Not sure what career direction?

Virtually no one finds this easy. We stay with the familiar, fearing the unknown. The real problem is how we make decisions about the unkown - staying inside our own heads, navel gazing. What is your decision making style? Try the quiz on this subject.

  • It's easier to know what jobs you like doing than what you might like about work you've never experienced.
  • Nor can you know if you like food you haven't tasted.
  • You can't make such decisions in your head.
  • As with strange food, you need to try new things first.
  • But you can't sample new jobs like you can sample new foods.
  • So how can you decide what new career to pursue?
    • By getting as much of a taste of the new short of trying it.
    • Ask people about their jobs - ones that interest you.
    • What are the upsides and downsides about it?
    • What types of people succeed in such roles
    • What do they like, dislike about it?
    • What's it like to work in their organization, context, culture?
    • Can you visualize yourself in their shoes?
    • It's like doing market research.
    • Don't restrict yourself to just one career avenue - explore at least 2 options. Your decision will feel more solid if you don't close down on the first option you explore.
  • This process can be a revelation if you really apply it.
  • People using this decision making approach get enough insight into something new to know they could do it and would like it.
  • Those who have made major career changes know that, having got through them in the past, they can do so again.
  • If you haven't made a major career change, the decision to jump will still feel scary. You won't be fully sure until you're there.
  • Can you convince yourself that, even if it doesn't work out, you will have gained some valuable experience to take to something else?
  • Can you see this as a positive step rather than failure?
  • You will have learned how to survive a major change and gained some valuable strengths for future changes.
  • Any decision to step into the unknown combines gaining some prior vicarious experience of it and a leap of faith.
  • Your leap of faith is based on your self belief that you can emerge from the change stronger no matter how it works out.

Opportunites closer to home

  • Don't resign simply out of career frustration.
  • Feeling powerless is frustrating and causes many to leave.
  • But if you think like an entrepreneur, you have a lot of internal customers who know you on your doorstep.
  • Instead of waiting for someone to tap you on the shoulder, talk to your internal customers about likely changes in their areas.
  • Brainstorming with them might uncover a new role for you that you would not have thought of on your own.

 

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