FINDING CAREER DIRECTION
Discover
Yourself and Your Purpose
How long has it been since you asked yourself what you want
to be when you grow up?
If you haven't considered the idea since high school, then you may have settled into a job that is not fulfilling your professional aspirations, or your purpose.
Each of us has particular talents that, when expressed or exercised, make the world a better place. Most likely you enjoy doing these things, and you find that people respond well to you when you do them. Perhaps they're things you gravitate towards during out-of-hours activities, and that people respect you for.
When you develop these talents as far as you can, you can make your greatest possible contribution to the world, and enjoy personal and professional satisfaction that goes along with this.
If you haven't considered the idea since high school, then you may have settled into a job that is not fulfilling your professional aspirations, or your purpose.
Each of us has particular talents that, when expressed or exercised, make the world a better place. Most likely you enjoy doing these things, and you find that people respond well to you when you do them. Perhaps they're things you gravitate towards during out-of-hours activities, and that people respect you for.
When you develop these talents as far as you can, you can make your greatest possible contribution to the world, and enjoy personal and professional satisfaction that goes along with this.
Your Career
Direction Journey
The process of uncovering what you are meant to do, that is
finding career direction, is a journey. It starts with discovering the
essential "you": the person who truly resides behind the facades,
defenses, and stresses of everyday life.
Once unmasked, your journey continues with specific career
exploration and identification of a career that allows you to make good use of
your talents. And it moves on with a focused job or career move, in which you
identify the jobs you want and put yourself in the best possible position to
get them.
In fact, this
journey never really ends because work itself is all about
Change,
Growth,
Development,
&
Reinvention.
By taking a talent-based approach to your career search right from the start, you keep yourself heading toward the right career even when the actual direction shifts over time. This approach consists of sequentially answering three questions:
By taking a talent-based approach to your career search right from the start, you keep yourself heading toward the right career even when the actual direction shifts over time. This approach consists of sequentially answering three questions:
1. Who Am I?
2. What Do I Want to
Do?
3. How Do I Get
Hired?
1. Discovering
Who You Really Are
The first question to answer is "Who am I?"
We'll take two approaches to answering this - firstly asking
you to explore your talents, and secondly using psychometric tests to explore
your preferences.
Exploring Your
Talents
First of all, consider your
answers to the following questions:
·When have you been most
committed, passionate and enthusiastic?
·When have you been most
creative?
·When have you been most sure
of yourself and your decisions?
·What do you consider to be
your greatest accomplishment?
·When have other people
considered you to be most successful?
·When have you enjoyed your
work most?
·What talents were you relying
on, and using, in these situations?
·For what would you take a very
strong stand?
·What about the world puzzles
or disturbs you that you could make an impact on?
·What jobs do you like to do at
work when you have a choice?
·What activities are you drawn
towards out of work?
·If money were no concern, what
would you be doing?
Brainstorm each of these questions, and
then use your answers to identify the top three talents that you most use when
you're successful. Rank these in order.
Tip:
If you're having problems choosing,
use a technique like
paired comparison
analysis to rank things in order.
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Personality Inventories
Next, we'll look at using personality
inventories as a way of looking at your preferred way of working relative to
other people.
With personality testing you learn what you have in common with other people. You also discover potential points of friction with people of other personality types. While no personality type is good or bad, it does help you discover what motivates and energizes you. This in turn empowers you to seek those elements in the work you choose to do, and avoid the things that frustrate and demotivate you.
As you explore your personality you come to realize that who you are is really determined by the choices you make. You choose to react one way over another, or to prefer one thing to another. You can take this self-awareness one step further by examining why you make the choices you do. In psychological terms,
With personality testing you learn what you have in common with other people. You also discover potential points of friction with people of other personality types. While no personality type is good or bad, it does help you discover what motivates and energizes you. This in turn empowers you to seek those elements in the work you choose to do, and avoid the things that frustrate and demotivate you.
As you explore your personality you come to realize that who you are is really determined by the choices you make. You choose to react one way over another, or to prefer one thing to another. You can take this self-awareness one step further by examining why you make the choices you do. In psychological terms,
what is your payoff for making
the choices you make?
When you know the "why"
When you know the "why"
it is easier to see how you can become
fulfilled through the work you do.
Write a "Who I Am" Statement
Now draw this together into a simple written statement of who
you are. This is an important step toward self-discovery and defining your
purpose. Use it to answer the following questions:
·What your talents and
strengths are.
·The talents you achieve most
with.
·The activities you get most
satisfaction from.
·The type of activity the
psychometrics you've completed guide you towards.
Tip:
When you're doing this, be careful
not just to look back nostalgically at simple jobs
where you performed well - after all,
many different people could perform well in these
situations, and
this gives you little information.
Focus instead on more difficult areas where you made a positive difference, and where others didn't. |
2. Finding Out What You Want to Do
Now that you know who you are, the next stage is to think
about what you want to do.
For your life to be balanced and fulfilled, your career must be aligned with who you are: Otherwise you'll be unhappy with work, and you'll probably underachieve. After all, ill-fitting jobs demand different talents from the ones that you have.
For your life to be balanced and fulfilled, your career must be aligned with who you are: Otherwise you'll be unhappy with work, and you'll probably underachieve. After all, ill-fitting jobs demand different talents from the ones that you have.
If you try to
pursue a career path that is at odds with
Your values,
Your beliefs, and
Your way of seeing
the world,
then
You'll struggle
constantly
and
Be under a great
deal of stress and pressure.
The starting point is to do some brainstorming on the jobs that you think would suit who you are. We'll then confirm this with some different psychometric tests, and then extend this list with some more brainstorming.
You then need to spend some time researching the top careers you've identified.
The starting point is to do some brainstorming on the jobs that you think would suit who you are. We'll then confirm this with some different psychometric tests, and then extend this list with some more brainstorming.
You then need to spend some time researching the top careers you've identified.
i. Exploring the Options You Know About
Starting with
your "Who I Am" statement, start thinking about all of the jobs you
can see that would suit you someone with the talents and interests in
that statement (by depersonalizing it in this way, you help to avoid
"being too close to the issue.")
Starting here is particularly important if you're already established in a career: It's important to capitalize where you can on the experience and contacts you've already built up, compared with ditching everything and starting completely afresh (while this sounds glamorous and enticing, it puts you in the position of competing equally with other career starters, who may be much younger than you. On the other hand,
Starting here is particularly important if you're already established in a career: It's important to capitalize where you can on the experience and contacts you've already built up, compared with ditching everything and starting completely afresh (while this sounds glamorous and enticing, it puts you in the position of competing equally with other career starters, who may be much younger than you. On the other hand,
if you're profoundly unhappy with
your company,
industry
and
profession,
a radical career change may be the best thing...)
So start by asking yourself if your current role can be adapted to suit you much better; if there are other roles within your existing company that would be worth trying; or whether similar roles in other organizations might be more rewarding.
Once you've done this, extend out and brainstorm the other options available.
So start by asking yourself if your current role can be adapted to suit you much better; if there are other roles within your existing company that would be worth trying; or whether similar roles in other organizations might be more rewarding.
Once you've done this, extend out and brainstorm the other options available.
ii. Using Career Tests
The
next stage is to use online career tests to explore options that you might have
missed.
Useful ones are:
Useful ones are:
Free, but limited career
selection advice:
Chargeable (but inexpensive, and
with good selections of possible careers):
iii. Thinking Further
The unavoidable flaw with these career
tests is that they're based on backward-looking data, and can only cope with
the major career types. Because of this, they can't recommend new careers, nor
do they know about less well-known careers.
Using the test results as a starting point, do some brainstorming to see if there are new technology careers which demand similar personality types, or if there are more obscure careers that may also be open.
Using the test results as a starting point, do some brainstorming to see if there are new technology careers which demand similar personality types, or if there are more obscure careers that may also be open.
iv. Pulling This Together.
You'll now have identifies a wide range of
possible careers open to you. Now's the time to cut these down and prioritize
them. We're not asking you to choose one now, but to cut down to your top 5 or
6 choices (the reason being that when you start researching these careers, some
of them may turn out to be quite bad!)
Again, if you're having trouble prioritizing, use paired comparison analysis to rank your choices.
Again, if you're having trouble prioritizing, use paired comparison analysis to rank your choices.
v. Perform Career Research
Armed with a solid understanding of how
you can participate in fulfilling work, you now need to research the various
options you have to make money doing so. Career research is not something many
people relish, but it is necessary in order to eliminate choices that seem to
be great fits on the surface but really won't align with your mission and
purpose.
Yes, this is quite tedious. But think about the consequences of getting things wrong! Surely it's worth spending time exploring your options, rather than a lifetime kicking yourself for making a bad choice!
Methods for researching careers include:
Yes, this is quite tedious. But think about the consequences of getting things wrong! Surely it's worth spending time exploring your options, rather than a lifetime kicking yourself for making a bad choice!
Methods for researching careers include:
·Researching the career using
sites like Acinet.org, so that you can understand industry
trends, job pay levels, qualifications needed, job availability, etc.
·Conducting your own PEST Analysis to
confirm your own view of likely career trends.
·Reading industry/career
magazines and get a sense of how "happy" the industry is, who the
major players in it are, and what the issues and problems within it are. Also,
looking at job vacancies to see if the career is in demand.
·Understanding what talents and
personalities make people successful in the career, and mapping these back
against your own talents and personality.
·Attending professional and
trade shows.
·Participating in job fairs;
·Visiting company websites, and
keep an eye on how companies are talked about in the press.
·Understanding where
organizations are based, and deciding if you're prepared to travel to
interviews, and perhaps to move.
·Volunteering.
·Working part time and/or
seasonally in the industry.
Tip:
Be careful when using career trends to identify career possibilities:
The desire to pursue an up and coming career may
overshadow your mission and purpose.
This will only lead to dissatisfaction down the road.
Also be aware that there's a natural desire from people within an industry to inflate its prospects
Take official figures with a pinch of salt!
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3. Answering "How do I Get
Hired?"
In this last phase you answer, "What am I going to do to
get hired?"
With your "Who I Am" statement and your research as your compass, now you need to actually map your progress.
With your "Who I Am" statement and your research as your compass, now you need to actually map your progress.
Many people tend to move from their purpose right into job
search mode. This is a mistake because unless you have a plan, it is far too
easy to get derailed by a lucrative job offer, an opening that Uncle Vinny has,
a job that sounds really glamorous, or a whole host of other distractions.
Develop your plan first and you're more likely to get where
you want to go, faster.
·Start by writing down the
career you want. What is your long-term vision for yourself in terms of your
career?
·Write down the steps you need
to take or the things you need to accomplish, in order to get there. What
qualifications should you get? What experience should you build? Which
organization will give you the best start?
·For each of these steps create
a detailed implementation plan.
·
These are your short term goals.
·
Be sure to express as SMART objectives.
·Go back and identify contingency
plans
·
Do a "what if" analysis on your goals
"If you don't get accepted to grad school this year, what will you
do?"
Tip 1:
The more contingency plans you have the more likely you will be able to survive the inevitable setbacks.
You will also have
much more confidence in yourself despite the bumps in the road.
Tip 2: Recognize that the more opportunities you have, the better the job that you'll be able to choose.
Concentrate on
creating as many opportunities as possible!
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Now you are free to pursue your dream career with confidence.
There are certainly no guarantees but with the right amount of planning and a
sufficient dose of reality, the career that you are meant for will materialize.
Signs a career direction
evaluation may be in order:
·Your
job lacks challenge and excitement for you.
·You
are feeling unappreciated.
·Your
promotional and/or development opportunities are limited.
·You
are no longer having fun.
·Learning
is replaced with routine.
·You
sense that your skills and talents are being wasted.
·You
are suffering from stress or depression.
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Key Points
Finding career direction is a process. The more effort you
put into the planning stages the better your results. Uncovering your true self
and your purpose is heavy, emotional work and you may have to go through this
process a few times in the span of your working life. The effort however, is
certainly worth it when you end up with a clear sense of the direction your
career should be taking.
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