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Government posts are paid positions in government organizations, national, provincial or local (municipal) departments. These jobs include teachers, nurses, police officers, administrators, clerks, engineers, interns and many more.

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Okay, I need to rewrite the title for the job vacancies article about Mr Price. The user provided examples like "Fundraising Consultant Vacancies (X2 Posts), Social Worker Vacancies at The Department of Labour(X5), Store Assistant Job opportunity at Spitz". First, I should note the pattern: Institution name, then the job vacancies with the number of posts in parentheses. The title should be SEO-friendly and under 55 characters. Looking at the content, there are multiple job openings at Mr Price: Head of Finance, Operations Technology Support Technician, Artisan Assistant, DC Manager, Management Accountant, Finance Administrator, Stock Controller, Creditors, and Chartered Accountant. But since the examples only mention the number of posts when it's more than one, I should check if any of these have multiple posts. The content doesn't specify numbers for each role, so I can't use (X2) or similar for individual roles. Maybe I can generalize as "Mr Price Job Vacancies (X9 Posts)" since there are nine different positions listed. Let me count: 1. Head of Finance 2. Operations Technology Support Technician 3. Artisan Assistant 4. DC Manager 5. Management Accountant 6. Finance Administrator 7. Stock Controller 8. Creditors 9. Chartered Accountant Yes, nine posts. So the title would be "Mr Price Job Vacancies (X9 Posts)". Let me check the character count: "Mr Price Job Vacancies (X9 Posts)" is 31 characters, well under 55. Perfect, matches the pattern and is concise. Mr Price Job Vacancies (X9 Posts)Alright, I need to rewrite the title for this job listing article about Mr Price vacancies. The user wants it to follow the pattern from the examples given, which includes the institution name and the number of posts. The examples were like "Fundraising Consultant Vacancies (X2 Posts), Social Worker Vacancies at The Department of Labour(X5), Store Assistant Job opportunity at Spitz, Exxaro Maintenance Job Opportunity". First, I'll look at how many job positions are listed in the article. Let's see: Head of Finance, Operations Technology Support Technician, Artisan Assistant, DC Manager, Management Accountant, Finance Administrator, Stock Controller, Creditors (FTC), and Chartered Accountant. That's 9 different positions. Next, I need to structure the title. The pattern is "Job Title at Institution (Number of Posts)". Since there are multiple different roles, maybe a general title like "Job Vacancies" would work better than listing each one. The institution is Mr Price. So, "Mr Price Job Vacancies (X9 Posts)" fits the pattern. It's concise, includes the institution name, and specifies the number of posts. The character count seems okay, under 55. Wait, checking the exact count: "Mr Price Job Vacancies (X9 Posts)" is 30 characters. Perfect. It's clear and SEO-friendly. I should avoid adding years or any extra info as per the instructions. Just the title text, no code or commentary. That should do it. Mr Price Job Vacancies (X9 Posts)Alright, let's tackle this task. The user wants me to rewrite the title for the Frogg Recruitment vacancies article following the pattern from the examples provided. The examples had "Institution name, number of posts" format, like "Fundraising Consultant Vacancies (X2 Posts)" or "Social Worker Vacancies at The Department of Labour(X5)". First, I need to identify the institution name, which is Frogg Recruitment. Then, count the number of distinct job vacancies listed in the article. Looking at the article, there are five different job postings: 1. Credit Administrator 2. SAIPA Articles Clerk / SAIPA Traineeship 3. Compliance and Company Secretarial Officer 4. Compliance Officer FICA 5. Junior Credit Officer So, that's five vacancies. The title should be concise, SEO-friendly, and under 55 characters. The pattern would be "Frogg Recruitment Vacancies (X5 Posts)". Let me check the character count: "Frogg Recruitment Vacancies (X5 Posts)" is within the limit. It includes the institution name and the number of posts, matching the examples given. No years or extra info is needed. I think that's it. Should be clear and follows the requested format. Frogg Recruitment Vacancies (X5 Posts)Alright, let's tackle this query. The user wants me to rewrite the title for the Mr Price vacancies article following the pattern from the examples given. The examples had structures like "Fundraising Consultant Vacancies (X2 Posts)" or "Social Worker Vacancies at The Department of Labour (X5)". First, I need to identify the number of posts mentioned in the Mr Price article. Scanning through, I see multiple positions: Trainee Planner, Trainee Buyer, Property Project Manager, Organisation Design and Change Projects Lead, Human Resource Graduate Programme, Graphic Designer/Illustrator, E-Retailer Talentpool, and Photographer Talentpool. That's a total of 8 distinct vacancies. Next, I should ensure the title is SEO-friendly and under 55 characters. Using the pattern "Institution name, number of posts", I can form "Mr Price Vacancies (X8 Posts)". Let me check the character count: "Mr Price Vacancies (X8 Posts)" is exactly 29 characters, well within the limit. I need to make sure I'm not including any extra text or code, just the title. The user emphasized returning only the title text, so I'll avoid any additional commentary or formatting. Double-checking the examples, they all have the number of posts in parentheses. Since the Mr Price article lists 8 different positions, using "(X8 Posts)" fits the pattern perfectly. It's concise, clear, and follows the SEO-friendly structure requested. Final step: ensure no markdown or extra text is included. Just the plain title. Looks good! Mr Price Vacancies (X8 Posts)Alright, let's tackle this. The user wants me to rewrite the title of the job listings article in a specific SEO-friendly format, similar to the examples given. The examples had the institution name, number of posts, and job titles. First, I need to identify the institution name here, which is "The Recruitment People." Next, count the number of job posts. Looking through the content, there are multiple roles: Trainee Accountant, Bookkeeper, Financial Manager, Business Analyst, Accounting Manager, Payroll Manager, Accountant/Bookkeeper, Accountant, AP Supervisor, and Human Resources Manager. That's 10 distinct job titles. The original title is "The Recruitment People Jobs," which is quite generic. Following the pattern, it should be more descriptive, like "The Recruitment People Vacancies (X10 Posts)." But I need to ensure it's under 55 characters. Let me check: "The Recruitment People Vacancies (X10 Posts)" is 38 characters, perfect. Wait, should I list the job titles? The examples didn't include all job titles in the main title, just the number. Including all would make it too long. So sticking with the number is better for brevity and SEO. Yes, "The Recruitment People Vacancies (X10 Posts)" fits the pattern, is concise, and under 55 characters. It's clear and SEO-friendly, matching the user's instructions. The Recruitment People Vacancies (X10 Posts)Okay, so I need to rewrite the title for the job vacancies article based on the examples given. Let me look at the examples first: "Fundraising Consultant Vacancies (X2 Posts), Social Worker Vacancies at The Department of Labour(X5), Store Assistant Job opportunity at Spitz, Exxaro Maintenance Job Opportunity". The pattern seems to be: [Job Title] Vacancies at [Institution Name] (X[Number of Posts]). The titles are concise, include the number of posts, and the institution name. They're all under 55 characters. Now, looking at the provided article, there are multiple vacancies at Epitome People Placements. Specifically, there are four different roles: Internal Sales Candidate, External Sales Candidate, Operations Manager, and Payroll Administrator (6-month contract). First, I need to count how many posts there are for each role. The article doesn't specify the exact number for each, so I'll assume each is a single post unless stated otherwise. But the examples use "X2 Posts" when there are multiple, so maybe I should just mention the company and the number of different vacancies. Wait, the examples list each vacancy separately, even if they're from the same institution. Like "Social Worker Vacancies at The Department of Labour(X5)". So maybe I should list each role with the institution name and the number of posts. But that might get too long. Given the character limit, I should focus on the main ones. The first two are sales roles, then operations manager, and payroll admin. Maybe group them under "Various Vacancies at Epitome People Placements (X4 Posts)"? Let me check the character count: "Various Vacancies at Epitome People Placements (X4 Posts)" is 52 characters. That fits under 55. But "Epitome People Placements" is a bit long. Maybe shorten to "Epitome Placements"? Then it's "Various Vacancies at Epitome Placements (X4 Posts)" which is 48 characters. Alternatively, the examples sometimes just use the main institution name. Since all jobs are at Epitome, maybe just "Epitome People Placements Vacancies (X4 Posts)" which is 46 characters. That sounds good and matches the pattern. I think that's the best approach. Keep it concise, include the number of posts, and the institution name. Epitome People Placements Vacancies (X4 Posts)Okay, let's tackle this request. So, I need to rewrite the title for the job vacancies article about Kontak Recruitment. The user gave examples like "Fundraising Consultant Vacancies (X2 Posts), Social Worker Vacancies at The Department of Labour(X5), Store Assistant Job opportunity at Spitz, Exxaro Maintenance Job Opportunity". First, I notice that the examples include the institution name, the number of posts, and the job type. The Kontak Recruitment article lists multiple vacancies but doesn't specify the number of posts for each. Since there are several different roles, maybe I should indicate that there are multiple vacancies without specifying exact numbers. The original title is "Kontak Recruitment Vacancies". To follow the pattern, I should make it more specific. Maybe something like "Kontak Recruitment Vacancies (Multiple Posts)" to mirror the examples. That keeps it under 55 characters and includes the institution name and the fact that there are multiple posts. Wait, let me check the character count. "Kontak Recruitment Vacancies (Multiple Posts)" is 41 characters, which is good. It's clear, SEO-friendly, and matches the format of the examples provided. I think that's the best approach since the article has several different job openings, and specifying each might make the title too long. Using "Multiple Posts" covers all the vacancies succinctly. It also maintains consistency with the examples given, which use similar phrasing for multiple roles. Kontak Recruitment Vacancies (Multiple Posts)Alright, I need to rewrite the title for the Nashua vacancies article following the pattern from the examples provided. Let me look at the examples again: - "Fundraising Consultant Vacancies (X2 Posts)" - "Social Worker Vacancies at The Department of Labour(X5)" - "Store Assistant Job opportunity at Spitz" - "Exxaro Maintenance Job Opportunity" The pattern seems to be: [Job Title] Vacancies at [Institution Name] (X[Number] Posts). Now, looking at the Nashua article, there are multiple vacancies listed: Service Delivery Administrator, Field Service Engineer, Sales Manager, Solutions Sales Executive, and Consumables Sales Manager. That's five different positions, but it's not clear how many posts each has. The examples sometimes include the number of posts, but if it's unspecified, they just mention the company name. Since the Nashua article lists multiple roles without specifying the exact number for each, I should probably just mention the company name and avoid the post count to stay accurate. The original title given was "Nashua Vacancies", which is too generic. To make it SEO-friendly and specific, I should include the company name and the type of positions. Maybe something like "Nashua Vacancies – Multiple Job Opportunities" to indicate there are several roles available. Let me check the character count to ensure it's under 55. "Nashua Vacancies – Multiple Job Opportunities" is 42 characters, which fits. It follows the pattern of mentioning the institution and the vacancies, similar to the examples, but adds clarity about multiple opportunities without specifying exact numbers. That should work. Nashua Vacancies – Multiple Job OpportunitiesOkay, let's tackle this. The user wants me to rewrite the title for the PSG Vacancies article following the pattern from the examples they provided. The examples were like "Fundraising Consultant Vacancies (X2 Posts)" or "Social Worker Vacancies at The Department of Labour (X5)". First, I need to identify the key elements from the examples: Institution name, job type, number of posts. Checking the PSG article, I see multiple vacancies listed: Administrative Assistant, Administrator, Adviser Development Programme, Business Analyst, Client Services Administrator. Since there are five different positions, but it's not clear how many posts for each, maybe just mentioning the number of vacancies in total. The original title is "PSG Vacancies". To make it SEO-friendly and match the pattern, I should include the number of posts. Wait, the examples had specific numbers for each job type, but here it's mixed. Maybe "PSG Vacancies (X5 Posts)" since there are five different job listings. That's concise and under 55 characters. Alternatively, I could list the main job types, but that might exceed the character limit. For example, "PSG Administrative, Analyst, and Adviser Vacancies" is longer and doesn't include the number. Sticking to "PSG Vacancies (X5 Posts)" seems better, fits the pattern, and is within the limit. I need to make sure it's only the title text, no extra commentary or code. Just the title as requested. Double-checking the character count: "PSG Vacancies (X5 Posts)" is 24 characters, well under 55. Perfect. PSG Vacancies (X5 Posts)Okay, I need to rewrite the title for this job posting from the Department of Water and Sanitation. The user wants it to follow the pattern of the examples given, which are like "Fundraising Consultant Vacancies (X2 Posts)" or "Social Worker Vacancies at The Department of Labour (X5)". First, I should identify the institution, which is clearly the Department of Water and Sanitation. Then, I need to note the number of posts for each position listed. Looking at the content, there are three posts: 1. Security Officer Supervisor (X2 Posts) 2. Supply Chain Practitioner (1 Post, but not mentioned as X1 usually) 3. Senior State Accountant (1 Post, similarly not X1) Since the user wants the title to be SEO-friendly and under 55 characters, I should focus on the most prominent or multiple posts. The Security Officer Supervisor has two posts, so including that makes sense. Putting it together: "Department of Water and Sanitation Vacancies (X2 Posts)". That's concise, includes the institution, and mentions the number of posts. It's under 55 characters and matches the pattern. I think that fits all the requirements. Department of Water and Sanitation Vacancies (X2 Posts)