Escape from Corporate America: A Practical Guide to Creating the Career of Your Dreams (Paperback)
From Publishers Weekly
Journalist Skillings aims to rescue Americans from corporate tedium in this entertaining and informative guide to walking away from an established—albeit stultifying—job and forging a more rewarding career. With insight and humor, Skillings enumerates the stages of Corporate Disillusionment and the features of the toxic workplace—the bullying bosses, moronic co-workers, terminal boredom and rampant racism and sexism. A multitude of questionnaires, exercises and worksheets helps readers determine their dream job, assess expenses and assets, and plot an escape plan to break free of corporate life without going bankrupt. Skillings also provides pointers to those readers who simply want to be happier in their current jobs—including negotiating for more flexible hours, telecommuting and taking sabbaticals. Vignettes of successful fugitives from the corporate world populate the book and an extremely useful Escape Tool Kit supplies information on (more...)
Career Change – Understanding your Worth and Value
Asimo is a robot made by Honda and currently working for IBM Japan. ASIMO works as a receptionist for IBM. He greets guests and shows them around the building. Asimo’s gets paid $150,000 a year (Yearly lease for ASIMO) Compared to the salary of a human receptionist - $35,000. To perform these duties, ASIMO has to be specially programmed to know the layout of the buildings and the appropriate way to greet visitors and answer questions.
What about You!
I recently saw a documentary about a lady that could not smile because of a birth defect. It cost her $70,000 to surgically have a smile created for her. It's close to the real thing but it's still not the real thing. Knowing the value of a rolex watch, how much would you pay for a fake rolex. Now try smiling. Easy? That's priceless but an artificial one would cost you $70,000.
Try squeezing your hand, pick up your pen, throw your pen a varied speeds, pick your ear, play with your hand, do what you wish. Asimo couldn't even do a tenth of what you are doing, yet it is paid a salary of $150,000 dollars. Asimo is a fake version of you. No where near the real thing.
You are priceless and Asimo is worthless compared to what you can do.
Yet it gets paid more than most!
Why?
People will only see you as you see yourself! My father always told me; "If you sell yourself cheap during the day, don't expect to increase the price at night, for you will not find a buyer" You are fearfully & wonderfully made, you probably have been nurtured and cared for by loving parents who in their own rights are priceless. You don't have to be programmed to know the layout of a building, greet visitors and answer questions. You are not made by man but uniquely created and fashioned to invent, innovate, discover, adapt and rule.
Dr, Micheal Denton clearly states – the cosmos (universe) is specially designed whole with life and mankind as its fundamental goal and purpose. Cosmos - The universe regarded as an orderly, harmonious whole. In simple words, The world has been created specifically for you!
Trees have a purpose, gold has a purpose, water has a purpose, salt has a purpose, even micro-organisms have a purpose. What more of you? You are the most intelligent being of all creation - One that wills thoughts to action, one with feelings, emotions, a soul and a mind to invent, learn, discover, communicate, build and rule.
The more physicist, biologists and scientist learn about the universe the more they realise it has been created custom made for human existence. For you are made with love in mind - Psalmist
If the world has been built with you in mind, why settle for anything less. Asimo is a product of your your neighbours invention and how much is it worth?
The question I need to ask you is this:
How do you see yourself?
The most valuable things in life are not things but people. You and I.
Celebrate and value yourself daily and everyone else will treat you the same way.
www.careerinsights.tv
How To Get Your Career Change In Motion
Know Your Uniqueness
Find out what is unique in you that makes you stand out and makes you the right choice for the job advertised.
The first thing you need to have is an outstanding resume, one that will guarantee you an interview. Every organization wants only the best employees, and you need to prove that you qualify.
Some basic preparation to determine your uniqueness is in order.
1. Recognize your strengths. You need to review what you have already done as well as your competence and aptitude level. Your past appraisal reports, verbal or written, will help you with this.
2. Identify your skills. The skills and experience you have acquired over the years will help you handle your new job. You have technical skills as well as software skills that you carry with you wherever you go. Stress these strengths. For example, your communication, management and interpersonal skills might be your forte.
3. Highlight your personality. You also have certain personal traits that make you unique. You have a record of meeting deadlines. You have initiative and a great attitude. Being positive will carry you a long way.
4. Follow up your list of strengths with examples to support them. This is most important if your interviewer is to believe that you are not claiming strengths you may not actually have. This will help you stand out.
Locating the Job of Your Choice
Geographical limitations should not stop you from applying for a job that you are suited for.
Read every advertisement carefully, noting what each company is looking for. Then make your notes in two columns, one with the heading "What the organization is looking for" and the other "What I have to offer." This exercise will help you see the closest matches.
It will help you identify your skills and strengths and how you might apply them. Spell them out in as many words as the advertisement calls for. This will make your resume stronger. You should also use this information in an interview situation.
Facing Your Interviewers
Remember to research the organization before the interview. This will demonstrate your interest in the company and also help you frame questions to them.
Wearing the appropriate clothing is important for any interview, so it is best to find out ahead of time what that is. In general, attire for an interview is formal; but if your research tells you that the organization is informal, dressing more casually might be a better choice.
Women candidates are faced with more choices. A good policy is to wear nothing very dramatic and keep it conservative. It's better to avoid fragrances the day of the interview.
Always remember: first impressions are often the last impressions, so make the best of that interview call. You may not get a second chance.
reCareered: Who’s Firing? Layoffs week ended 10-16-09
Who's Firing is a weekly survey of organizations announcing (or rumoring) layoffs. Not only is this valuable for job seekers, but for business analysts, corporate strategists, marketers, salespeople, investment analysts, financial advisers, and others who are interested in companies that are contracting.
Inclusion on this listing doesn’t mean the entire industry is down, as many from the same sector appeared on the “Who’s Hiring” article published 10/12/09. It is interesting to note that while Federal hiring is on the rise, a number of State and Local governments face continued cutbacks. Also, Verizon has led the top hiring lists, but is also announcing a number of layoffs. Boeing made the layoff list, while competing aerospace manufacturers top the Who’s Hiring lists. Job seekers: You might want to look in greener pastures than these companies. Layoffs announced and rumored this week were in the Government, Manufacturing, Automotive, Technology, Publishing and Energy sectors. Organizations announcing or rumored layoffs week ended 10/16/09:
AM General (250)State of Massachusetts (up to 2K)State of Iowa (1000)Standish Max Prison (Michigan) (100)Smiths Medical PM Inc. (100)The Amherst H. Wilder Foundation (260)Boeing Corp. (200-300)City of Spokane, WA (200)SunTrust Bank (YTD 100)Wilsonart International (120)Moog Aircraft Group (220)Onondaga County, NY (133)State of New Hampshire (300)Country Financial (400)Kohl's Corporation (250)Team Broadcast Services (96)HNI Corporation (150)State of Vermont (160 total jobs lost)Verizon Communications (200)City of Moraine, OH (187)Solvay Pharmaceuticals (450)Steifel Laboratories (200)Pilgrim's Pride (GA) (100)Hamilton County Public Library (250)Oral Roberts University (124)NYC Dept. of Education (714)Albany County, NY (109)Bestop (140)Flour Energy Corp. (500)Valero Energy Corp. (250)Boeing Corp. (130)D&E Communications (280-290)United States Postal Service (650)Lafayette Caterpillar (106)American Cancer Society (140)Canron Western Constructors Inc. (106)Fluor Corporation (100-150)Redcats USA (490)Blue Cross Blue Shield of Florida (150)Kent County, MI (145)Boise Cascade (130)Dell (905)L.L. Bean Call Center (700)Sunoco Inc. (400)ATK Space Systems (550)Hilton Reservations and Customer Care (176)Thermo Fisher Scientific (130)Conde Nast Publications (180)Atlantic City Casinos (1067)Metavation (120)Prairie Correctional Facility (120)University of California Riverside (425)Pilgrim’s Pride (640)Emerson Network Power Connectivity Solutions (135)United Space Alliance (258)Dow Roofing (100)Tomasco Mulciber Inc. (213)Delta, Eagan, MN (unknown)Aramark Health Support Services, Huntsville, AL (163)Chevron Mining, Gallup NM (80)Electric Boat, Groton, CT (96)Sylvania Yarn Systems (145)Trojan Battery Co., Sandersville, GA (50)HON Co., Owensboro, KY (144)Aramark Sports & Entertainment, Deer Creek Resort, Mt. Sterling, OH (112)Phoenix Health Systems, Pittsburgh, PA (50)GE Oil & Gas Operations, Bethelehem, PA (81)Parsons, Pittsburgh, PA (90)Alliance One Inc., Trevose, PA (63)Richfield Hospitality, Charlottesville, VA (146)FreightCar America Inc., Roanoke, VA (33)Lockheed Martin, Fairfax, VA (65)Educational Credit Management Corp., Richmond, VA (60)Wells Fargo Mortgage, Kirkland, WA (60)Brandrud, Auburn, WA (104)Corhart Refractories, Buckhannon, WV (26)Care Wisconsin First, Madison, WI (77)Eppendorf Inc., Westbury, NY (44)Avant-Garde Optics LLC, Washington, NY (137)Matthews International Corp., Seneca Falls, NY (33)Tavern on the Green LP, NYC (405)Dominion Enterprises DBA Interco Print, Ontario, CA (31)Telecare Corp, Lemon Grove, CA (102)Duane Morris LLC, Carpinteria, CA (126)USS-Posco Industries, Pittsburg, CA (827)Bassett Furniture Industries Inc, Bassett, VA (45)Summit Holdings, Lakeland, FL (70)Frontier Oil Corp., Cheyenne, WY (28)NCH Healthcare, Naples, FL System (66)Freudenberg-NOK, Spencer, IA (65)Franciscan Skemp Healthcare, Lacrosse, WI (25)McCann Erickson, San Francisco, CA (40)Jeld-Wen, Bend, OR (31)Foley & Lardner LLC, Milwaukee, WI (39)Crothall Services Group, Valhalla, NY (235)Aramark, Huntsville, AL (163)Mueller Industries, Fulton, MS (37)Miller Brothers Mining, KY (85)Baker Hughes Inc., Houston, TX, (62)Hamilton Sundstrand, Hartford, CN (30)City of Loveland, CO (5.9%)Comcast, Wellesley, MA (64)Rensselaer County, NY (24)Midcoast Aviation, Cahokia, MO (150)TomoTherapy, Madison, WI (10%)Boston Globe, Boston, MA (unknown)Police Department Kansas City, MO (16)Clear One Health Plans, Bend, OR (25)Save – A – Pet, Greyslake, IL (40%)Microtune, Plano, TX (10%)Viking Range Corporation, Greenwood, MS (30)Current Media, San Francisco, CA (unknown)NH Department of Corrections (37)Bossier City, LA (88)Calumet City IL Schools (57)Lackawanna County, PA (30)Verizon, Newark, DE (66)Bistol Meyers Squibb, National (355 of Abilify sales force)MetLife, Lackawanna County PA (34)Stanley Furniture, Stanleytown, VA (unknown)North Providence, RI (35)Louisiana State Department of Education, Baton Rouge, LA (50)Yuba Community College, Clearlake, CA (56)Chelan County, WA (50)City of Kingston, NY (28)AOL, NY, NY (2,000)EBay, San Francisco, CA (several dozen)LCN Closers, Princeton, IL (47)NC Department of Health and Human Services, Raleigh, NC (thousands)City of Aurora, CO (50)Ohio State Prisons, Ohio (41)Osceola County, FL (40)University of Toledo Medical Center, Toledo, OH (50)Volvo Trucks North America, Dublin VA (50)Zillion TV, Sunnyvale, CA (1/3)Victor Valley College, Victorville, CA (28)DaySpring Inc, Siloam Springs, AR (53)CNN, Atlanta, GA (unknown)Source: Google, Twitter, AllPinkSlips.com, Telonu.com, TechCrunch.com, CoStar.com, Gawker, Screwedd.com
Readers – If you know of employers announcing significant layoff plans, or employers reducing large numbers of employees, please comment below to add to this list.
Trackback: http://www.recareered.blogspot.com/2009/10/whos-firing-layoffs-week-ending-10-16.html
Step by step…get moving on your successful career change
I'm sure you've heard all of the saying to get you started on something new. You put one foot in front of the other. One thought leads to the next. One action causes a result. One breath brings the next. And the journey has begun.
Where are you not moving forward or taking action? I'm sure you have any number of reasons why you've stalled, taken a time out; don't feel up to doing anything, etc. Some of this could be clinical, i.e. depression or anxiety and if so I encourage you to seek appropriate help and support. But it can also be environmental, fatigue, confusion, lack of clarity or you just don't feel like it. Oh, I acknowledge that these could be legitimate reasons for you to place your career and life on hold - short term. But then, how do you rev up that engine to get going again?
Step by step, inch by inch... It's no secret that the most successful people didn't have fame and fortune thrust upon them. Heck, even Paris Hilton has to "work" to gain and sustain her publicity! But what they all know is that it's one step, one foot, one thought will lead to the next. And that keeps them moving forward and taking action.
There are a number of ways that help you to get your motor runnin! But first things first...you must be or become crystal clear about what it is you want. Otherwise you'll take a step, get distracted by life (as we all do) and lose your energy around moving forward. Next, just decide on one step, one thought, and one action, no matter how small, that will keep you moving and build momentum. It could be talking with an expert, reading a book, doing a free consult with a coach, making a journal entry, getting quiet and visualizing your success, meditating or talking with a trusted friend over a beverage. Think of the rock that begins to roll downhill, once begun it's hard, if not impossible to stop.
You should keep track of each accomplishment so that you can look back at the evidence of your success. You can do this by keeping a journal. In it, write down your clear statements of what you want, capture all the ideas that come to you and make note of what you did and how it worked out. Once you have a record of your success, it becomes so much easier to repeat it. And your energy starts to surge with the pride of accomplishment. This is not to be taken lightly! Think back to your last successful undertaking. If you break it down and look at it in detail, you'll recognize that it began with a first step, no matter how big or how small.
As you approach your career and life transitions, it can be overwhelming to see the big picture - grand and bright and not know how to get there. By starting with one step, one foot one thought, you can make it look and feel as if it were like magic!
The Benefits of Career Change
Changing jobs is quite natural for many people nowadays. Specialists kept on switching companies looking for a better place to work at. But their functional responsibilities still remain the same. However, such rotation without the change of your occupation is not 100% useful. Psychological research has showed that a person will have more chances to succeed if he changes his vocation once 5 - 7 years. Thus he will acquire new knowledge and experience and he will learn how to deal with new unusual tasks.Even if you have created a dynamic plan for developing your career from a clerk to a senior manager in a particular company new responsibilities don't substitute old ones, but are just added to the existing duties. In other words, you don't change your activity - but the sphere of your responsibility becomes wider. In fact, a person keeps on working in the same professional area. However paradoxical it may be, but after a few years since submitting your sales resume you are more likely to lose your sales competence than to gain or improve it. You get tired of routine work; you fulfill your duties mechanically with no zest and enthusiasm. That is why psychologists suggest changing the content of the work not its place. Human resource managers still make the same mistake: they are looking for the applicants with at least a year - relevant experience. They don't consider retrained specialists or those who have no experience in the pertinent area. They don't take into account that inexperienced candidates have considerable advantages over the experts: they have no professional stamps/ clichés, they are ready to improve themselves, and they have sincere interest for the new job and others.Today more and more people are changing their specialty. Social psychology defines this phenomenon as professional reorientation. Mostly it applies to young people. Older people have less flexible thinking - their professional life is influenced by prevalent stereotypes and they have too high demands for themselves. People older 35 are afraid of taking risks. Even if his life-time dream was to become an executive of car manufacturing company, he won't set himself to writing a resume. The idea of cardinal retraining seems senseless and even careless to older people. Most of them can neither afford no do they want to spend their time and money for obtaining a second education. Two categories make an exception of this statement. They are housewives, who have adult children and now are free to take up their career. Another category is retired servicemen. Both groups come across a lot of objective and psychological difficulties. Psychologists admit that only few people with a specific temperament are capable of abrupt changing their professional life. The ability to take reasonable risk in your professional life - is the major factor of success. And on the contrary - fear of changes or failure inhibit your success. You will always have a well -paid job if you learn to regard studies and job changing as a natural component of your working life. A well - known American businessman, the author of several books on business psychology wrote: "It is not worth sticking to your primary vocation for being rewarded a golden watch when you are retired." Think, may be it is time for you to stop sending your teacher resume from one school to another and consider better choices.
Need a Meaningful Career Change?
Have many people dream of having more meaningful work? The average person spends over 65% of their life working. How many Americans wake up to job drudgery and the recurring thoughts, I wish I had more meaningful work, or I wish I could earn more. Downsizing, a slowing economy and rising costs are pervasive phenomena that affect us all. So the big question becomes, "What do I want to do for a living?" Searching for a new career can be tedious, filled with dead-end jobs, multi-level pyramids and get-rich-quick schemes.
If you’re looking for a meaningful change, or perhaps you would enjoy a career earning a good income while supporting your local community, check out www.schoolheart.com. SchoolHeart® is an innovative company providing a fresh fundraising approach to schools and nonprofit organizations. For those that would love to make a difference in people’s lives as they earn, there are management positions, as well as full or part-time careers are available nationwide.
SchoolHeart is part of the solution, providing much needed fundraising to school and nonprofit organizations, as well as helping tie together the overall community. SchoolHeart’s smart and fresh fundraising approach is free, easy and perpetual; three (3) things nonprofit administrators covet most.
Wouldn’t it be nice if we could just all volunteer, helping out the over 130 thousand schools and over 3 million nonprofit organizations in the U.S.? Although it would be very rewarding, for most people, volunteering will not pay the bills. SchoolHeart’s opportunity can provide a rewarding long-term career, as well as a way to help those in need. SchoolHeart seeks motivated individuals, able to focus on results and perform to professional standards. Applicants should be reliable, computer literate, enjoy working with people, along with a professional appearance.
The job recruit can expect professional business tools, freedom to work their own hours, solid residual income, personalized website, business cards, promotional materials, real-time reports, patent-pending technology and strong earning potential. This is a career you can feel good about while achieving recognition, prestige and goodwill.
You will be providing a FREE service to nonprofit organizations that need exactly what you offer, making it a soft sell. "Funding the Heart of America®" is more than just our company slogan; it is our primary focus. The schools and nonprofits win! The vendors and sponsors win! Nonprofit members win! The community wins! And you win as an Account Supervisor or Area Manager! Technology is moving fast. Can you afford to wait? This is your opportunity to capitalize on a first class business. To apply, email resume to myakos@schoolheart.com or fax to 810-885-5265. Include phone number and best times to call.
The Career Makeover: 7 Steps to Achieving Your Goals
Makeovers on television shows and in magazines are enticing for women the world over. Of course the reason they are so popular, is because the idea of getting a fresh start in life is a golden key we have all dreamt about at one time or another. No matter what their lives are like, everyone has something they wish could be different – their home, their body, their friends, and even their career. Career makeovers are not a new concept and if you think about it, making over your career will automatically set a chain reaction in motion that will affect all aspects of your life, particularly those that are unsatisfactory. If you’ve ever changed jobs or industries, worked with a recruiter, drafted a new resume or pursued additional education to increase your job prospects or opportunities, you’ve already taken steps to improve or “make over” your career.Here are some ideas which can take your career makeover to a whole new level!1. Look inside yourself. How do you perceive yourself? Are you confident? Do you like yourself? Are you proud of your accomplishments? What is your attitude to life, on working, on the value that you bring to your job? How do you feel about your career? Do you feel in control of your future? Working on your “inner self” is of critical importance when it comes to creating a career makeover. If your internal thoughts are not consistent with the actions that you need to take, you’ll continually feel a sense of disconnect. Others will feel it too. All change starts on the inside. If you need support in this area, consider counseling or coaching, whichever is most appropriate for your situation. Until the inner issues are resolved or healed, it can be very challenging to take the necessary steps that lead to a fulfilling career. 2. Get balanced. A key component of effectively managing your career starts with managing your time efficiently. Do you keep your work life separate from your home life? Do you take work home in the evenings or weekends? Do you talk about work ALL THE TIME? Do you take time to recharge your batteries so that you feel refreshed? This is probably one of the most difficult areas when it comes to career makeovers. It takes a lot of courage to “draw the line” when it comes to balancing your life. Many women feel that if they don’t give everything to their job, then they won’t have a job, yet, the opposite is actually true. If you’re working for a company which does not allow you to set boundaries around your time, you WILL burn out. Before this happens it is probably best that you start looking for a new position. It’s a difficult choice to make, but ultimately it’s up to you to set boundaries around what types of treatment you will accept from others – including your employer. If you can’t achieve work/life balance in your current job, you will never be able to give it your best, simply because you will not be at your best which in turn will affect your future career prospects. 3. Get your relationships in check. They say birds of a feather flock together. Are your friends dragging you down? ( I was told my friends were holding me back by a naturopath when I was in my early 20’s I was VERY angry with him and protective of my friends – but a year later when I had taken a grip of my life and moved on, I realized he had been completely right!) Is your network of friends and associates supportive of you and your goals, or are they constantly telling you that your dreams are too lofty? Do they drag you into their gossip or do they inspire you with thoughtful conversation? In essence your ambition can be affected by the people around you and because of this your personal and professional relationships will have a tremendous influence on your career success. Therefore, to get your relationships in check, evaluate your friendships and acquaintances. It might be time to start gently letting go of some of the relationships that aren’t serving you, which will allow you to fill the empty spaces with new friends who will support you. Make sure you’re forging relationships with the people who see your value, and surround yourself with mentors who are helpful in assisting you to move forward.4. Begin with a vision. Having an idea of where you want to go is one of the most important steps in your career makeover. Until you know where you want to be or what you want to have, it’s impossible to decide on the correct steps to get you there. How do you envision your ideal life? What type of job would make you happy? What brings you the most joy? What type of position would you like to see yourself working in 5 years time? Give yourself permission to think about what you really want, dare to dream a little. Remember what seems impossible today is only so because you haven’t had the opportunity to break the journey from here to there down into manageable chunks – now you are ready to start working on your career makeover.5. Be the change. Once you have a vision of what you think you might want. It’s now time to assess where you are now. What are your strengths and your weaknesses? What skills do you have? Which ones will you need in order to achieve your career vision? You need to know where you are now versus where you want to be in the future. The rest is about managing the “gap” in between. Here is where the career makeover really takes place and this is the secret to making it possible…6. Start at the end and work backwards. Imagine you have your dream job and are living your dream life. What was the final step you had to take to make this all possible, now what was the step before that? Work this process through until you arrive back at where you are today. Now you are aware of these steps, you know what you have to do to achieve your goals in manageable chunks. Your next course of action is to develop a plan for achieving these goals thereby giving each part of the process a timeline.7. Now hone your skills. One of the most obvious ways to create a career makeover is to work on your skills. Whether you go back to school to earn an advanced degree or take training classes here and there, anything that you can do to improve yourself can benefit your career. Learn more about your industry; attend conferences where you can keep abreast of the latest trends. Network with possible mentors. Buy books written by leaders in your field. Read industry periodicals and other materials that deep your knowledge. Check with your human resources department to find out what types of internal training opportunities are available. Take advantage of your company’s tuition reimbursement programs. Continuing your education is essential no matter how you do it. Studying will not be a chore. If you are doing work you love you will be passionate about absorbing as much information about your field as you can!And finally plan for the future. No matter who you are or whom you know, you career will have its ups and downs. These days it’s unrealistic to think you’ll have a job for life. You might be transferred, demoted, or get a new boss that you don’t enjoy. You could even lose your job because of a downturn in your industry. These are realities of work life today. To lessen the possibility of your becoming an economic statistic it’s always a good idea to have options. This means you need to think about your exit plan. What would you do if you wanted to leave, or lost your job for whatever reason? Even the people who are happy in their jobs today should have an exit strategy, so take my advice and start working on it now. Don’t wait until it’s too late and you’re in panic mode. In conclusion, always remember, no matter what career or life choices you make, ALL women need a strategic career plan. Your career makeover is ultimately your responsibility. You are the master of your life and it’s up to you to make a plan. Once you have a clear plan, take the steps that lead you to fulfilling your ultimate vision. One powerful way of helping you stay on track is by working with a coach who can help you make the transition more quickly. A good coach gives you support you need, helps you to stay focused and on track. With proper guidance, you will quickly find yourself achieving your career goals.
Creating Positive Career Changes
You and I are lucky. We live in a world rich in possibilities. We are able to select from an unlimited variety of occupations, and have the right to find happiness and personal fulfillment in our daily work.
The fact that you live in a free society gives you the privilege to decide your own fate. You have as much power in determining where you work as you do in selecting a spouse, a home, a car, or a pet. Your choice of jobs really depends on how much you want to shape your career, and how much effort you're willing to spend to make the necessary improvements in your life.
If you're considering a job change, it's likely related to three reasons :
1 - Personal - You want to change your relationships with others.
For example, you may have discovered that you're incompatible with the people in your company. Perhaps they have different interests than you; or they communicate differently or have different educational backgrounds.
2 - Professional - You've determined the need to advance your career
For example, you have found that you won't reach your professional or technical goals at your present company; or that your advancement is being blocked by someone who's more senior or more politically oriented; or that you are not getting the recognition you deserve; or that you and your company are growing in different directions; or that you are not being challenged technically; or you are not being given the skills you need to compete for employment in the future. Or you have simply lost interest in your assigned tasks.
3 - Situational - You are motivated by other circumstances that all contribute to your satisfaction in the workplace. Maybe you are commuting too far from home each day, you are too compartmentalized in your duties, you are forced to travel too much, you are working too many hours, or you are under too much stress. Maybe you want to relocate to another city, or stay where you are rather than be transferred?
Whatever your personal, professional, or situational reasons may be, you're motivated by the desire to improve your level of job satisfaction and make a positive change. You'd be surprised how many people are unclear about what they actually do for a living, and the way their jobs make them feel. In order to translate your wishes and needs into results, let's begin by evaluating your present position it's the first step to any job change.
For example, whenever I interview a candidate, the first thing I ask for is a complete narrative job description:
"So tell me, Bonnie", I begin, "What is it that you do at your present company?"
"Gee Dave, I thought I told you already. I'm a systems analyst."
"All right", I reply. "But would you please describe to me in detail the following two things:
1- What are your daily activities? That is, how do you spend your time during a typical day
2- What are the measurable results your company expects from these activities? In other words, how does your supervisor know when you're doing a good job?"
Often, I discover that people are hard pressed to come up with solid answers about the specific nature of their work. They're not exactly sure about their job responsibilities, and their lack of focus results in stress or counter-productivity. Many employers expect you know what they want and how that should be done, often without giving you feedback till after you were passed over for that promotion you felt was deserved. It is your job and part of being fulfilled in it for you and your employer is to be on the same page and meet or exceed expectations and goals you both set.
While a little bit of stress may is natural in any job, a steady diet of it can destroy your incentive to work and dramatically effect happiness in all phases of your life. When you count your work week combined with your average commute, most people work more than they sleep (or do anything else), so minimizing any stress in your life contributes to life's satisfaction. A recent study confirms this and indicates a direct correlation between a person's lack of task clarity and their level of job dissatisfaction. Knowing what you want is the crucial first step for getting what is most appropriate for you. Every compromise you make undermines your goal of vocational satisfaction and personal achievement. Asking for what you want shows you are focused, thoughtful, and confident about your skills, goals, and abilities. Proactively approaching your work this way will more often than not impress the people you want to (if they are the right people), and will pave the way to you finding satisfaction and an optimal match in the workplace.
Try this exercise:
On a sheet of paper, write a complete, current job description in which you list your daily activities and their expected, measurable results. This exercise will not only help you clarify your own perception of your work, it'll be useful later on when you begin to construct a resume and communicate to others exactly what you've done and what you are looking for.
Once you've described all the facets of your job, the next step is to understand the relationship between what you do and the way you feel. I use the term 'values' as a descriptor of personal priorities, as a yardstick to help you:
* Understand what types of work-related activities you really enjoy;
* Determine which goals or accomplishments are important to you and give you a feeling of satisfaction; and
* Evaluate whether your personal priorities are in balance, or in harmony with your job situation. new position.
Although it's fairly simple to decipher which daily tasks you really enjoy, the task of scrutinizing your personal priorities can be tricky. That's because there are often factors unrelated to your job that can come into play.
To demonstrate this importance of values in our decision-making process, consider the following:
* A job-seeker can turn down a position because he was an amateur athlete and he didn't like the air quality where my client company was located.
* A candidate who was a long distance runner. He took a position largely because his new boss was also a runner, and would understand his need to take off work twice a year to run the New York City and Boston marathons.
* An engineer that took a job with a company that offered him a demotion, since being highly visible within his current employer's department made him feel uncomfortable.
The theme here is, we all have highly personal motivations which guide our career choices. It is important to prioritize and make these known.
Now that you know how to clearly define your values, the next step is to describe the changes you'd like to make in your new job. To further illustrate, listen to the way Pat, Craig, and Neil talk about their respective situations, and how they take their values into consideration:
Pat:
"I want to have more autonomy where I work. That would mean having a flexible schedule, working different hours each day at my discretion, without having to ask permission. I'd be able to leave early on Thursdays to take my daughter to her acting class, and in return, I'd be willing to spend several hours working at home during the evening and on weekends. With my personal computer, I'd have access by modem to the database in my department, and I'd be able to make a significant contribution to the workload, any time, day or night. Most importantly, I'd be evaluated solely on my performance, not by the number of hours I've punched on a clock."
Craig:
"I'd prefer to work closer to my home. I didn't think the amount of time I spent commuting was very important when I joined the company two years ago, but now it really wears on me to sit for an hour a day in traffic. It's not only nerve-wracking to deal with all the crazy people on the freeway; I could be using the commuting time to be with my family. The reduction of stress would improve my attitude, and give me a higher quality of life. If I could find a job similar to what I have now within a few minutes of home, that would make me happy."
Neil: "I'm interested in my own career advancement. If I stay at this company too much longer, I'll work myself into a corner technically and never achieve my potential. The people here are nice, but I don't share their 'lifer' mentality. Look at Ed, my boss. He's been here 17 years, and although he's a really solid engineer, he's not familiar with any of the latest advancements in technology. He'd have a hard time finding another job in this market, and it makes me worried, knowing I might someday be in his situation. Besides, I won't be promoted until Ed retires. So I'd better leave soon, while I'm still attractive to other companies. That would give me the salary increase I deserve and the opportunity to learn new skills with people who are upwardly mobile and aggressive like myself."
Someone recently asked me whether I helped people get "better" jobs or jobs that made them happier. My answer was that the two were one in the same. As any advocate of goal-setting will tell you, the more specifically you're able to communicate what you're looking for, the faster and more efficiently you'll be able to get what you want and need.
Another consideration is, if you were to look at your career from a purely strategic point of view, I could give you four poignant reasons why it makes sense to change jobs within the same or similar industry three times during your first ten years of employment:
1 - Changing jobs gives you a broader base of experience:
After about three years, you've learned most of what you're going to know about how to do your job. Therefore, over a ten year period, you gain more experience from "three times 90 percent" than "one times 100 percent."
2 - A more varied background creates a greater demand for your skills:
Depth of experience means you're more valuable to a larger number of employers. You're not only familiar with your current company's product, service, procedures, quality programs, inventory system, and so forth; you bring with you the expertise you've gained from your prior employment with other companies.
3 - A job change results in an accelerated promotion cycle:
With a change you can jump, for example, from project engineer to senior project engineer; or national sales manager to vice president of sales and marketing.
4 - More responsibility leads to greater earning power :
A promotion is usually accompanied by a salary increase. And since you're being promoted faster, your salary grows at a quicker pace, sort of like compounding the interest you'd earn on a certificate of deposit.
While there's no denying the strategic virtues of selective job changing for the purpose of career leverage, you want to make sure the path you take will lead you where you really want to go. There is ultimately little reason to make a job change for more money if the resulting frustrations make you unhappy to the point of distraction. Not long ago, I placed a project engineer with a company that offered him a $47,000 a year job. He later confided to me that the same day he agreed to go to work for my client, he'd turned down an offer of $83,200 with rival company. The reason? The higher offer was a consulting position with an aerospace company in Detroit -- a job that would have taken him down a road he felt was a dead end.
The "best" job is one in which your values are being satisfied most effectively. If career growth and advancement are your primary goals, and they're represented by how much you earn, then the job that pays the most money is often the "better" job. Your responsibility when contemplating a change is to evaluate what's most important to you. Whether you focus on a single aspect of your job (like Pat, Craig, and Neil did), or on the overall nature of the job you'd like to improve, the more clearly you connect your values with your work, the greater the potential for job satisfaction.
Career Connections Coaching – Best Way To Make A Successful Career Change
The idea of looking for a new job and switching careers can be both exciting and scary at the same time. A lot of people in the workplace are unhappy with their present jobs and are yearning for a better one, but have no idea what to do with the problem. This is extremely stressful for a worker and more often than not, this affects your personal life. if you want change, then you might want to try consulting a career connections coach. Career connections coachers are professionals equipped with the training that can help you change and better your life at work and if the situation calls for it, a new career.
We live in a fast paced world. Everyday new ideas and technologies are introduced at the workplace, and it’s imperative that we roll and try to cope with these changes. In the workforce there are a lot of changes happening. Each day someone new is hired, someone that could be better than you are and might even replace you. this happens a lot, everyday in fact if looked at closely. Career connections coaches help you navigate through all these challenges. With their help, you can learn and acquire the necessary skills to adapt with the changing times.
What does a career coach do? First s/he will help you fill out forms seeking information from everything about you. this includes your personal life, interests, your relationships in the job and outside your job, as the two are always connected with each other. This forms will help the coach evaluate you and your lifestyle. With a career coach you learn how and what you’ll probably need for a career makeover and even a new life. they will coach you on how to trust and believe in yourself, and help you gain confidence in your abilities and skills.
Do you think you can be a career coach too? Do you want to help others cope with the changing times? If you do, then a specialist in career connections can help you become one. Coaches will work with you on each step, and through evaluations, will figure out and design training for you, and how you can get them. Helping others to be happy is a rewarding job, especially so when you were at the side of this person all the way. This is why we have career connections coaches. You benefit from both receiving and giving ends.
A lot of companies now offer career connections coaching for their employees. If in doubt, you can always call the company or a local job service agency to contact one. Many companies are found online now too, so the internet can be of great help to you. through the internet, you can now check what are the services companies offer and which ones interest you. Another bonus is that you can apply and submit your resumes online, making it easier for workers to change careers. Never has switching careers and finding jobs been easier than at the moment.
