I get that, but it's kind of nerve-wracking just having an offer on the table without any kind of response since Thursday. And the Monday work day is already nearing a close too...
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# ? May 16, 2016 19:35 |
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# ? May 15, 2024 04:09 |
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Gin_Rummy posted:I mean, yeah, I get that, but it's kind of nerve-wracking just having an offer on the table without any kind of response since Thursday. And the Monday work day is already nearing a close too... You can complain come Friday, until then chill
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# ? May 16, 2016 20:22 |
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finalizing some jabroni's offer would be pretty low on my priority list and would be the type of thing that i might have to circulate internally as well
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# ? May 16, 2016 20:23 |
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This thread needs to be stickied.
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# ? May 16, 2016 21:25 |
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KYOON GRIFFEY JR posted:finalizing some jabroni's offer would be pretty low on my priority list and would be the type of thing that i might have to circulate internally as well Fair enough, but I mean, it's not like I'm looking for the job offer itself right now or today, but I just kind of figured some sort of "We will take this into consideration and get back to you soon" or a simple general acknowledgement of my email would be in order. As it stands now, for all I know my email got buried in a poo poo ton of others the dude received while he was out and now they're just sitting over there thinking "well, I guess he wasn't interested in the job. Onto the next candidate then!" But also, I don't work in HR so I don't really know if this is just kind of normal or what.
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# ? May 16, 2016 21:48 |
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Gin_Rummy posted:Fair enough, but I mean, it's not like I'm looking for the job offer itself right now or today, but I just kind of figured some sort of "We will take this into consideration and get back to you soon" or a simple general acknowledgement of my email would be in order. As it stands now, for all I know my email got buried in a poo poo ton of others the dude received while he was out and now they're just sitting over there thinking "well, I guess he wasn't interested in the job. Onto the next candidate then!"
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# ? May 16, 2016 23:13 |
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Dik Hz posted:Pretty normal. If you have an open offer, they know it. It probably needs HR and executive approval, which could take a couple days depending on the company. If you still haven't heard anything by Wednesday morning, go ahead and ping your contact again. Seems reasonable. Thanks for the advice!
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# ? May 16, 2016 23:32 |
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It's entirely possible they're trying to meet your number but need to up the budget / consult with someone / otherwise cannot execute that decision entirely on their own but still want to make it happen. This is one of those cases where it's quick to deliver a "no" but might take some time to try and wrangle together either a "yes" or a "no, but we can do x", which are both preferable outcomes to a flat out "no". It's frustrating that you have to wait, but it is probably a good sign.
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# ? May 17, 2016 19:39 |
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Dwight Eisenhower posted:It's entirely possible they're trying to meet your number but need to up the budget / consult with someone / otherwise cannot execute that decision entirely on their own but still want to make it happen. Well the reason I was so concerned was because no number has been thrown out by either party. All I have right now is a "hey, we are going to offer you! What's your asking price?" and then radio silence since I bounced the "say a number" ball right back at them. Gin_Rummy fucked around with this message at 20:27 on May 17, 2016 |
# ? May 17, 2016 20:15 |
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Gin_Rummy posted:Well the reason I was so concerned was because no number has been thrown out by either party. All I have right now is a "hey, we are going to offer you! What's your asking price?" and then radio silence since I bounced the "say a number" ball right back at them. A good practice is to fake it until you make it on not giving a poo poo whether they come back to you. Maybe they never will because they only want people who lowball themselves, who knows?
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# ? May 17, 2016 22:53 |
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baquerd posted:A good practice is to fake it until you make it on not giving a poo poo whether they come back to you. Maybe they never will because they only want people who lowball themselves, who knows? That is certainly a possibility, but I would hope they wouldn't be stupid enough to spend like $1500 on a person just to interview them and then say gently caress it when they don't get a lowball number.
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# ? May 17, 2016 22:56 |
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Gin_Rummy posted:That is certainly a possibility, but I would hope they wouldn't be stupid enough to spend like $1500 on a person just to interview them and then say gently caress it when they don't get a lowball number. I don't want to add to what are clearly high stress levels for you, but just because somebody runs a business doesn't make them smart.
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# ? May 17, 2016 23:12 |
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Given my experience over the last two days: never try to negotiate and internal offer or expect a lecture from your HR rep
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# ? May 17, 2016 23:14 |
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TwoSheds posted:I don't want to add to what are clearly high stress levels for you, but just because somebody runs a business doesn't make them smart. Oh, for sure. I just assume all businesses are run by idiots, because for the most part they are. That was just the idealist in me speaking. I would HOPE they aren't that stupid, but they probably are.
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# ? May 17, 2016 23:30 |
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Deadite posted:Given my experience over the last two days: never try to negotiate and internal offer or expect a lecture from your HR rep gently caress that, absolutely try to negotiate internal offers if it's a big promotion or significant change/increase in responsibilities.
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# ? May 18, 2016 00:05 |
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Deadite posted:Given my experience over the last two days: never try to negotiate and internal offer or expect a lecture from your HR rep If someone tries to punish you for negotiating, they are a shithead and you do not want anything to do with them. Reasonable people know that everything is negotiable. If they're firm and unwilling to negotiate, reasonable people won't try to punish you for attempting to negotiate. If you try to negotiate and get poo poo for it run, don't walk, away. You dodged a bullet. If they're asking you to do more, they should pay you more. gently caress getting paid in promises.
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# ? May 18, 2016 01:20 |
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Well what happened was I received two internal job offers, and then my current team realized I was serious about leaving and offered me heaven and earth to stay. Except according to HR policies the team I am on is not allowed to offer me anything after I've applied to another job, I'm just supposed to select one of the jobs I applied for. Then me, my boss, my boss's boss, and my boss's boss's boss all got the same lecture about how this process works, because the company does not like it when teams compete against eachother for employees.
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# ? May 18, 2016 02:12 |
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Deadite posted:Well what happened was I received two internal job offers, and then my current team realized I was serious about leaving and offered me heaven and earth to stay. Except according to HR policies the team I am on is not allowed to offer me anything after I've applied to another job, I'm just supposed to select one of the jobs I applied for. That is such bullshit. They're making sure you get paid the absolute minimum amount of money possible as a reward for your loyalty rather than taking your skills to a competitor and telling the company to sit and spin.
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# ? May 18, 2016 02:23 |
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The irony of course is that if I had gone to a competitor then the sky is the limit for negotiating. It is absolutely fine to compete against a competitor, even if that might result in the employee leaving for that competitor.
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# ? May 18, 2016 02:25 |
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Deadite posted:The irony of course is that if I had gone to a competitor then the sky is the limit for negotiating. It is absolutely fine to compete against a competitor, even if that might result in the employee leaving for that competitor. It looks like you exactly understand what your company expects out of you, then. edit: Also Dik Hz is right. If anyone ever tries to bring reprisal for attempting to negotiate cut them off. That's bridge burning material.
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# ? May 18, 2016 13:44 |
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Dik Hz posted:If you still haven't heard anything by Wednesday morning, go ahead and ping your contact again. So can anyone recommend the best way to approach this? Do I just make it brief with "just wanted to see where we were at kthxbai," or should I take a bit of time to show my understanding and mention that I know this process is generally slow, but at the same time I haven't heard a single word in a week? Would it be wise to add a bit of "get someone's eyes on this email" insurance by CCing the contact mentioned in their "if you need immediate assistance" out of office message, or would that be a bit too much?
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# ? May 18, 2016 15:24 |
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Some conversations in my company lead me to believe there is a strong possibility that I am getting hired for an internal administrative position in a different department. This position is entry level with the same title as my current role. Career planning is really new to me, but I'm seriously considering accepting it if offered because I'm very bored in my current role and people tend to move up out of that other department. Another difference is that my current department focuses on maintenance and my new department actually brings in revenue, so maybe people in that department get paid a little better. I also enjoy the people in the other department. There is a male co-worker in my current department who I no longer want to work with professionally--he's cussed me out twice this year, then felt awful when he realized the mistake was entirely on his end. He also has a weird habit of touching women after they've told him not to. I think he once incorrectly assumed that I reported him to HR (when really it could have been anyone who saw him touching a woman co-worker, who got cussed out by him, who heard his political opinions, etc) because he once hovered over my desk and said "You are not allowed to report me without talking to me" and walked off. Even though he's tried to touch me, I don't really trust corporate HR, so I've never reported him. Again, career planning is really new to me, but how does salary negotiation go if you are changing jobs internally? If I receive the offer, do I have a case for requesting a 2% raise? We already received our annual cost-of-living increases at the beginning of the year.
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# ? May 18, 2016 22:36 |
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legsarerequired posted:Some conversations in my company lead me to believe there is a strong possibility that I am getting hired for an internal administrative position in a different department. This position is entry level with the same title as my current role. We have a Career Path Thread that you should post these questions in. legsarerequired posted:I also enjoy the people in the other department. There is a male co-worker in my current department who I no longer want to work with professionally--he's cussed me out twice this year, then felt awful when he realized the mistake was entirely on his end. He also has a weird habit of touching women after they've told him not to. I think he once incorrectly assumed that I reported him to HR (when really it could have been anyone who saw him touching a woman co-worker, who got cussed out by him, who heard his political opinions, etc) because he once hovered over my desk and said "You are not allowed to report me without talking to me" and walked off. Even though he's tried to touch me, I don't really trust corporate HR, so I've never reported him. legsarerequired posted:Again, career planning is really new to me, but how does salary negotiation go if you are changing jobs internally? If I receive the offer, do I have a case for requesting a 2% raise? We already received our annual cost-of-living increases at the beginning of the year.
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# ? May 19, 2016 03:44 |
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Not sure if this is exactly the right place to ask, but it seems right. My girlfriend and I both work in the same industry and are looking to relocate. We interviewed this week at competing companies in the city we would like to move to, and both got offers. Because it's a little of a niche industry and kind of a small world, so to speak, my potential employer knows my girlfriend interviewed at the other company. I actually interviewed at two locations owned by the same person; one is specialty and one is more generalized (and in another town ~20-30 mins away). I'm more interested in the specialty place, and today received an email back with an offer, with the caveat that the owner would prefer that I not work in the specialty office if my girlfriend is going to work for the competitor (conflict of interest?). I kind of get it, but it also kind of seems like bullshit to me. I am going to sleep on it before I respond, but as I've never been in this situation, I thought I'd get some more perspective. Thoughts?
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# ? May 19, 2016 15:27 |
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Not Grover posted:Not sure if this is exactly the right place to ask, but it seems right. My girlfriend and I both work in the same industry and are looking to relocate. We interviewed this week at competing companies in the city we would like to move to, and both got offers. Because it's a little of a niche industry and kind of a small world, so to speak, my potential employer knows my girlfriend interviewed at the other company. I actually interviewed at two locations owned by the same person; one is specialty and one is more generalized (and in another town ~20-30 mins away). I'm more interested in the specialty place, and today received an email back with an offer, with the caveat that the owner would prefer that I not work in the specialty office if my girlfriend is going to work for the competitor (conflict of interest?). I kind of get it, but it also kind of seems like bullshit to me. I am going to sleep on it before I respond, but as I've never been in this situation, I thought I'd get some more perspective. Thoughts? I'm certainly no expert, but that seems like a load of poo poo to me too. Is there any chance you could counter that by committing to an NDA? Maybe that would be a compromise they'd be willing to give?
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# ? May 19, 2016 15:55 |
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I've never remotely been in the situation but that seems like bullshit to me. I'm not sure how to gauge how serious he is - would an email assurance of professionalism serve for now which you can follow through with?
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# ? May 19, 2016 16:01 |
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Not Grover posted:Not sure if this is exactly the right place to ask, but it seems right. My girlfriend and I both work in the same industry and are looking to relocate. We interviewed this week at competing companies in the city we would like to move to, and both got offers. Because it's a little of a niche industry and kind of a small world, so to speak, my potential employer knows my girlfriend interviewed at the other company. I actually interviewed at two locations owned by the same person; one is specialty and one is more generalized (and in another town ~20-30 mins away). I'm more interested in the specialty place, and today received an email back with an offer, with the caveat that the owner would prefer that I not work in the specialty office if my girlfriend is going to work for the competitor (conflict of interest?). I kind of get it, but it also kind of seems like bullshit to me. I am going to sleep on it before I respond, but as I've never been in this situation, I thought I'd get some more perspective. Thoughts?
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# ? May 20, 2016 02:06 |
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Not Grover posted:Not sure if this is exactly the right place to ask, but it seems right. My girlfriend and I both work in the same industry and are looking to relocate. We interviewed this week at competing companies in the city we would like to move to, and both got offers. Because it's a little of a niche industry and kind of a small world, so to speak, my potential employer knows my girlfriend interviewed at the other company. I actually interviewed at two locations owned by the same person; one is specialty and one is more generalized (and in another town ~20-30 mins away). I'm more interested in the specialty place, and today received an email back with an offer, with the caveat that the owner would prefer that I not work in the specialty office if my girlfriend is going to work for the competitor (conflict of interest?). I kind of get it, but it also kind of seems like bullshit to me. I am going to sleep on it before I respond, but as I've never been in this situation, I thought I'd get some more perspective. Thoughts? Your girlfriend is in the same position; how did her company handle it?
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# ? May 20, 2016 02:29 |
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I sent an email back to try to address those concerns and they agreed that it would be unfair to exclude me based on where someone else was interviewing, so it's "tabled for now". That said, I don't know what will happen going forward because I think she plans on taking the job at the competitor. The industry is vet medicine (which is all privately owned and small business driven in my state - legally corporations can't own clinics here) and I am a vet nurse, so it's not like I am a doctor or in some kind of position to plunder their trade secrets or IP or anything. My girlfriend's place made her an offer without any stated caveats or concerns (and actually told her to have me pass my resume their way if I was interested in their clinic).
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# ? May 20, 2016 16:30 |
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So it has now been a full week since I was given the promise of an offer and I didn't get a reply to my email used to attempt to initiate salary negotiations nor my "hey, you never replied, is this even still a thing?" email. Should I just assume they didn't want to negotiate at all, or is this still a normal thing for HR departments?
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# ? May 20, 2016 17:15 |
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Gin_Rummy posted:So it has now been a full week since I was given the promise of an offer and I didn't get a reply to my email used to attempt to initiate salary negotiations nor my "hey, you never replied, is this even still a thing?" email. Should I just assume they didn't want to negotiate at all, or is this still a normal thing for HR departments? Have you tried calling the HR contact?
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# ? May 20, 2016 17:32 |
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TwoSheds posted:Have you tried calling the HR contact? I actually didn't think I had the dude's phone number, but it looks like I still do so I suppose I'll give it a shot.
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# ? May 20, 2016 17:36 |
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Gin_Rummy posted:So it has now been a full week since I was given the promise of an offer and I didn't get a reply to my email used to attempt to initiate salary negotiations nor my "hey, you never replied, is this even still a thing?" email. Should I just assume they didn't want to negotiate at all, or is this still a normal thing for HR departments? After a week I definitely would not consider it obnoxious to call for a follow up, especially if that's where they left the conversation. It's unfortunately probably not a good sign, but you never know. Sometimes people get busy or distracted, or are just disorganized.
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# ? May 20, 2016 19:17 |
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Guinness posted:After a week I definitely would not consider it obnoxious to call for a follow up, especially if that's where they left the conversation. I dunno what the story is with this dude, but my call was not answered and the voice-mail box was full.
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# ? May 20, 2016 19:22 |
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You interviewed at a front for a meth operation.
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# ? May 20, 2016 19:30 |
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Nail Rat posted:You interviewed at a front for a meth operation. I wish. At least in that situation I would've known from the vibe on-site that things would be sketch as hell. This is actually a major, multinational company.
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# ? May 20, 2016 19:45 |
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Gin_Rummy posted:I wish. At least in that situation I would've known from the vibe on-site that things would be sketch as hell. This is actually a major, multinational company. What about trying the hiring manager and just going around HR? The manager is going to ultimately have more say in what actually happens anyways. HR is mostly there to aid in the process.
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# ? May 20, 2016 20:17 |
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Kalenn Istarion posted:What about trying the hiring manager and just going around HR? The manager is going to ultimately have more say in what actually happens anyways. HR is mostly there to aid in the process. This would have been my next step, but I interviewed with like four different potential hiring managers of varying departments. My "we are gonna offer you" email was so vague that they didn't really specify who or what department I was really being offered by. EDIT: Basically my only point of contact is this crappy HR rep, unless I get desperate enough to try the dude mentioned in the original "out of office" reply, or possibly one of the recruiters that helped set up the interviews. Though, I'm not sure they'd even be much help if I tried them. Worst negotiation ever. Gin_Rummy fucked around with this message at 20:46 on May 20, 2016 |
# ? May 20, 2016 20:21 |
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Gin_Rummy posted:This would have been my next step, but I interviewed with like four different potential hiring managers of varying departments. My "we are gonna offer you" email was so vague that they didn't really specify who or what department I was really being offered by.
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# ? May 20, 2016 23:05 |
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# ? May 15, 2024 04:09 |
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What's the best publicly available general resource for determining market value for job and experience (I understand multiple things play into this like location, specific marketplace, specific type of job)? I've checked out glassdoor, payscale and the bureau of labor and statistics. Only BLS seems to be worth a drat, but it's only good for entry-level and mean/median wages as far as I can tell. I work in engineering, and I know what the municipal/County side pays based on experience since it's public record. Is there a good multiplier that I could use to determine the private consulting side for the same work? Short end is, I know my job experience/skills exceeds that for someone with my X amount years in the industry. I'm looking to leverage that in the second half of this year.
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# ? May 21, 2016 16:20 |