$600…! NET FOR BASE MANAGER… Ultra Competent!
Dixit, an advertiser / recruiter who will certainly recognize himself ...
This is a SHAME.
Search PADI Instructor (or Instructor) ET “ANMP or CMAS” (at least 2 *) for a post of center manager in Zanzibar (Tanzania). Fixed-term contract from June 2011 to March 2012 initially.
Average staff to coach 3 people (1 DM, 1 captain, 1 help).
Perfectly mastered French and English compulsory, other languages desired (Spanish, Italian, German, others…). Plan to learn Kiswahili on site (“Assimil” method provided).
Center located in 2 hotels (see “Peponi Diving Zanzibar” site). French-speaking owners.
Strong personal involvement indispensable.
Experience and great autonomy necessary (technical, commercial-external prospection, management, maintenance ...).
Fixed salary of 600 USD net more variable according to monthly result (contracted tranches) + fed + lodged. 1 day of rest a week.
Big potential if motivated and effective.
Taxes and administrative fees (work permit ...) are paid by the owners.
The ticket can be taken care of at the end of the contract, depending on the results.
With the possibility for Monitors of “little virtue”, to supplement the evening after work, the end of the month…!
NB: 600 USD = 425 Euros
A Good Regulator Hi!
3 comments
Except that in Annecy I don't come! lol
Long live globalization! Until that gives some ideas to us. It is urgent to train the Celestials in diving (but no, it's to smile, what a nightmare). Well, $ 600 in Tanzania might be a good salary after all. As long as you want to stay there.
Yes Christophe… and thank you for your answer.
Globalization is not there to improve things, on the contrary… and it turns out that it is always the “western” and the adventure in the world of diving to earn its crust…
It's been years and years that the (professionalization) of the profession has been working like this, when you don't have to fight and “fuck yourself in the face” at the end of the month to get your salary ... it continues, it continues ... people are very little informed of the deep malaise that there is in the profession, it still revolts me as much ...
But you have to stay with your head held high and “keep it right”, when you don't have to talk about safety in certain cases, but it is important to talk about it and pass the information on, especially for the young monitors who arrive on the market ... I can tell you that there is something to worry about ...
A Good Regulator Hi!