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How do I: Write the perfect CV?

It may translate as "course of life" but that doesn't mean your curriculum vitae should give an exhaustive summary of every aspect of your life including pages of interests, hobbies, irrelevant qualifications and every odd job you've undertaken since you were 11.

How to get yourself a better work-life balance

Whether you're fed up with your commute, missing the kids or lacking quality time with your partner, Rob Griffin explores options to revolutionise your working life

The secret of my success: How five high-flying graduates made it

Exorbitant university fees, high youth unemployment... Things look bleak for the next generation. What does it take to land a top job in our most elite professions?

Cyber spies: Why one tweet could cost you a job

These days, job applicants don't just need a good CV – they need a clean bill of web health. Rhodri Marsden on cyber snooping by employers

Being Modern: Management speak

Let's run this topic up the flagpole and see who salutes it. Management speak, that office bête noire that reached its pompous zenith in the 1990s, has returned to prominence with a vengeance as the PM and his pals have really taken it (and Labour's annoying insistence on blue-sky thinking and stakeholder management) to the next level.

Apprenticeships are a great way to make sure that you're hired

Students over the age of 16 who choose an apprenticeship are in good company, irrespective of the goings-on in Lord Sugar's boardroom. Notable apprentices throughout history have included Leonardo da Vinci, Benjamin Franklin and even Elvis, who was an apprentice electrician before putting on those blue suede shoes.

You're hired!: Apprenticeships are the best way to ensure fair access to the professional world

Apprenticeships have all but died out out over the past few decades but now they're coming back

You're hired!: Why soft skills can help land that dream job

With employability skills the key to a first job, more courses are including them, says Steve McCormack

It pays to study the key skill of negotiation

"All through life one learns to be a better negotiator," said Antoine Pecquet, a French diplomat who wrote Discourse On The Art Of Negotiation. That was in 1737, and nearly 300 years later Christophe Lattuada agrees.

An online course opens up a virtual world of opportunities

Anyone who saw Stuart Baggs 'The Brand' squirm his way into the semi-finals of The Apprentice in December knows that, in Lord Sugar's boardroom at least, the gift of the gab can get you a long way. In real-world business, however, it may not always be necessary. A growing number are realising that it is possible to gain the required acumen without engaging in the cut and thrust of face-to-face negotiation.

Team UK could be victorious in the Olympics for skills

Preparations are well under way for this year's "Olympics" in London. Surely some mistake here? The once-every-four-years sporting extravanganza due to be hosted by the UK will not be taking place until 2012. That is right. But there is another Olympic-style competition, which will be taking place at the Excel centre in London Docklands this October. It's WorldSkills London 2011 – an Olympic-style competition that is arguably just as important to the country's economy as the main event.

How to stay ahead in your workplace

'You must take what you learn back to your work'

Fed up with your job? You can make the leap but take a good look first

Career moves can work as long as you do your homework, say the experts.

'The young need careers advice more than ever'

To reduce school-leavers' careers services in a shrinking jobs market would be madness, argues Deirdre Hughes

A competitive field: The improved perception of the oil, gas and mining industry is luring graduates

Times are changing. In the past, students have smeared themselves in oil and lain down before oil company stands at careers fairs in protest at corporate ethics. Now, many are coming to the big multinationals, more interested in a job. The numbers of graduates attending recruitment fairs for the science and engineering sector are higher than ever this year, according to the University of Oxford. "This is partly the economic situation, partly because the perception of the [oil, gas and mining] industry has changed for the better," says Jonathan Black, director of the careers service at the University of Oxford.

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Jim Broadbent: Dementia, even among the famous, shouldn't be a taboo

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James Delingpole: Never apologise, never explain. And you have 109 characters left...

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Fine dining discovers its 'Fight Club' side

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The creator of Secret Cinema has teamed up with one of London's most distinctive eateries
Shakespeare on film: He that plays the king... and director

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Next stop, the Olympics: Urban farmers are digging for eco-victory

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Soldier of fortune: Tom Hiddleston is set to become 2012's hottest new star

Soldier of fortune: Tom Hiddleston

After a string of hit films the actor is being hailed as Britain's hottest acting talent
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Classic FM: Twenty years of Brahms & Liszt

Meet the Classic FM DJs who have made fugues funky
Shall we dance? Just try stopping us!

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English National Ballet prepares to bring favourite Gershwin tunes to life at the London Coliseum
A Clockwork Orange at 40

A Clockwork Orange at 40

A look back on a monument of modern cinema
Can do attitude: Too cold to go out shopping? Time to reach for the tins, says Bill Granger

Bill Granger: Can do attitude

Too cold to go out shopping? Time to reach for the tins...
Sir Clive Woodward: 'I would have done things differently to Johnson'

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Ian Holloway: We are role models so we must not let fans think it is OK to be racist

Ian Holloway

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The Last Word: Rooney is spitting image of problem

The Last Word: Rooney is spitting image of problem

Football cries out for inspirational leaders as players and managers alike combine to set a poor example