6 Ignored Jobs in the World

The desperation of doing work in front of Job recessions and unemployment is really hard to control. There are people who back off after facing disappointment from different companies where they fail to get job, but on the other hand, there are people who make themselves busy with the private affordable jobs, may not be permanent, but still enough to get rid of boredom and getting a respectable earnings. Who are they? What they do? How they earn and how they make their lives , lets see below, few of the coolest jobs to do.

1- Whiskey Maker

Colum Egan has a degree from the University of Limerick in Southwestern Ireland and was developing quite a nice engineering career when he fell in love.

He was living in London at the time and the woman who would later be his wife was from a town in Northern Ireland, 12 miles from theBushmills distillery .

He wound up moving there and got a job at Bushmills bottling and mixing whiskey for five years before he had the opportunity work with the master distiller, a job that ultimately became his.

One of the most challenging parts of his job is that any new whiskey they create still has to have a Bushmills taste beneath it — smooth, fruity and vanilla, a little floral and slightly spicy.

And then there’s figuring out how much to produce.

“The weird thing is, it just takes so long to make,” Egan said, explaining that whiskey stays in the barrel anywhere from three to 20 years or more. “You have to try to make an educated guess on how much we’ll be drinking in 20 years time!”

2- Videogame Tester

Playing videogames too long has been the cause for more than one boy being sent to his room but here’s something your mom didn’t tell you: Videogames are a roughly $25 billion industry and if you stick with it, you can actually get paid to play them.

When Scott Steinberg (left at a trade show) was 17, he landed a part-time testing job for the company that would later become Atari after he simply called them up and asked. He got his first full-time position from a French game maker after meeting someone from the company at a trade show.

Now he tests them from a consumer standpoint and publishes “GameExec” magazine. He’s also the author of several books on videogames, including “ Get Rich Playing Games.”

He often gets that “You’ve found the Holy Grail!” look from people but says testing can be tedious because you’re running the same part of the game over and over again, trying to break it. And, testing for a game maker only pays about $8 an hour.

On the upside, “You gain a knowledge [of the game] that many times over eclipses that of its creator,” Steinberg said.



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