CakeResume 找人才

進階搜尋
On
4 到 6 年
6 到 10 年
10 到 15 年
15 年以上
United States
Avatar of Joanna Rees.
Founding Partner
超過一年
Joanna Rees Joanna Rees is a Managing Partner at West in San Francisco and leads the firm's investments. She is an experienced investor, entrepreneur, and philanthropist. Joanna believes that change starts with ethical companies willing to work for it. Founding Partner San Francisco, US [email protected] JoannaRees.net Joanna Rees writes about entrepreneurship, startups, and the ways that both can make the world a better place. JoannaRees.org Joanna Rees' philanthropy and nonprofit blog, with an emphasis on halting climate change and fighting corruption in corporations. Map Joanna Rees
finance
Entrepreneurship
Venture Capital
目前沒有興趣尋找新的機會
全職 / 暫不考慮遠端工作
15 年以上
Columbia Business School
Finance
Avatar of Lynn Lee.
Avatar of Lynn Lee.
曾任
Caregiver @Career Break:The COVID-19 pandemic spread and care for my parents ( 86 and 81)
2020 ~ 2024
Project/Account Manager, International Sales Specialist
一個月內
a high level of communication with internal teams and clients ensuring high service delivery ●Oversee the order qualifications and ensure all orders end up getting produced in the right manner and correct lead time. ●Assist international clients to inspect products and create internal inspection reports to production teams for correction and improvement ●Present inspection reports to client while client is hard to carry out inspection in Vietnam ●Offer quotations to potential and existing customers ●Monitor and achieve the timelines the product and sample development progress ●Communication with HQ in Taipei ●Coach Vietnamese team members International Sales Manager • Furniture Manufacture
Word
Excel
PowerPoint
待業中
正在積極求職中
全職 / 暫不考慮遠端工作
15 年以上
Brunel University, London
MBA

最輕量、快速的招募方案,數百家企業的選擇

搜尋履歷,主動聯繫求職者,提升招募效率。

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  • 檢視使用者信箱 & 電話
搜尋技巧
1
嘗試搜尋最精準的關鍵字組合
資深 後端 php laravel
如果結果不夠多,再逐一刪除較不重要的關鍵字
2
將須完全符合的字詞放在雙引號中
"社群行銷"
3
在不想搜尋到的字詞前面加上減號,如果想濾掉中文字,需搭配雙引號使用 (-"人資")
UI designer -UX
免費方案僅能搜尋公開履歷。
升級至進階方案,即可瀏覽所有搜尋結果(包含數萬筆覽僅在 CakeResume 平台上公開的履歷)。

職場能力評價定義

專業技能
該領域中具備哪些專業能力(例如熟悉 SEO 操作,且會使用相關工具)。
問題解決能力
能洞察、分析問題,並擬定方案有效解決問題。
變通能力
遇到突發事件能冷靜應對,並隨時調整專案、客戶、技術的相對優先序。
溝通能力
有效傳達個人想法,且願意傾聽他人意見並給予反饋。
時間管理能力
了解工作項目的優先順序,有效運用時間,準時完成工作內容。
團隊合作能力
具有向心力與團隊責任感,願意傾聽他人意見並主動溝通協調。
領導力
專注於團隊發展,有效引領團隊採取行動,達成共同目標。
超過一年
The World Bank
2011 ~ 2017
Washington, D.C., USA
專業背景
目前狀態
求職階段
專業
產業
工作年資
管理經歷
技能
語言能力
求職偏好
希望獲得的職位
預期工作模式
期望的工作地點
遠端工作意願
接案服務
學歷
學校
Duke University
主修科系
Economics
列印
Profile 00 00@2x

Augusto Lopez-Claros

Directing International Efforts at World Bank

During his tenure (2011-17) as director of the World Bank’s Global Indicators Group in DEC (DECIG) Augusto Lopez-Claros oversaw the production of the Bank’s Doing Business Report, a rich database offering insights into business environment conditions in nations spanning the globe, as well as the report and database Women, Business, and the Law, a biannual publication taking a close look at the ways governments used the law (e.g., the Constitution, the Civil Code, Company Law, the Labor and Tax Codes) to discriminate against women, adversely affecting their ability to take part in economic activity. During presentations made at the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development, the Law Society in London, the Australian Banking and Finance conference in Sydney, the Stockholm School of Economics, and elsewhere Dr. Lopez-Claros has stated that inequalities in education artificially reduced the pool of talent which societies could draw from; by excluding qualified girls from the educational stream and promoting less qualified boys, the average amount of human capital in a country would be reduced and this would have an adverse impact on economic performance. The promotion of female education led to lower births per women, not only because educated women would have greater knowledge about family planning but also because education created greater opportunities for women that could be more attractive than childbearing. Lower fertility levels helped reduce child mortality and expand the range of educational opportunities available to the next generation. With reduced fertility levels the working-age population would grow more rapidly than the overall population and this would boost per capita economic growth. 


A possibly equally powerful driver of economic growth associated with the narrowing of employment gender gaps had to do with the “bargaining power within families.” Not surprisingly, when women worked and earned income as a result, they would be more empowered within the home. Beyond the direct personal benefits to her, the economics literature had identified a number of other favorable effects such as higher investments in the health and education of children, higher savings, more productive investments and better use and repayment of credit, all of which were beneficial for economic growth. Yet another avenue of influence had to do with growing evidence that women workers were less prone to corruption and nepotism than men workers. The evidence came from a number of sources; a survey of 6500 companies carried out in the United Kingdom looking at the gender composition of company boards showed clear evidence that companies with greater female participation in boards were less likely to be hit by governance scandals involving bribery, fraud and other factors likely to depress business confidence. So, boosting the employment of women was likely to be beneficial for economic growth through improvements in the quality of governance. Picking up on these and other themes Dr. Lopez-Claros coauthored the 2018 book Equality for Women = Prosperity for All: The Disastrous Crisis of Gender Inequality (St. Martin’s Press).


Work Experience

Jan 1, 2011 - Jan 1, 2017

Director of the Global Indicators Group in DEC
The World Bank


Education

Aug 1, 1978 - Dec 1, 1981

PhD
Duke University
Economics

履歷
個人檔案
Profile 00 00@2x

Augusto Lopez-Claros

Directing International Efforts at World Bank

During his tenure (2011-17) as director of the World Bank’s Global Indicators Group in DEC (DECIG) Augusto Lopez-Claros oversaw the production of the Bank’s Doing Business Report, a rich database offering insights into business environment conditions in nations spanning the globe, as well as the report and database Women, Business, and the Law, a biannual publication taking a close look at the ways governments used the law (e.g., the Constitution, the Civil Code, Company Law, the Labor and Tax Codes) to discriminate against women, adversely affecting their ability to take part in economic activity. During presentations made at the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development, the Law Society in London, the Australian Banking and Finance conference in Sydney, the Stockholm School of Economics, and elsewhere Dr. Lopez-Claros has stated that inequalities in education artificially reduced the pool of talent which societies could draw from; by excluding qualified girls from the educational stream and promoting less qualified boys, the average amount of human capital in a country would be reduced and this would have an adverse impact on economic performance. The promotion of female education led to lower births per women, not only because educated women would have greater knowledge about family planning but also because education created greater opportunities for women that could be more attractive than childbearing. Lower fertility levels helped reduce child mortality and expand the range of educational opportunities available to the next generation. With reduced fertility levels the working-age population would grow more rapidly than the overall population and this would boost per capita economic growth. 


A possibly equally powerful driver of economic growth associated with the narrowing of employment gender gaps had to do with the “bargaining power within families.” Not surprisingly, when women worked and earned income as a result, they would be more empowered within the home. Beyond the direct personal benefits to her, the economics literature had identified a number of other favorable effects such as higher investments in the health and education of children, higher savings, more productive investments and better use and repayment of credit, all of which were beneficial for economic growth. Yet another avenue of influence had to do with growing evidence that women workers were less prone to corruption and nepotism than men workers. The evidence came from a number of sources; a survey of 6500 companies carried out in the United Kingdom looking at the gender composition of company boards showed clear evidence that companies with greater female participation in boards were less likely to be hit by governance scandals involving bribery, fraud and other factors likely to depress business confidence. So, boosting the employment of women was likely to be beneficial for economic growth through improvements in the quality of governance. Picking up on these and other themes Dr. Lopez-Claros coauthored the 2018 book Equality for Women = Prosperity for All: The Disastrous Crisis of Gender Inequality (St. Martin’s Press).


Work Experience

Jan 1, 2011 - Jan 1, 2017

Director of the Global Indicators Group in DEC
The World Bank


Education

Aug 1, 1978 - Dec 1, 1981

PhD
Duke University
Economics