Strategies for Career Success

Helping professionals, managers, and executives move up, move forward, or move on!

Pathways Career Success Strategies www.pathwayscareer.com

 Strategies for Career Success - Early-January 2010


in this issue

  • Time for a Career Change?

  • Quote

  • Special Offer

Joan's Photo

Joan Runnheim Olson is the expert and visionary behind Strategies for Career Success, a no-cost bi-weekly e-newsletter for professionals, managers, and executives. Each issue delivers simple strategies you can use right away to create the career of your dreams. Go to http://www.pathwayscareer.com to learn more.

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Editor's Note

Happy New Year!

Welcome to the Early-January issue of Strategies for Career Success.  It's hard to believe it's already a new year! Where did 2009 go? Did you accomplish what you set out to last year? What are your goals for 2010? Remember, you're much more likely to achieve your goals if they're written down.

 

This issue of Strategies for Career Success includes an article on career change. Whether you've been laid-off or just simply are ready for a change, this article can help. 

 

Don't miss our January special offer of one-free coaching session with the purchase of the Career Change Accelerator Program. Read below for more information.

 

Become a fan of Pathways Career Success Strategies on Facebook and receive additional career and leadership tips.

 

Follow me on Twitter and receive "Tweets" on    Twitter-exclusive offers with discounts on career coaching and résumé services. These special offers won't be advertised anywhere else and will be available to my Twitter followers only. 

 

Check out my blog for more career and leadership tips. You can follow me and receive updates as they are published.
 
 

Enjoy!

 

Joan Runnheim Olson  

Certified Career & Leadership Coach 

 


Time for a Career Change?

By Joan Runnheim Olson

Are you bored with your career? Or were you recently down-sized and find yourself contemplating a career change?  Reports indicate that on average, individuals change careers five or six times during their working life. While unemployment rates are at an all-time high, many folks are using this time to re-invent themselves. 

Try Something New 

You don’t need to stay in the same career field in which you started out. While that was common and expected years ago, it’s not anymore. Some career changers realize they made a bad choice when they first chose a career. Others may now want a job with meaning, one that offers more challenge, or one in which they are passionate. And for others, their career is no longer available. 

What you enjoyed doing when you were twenty-five years old, may not be appealing at forty. With each job you gain valuable skills that you can transfer from one job to another and one career to another. Let’s say you were most recently in retail management, but are now interested in a supervisory position in a customer service department of an insurance company. The type of business is different, but the basic set of skills is the same, i.e., supervising, training, customer service, etc. 

What Are You Good At? 

Keep in mind your interests, skills, work values, personality style, lifestyle, and financial needs when choosing a new career. It’s like putting together the pieces of a puzzle- with each piece being integral to ensure career satisfaction. 

Select a career that interests you and one in which you can use the skills you enjoy. Another important consideration is choosing a career that is in alignment with your work values. For example, let’s say you value having your evenings and weekends free. With this knowledge, you’ll realize that retail management would probably not be a good match for you. 

Consider taking a personality assessment to identify your natural preferences. For a no-cost, personality quiz go to:  http://resources.monster.com/tools/quizzes/perfectcareer. To learn more about your personality type, check out Do What You Are : Discover the Perfect Career for You Through the Secrets of Personality Type by Paul D. Tieger. The more your career is aligned with your values, the greater your level of career satisfaction. 

Other considerations include your lifestyle and financial needs. What type of lifestyle do you want to live and how much money is required to achieve and maintain that lifestyle? You’ll want to keep this in mind when exploring your options. 

Try-Out New Skills 

A great way to learn new skills and “try-out” a new career is through volunteering. Perhaps you would like to gain some skills in the fundraising arena, consider volunteering on an election campaign. Maybe you would like to explore a career as a trainer, offer to teach a workshop at a non-profit agency.  

Another very effective way to try out a new career is through an internship, paid or unpaid. One example of a successful internship experience is an individual in restaurant management who transitioned into computer networking. He had completed some basic hardware and software computer classes and then attended a job fair where he submitted his resume. By demonstrating an interest and some basic computer networking skills, he landed a paid internship. 

In closing, whether you're in a career that's not a good fit anymore, you've been laid off, or you're in an industry that is dying, use the New Year as a springboard for identifying other career options.

Click here for archives.

Quote

"Let yourself be silently drawn by the stronger pull of what you really love."

- Rumi


Special Offer

Ready for a Career Change? For the month of January, I am offering a free one-hour coaching session with the purchase of the Career Change Accelerator Program. To learn more about this program, click here.

Schedule your first session today! Call Joan Runnheim Olson, Certified Career & Leadership Coach, Pathways Career Success Strategies, at 715-808-0344 or email joan@pathwayscareer.com or go to www.pathwayscareer.com. 

Contact Us

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To contact us:
Joan Runnheim Olson

Pathways Career Success Strategies

joan@pathwayscareer.com

Hudson, WI 54016

(715) 808-0344


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