How to Choose Your Ideal Career
by: Skye Thomas
They say that most people do complete and total career changes at least once
often twice in their lifetimes. Very few people chose the ideal perfect career
for themselves when they're in high school and blissfully happily work those same
jobs for the rest of their lives. With the way that technology and everything
else changes so fast, I think it's ridiculous to expect to stay in one job from
the time you leave school until you retire. Even staying in the same company can
be a huge challenge. So how will you pick your first career? Your next major career
change?
The first thing I want you to look at is what kinds of things do you enjoy doing
and what you are naturally good at. Imagine that you just won the lottery and
you will never have to work again for another day of your life. How would you
spend your time? After the shopping sprees and traveling and such grows old, you're
going to have to fill your days up doing something so that you aren't bored out
of your mind. What would you do? What would consume your attention if you could
freely bury yourself in it? Is there a way to make a living at that now? Is there
a way to incorporate some of that into your current career? Could you begin doing
it now as a hobby and grow it into a second income and eventually quit your 'real
job' to play full time at your new hobby/career?
You obviously have to look at practicality issues. Truth be known my very favorite
thing to do is drive convertibles and suntan at the beach. That's not likely going
to ever become a career and it sure as heck isn't going to pay my bills! You have
to look at what you like to do and take a realistic look at whether the market
is ever going to pay you an income for doing it. Just because you love doing something
doesn't mean that the world is going to love giving you money for doing it. There
are plenty of musicians and artists out there who can't earn enough to support
themselves. It takes more then just a love of your work. Pick a number of different
things that you love and narrow the list down by deciding which ones would realistically
finance you at the level that you require.
Another thing to consider, especially when you're choosing your first job is
how much education or special training is required. How many kids think that because
they love to play basketball that they'll be the next Michael Jordan? How many
put in the kind of work and practice that he did? If you want to be a doctor,
then you better seriously contemplate the years of college and the extremely high
cost of going to medical school. Down the road, a lot of the experience you get
in one career can be transferred to your next career. Customer service skills
that you learn while waiting tables will still serve you later when you're an
entrepreneur. If you have a lot of the skills from previous work experience, but
not all of them, then you have to figure out how to finance going to night school
or whatever else you need to do to change careers. Additional education and skills
shouldn't stop you from changing to a great job that you know you'll love, but
you do need to take it into serious consideration while making the choice.
Many of the community colleges have these cool placement tests that tell you
what kinds of work you'd be happy doing. They ask you a bunch of multiple choice
questions like if you'd rather work indoors or outside. Do you want to travel
as part of your career or stay home? How much weight are you willing to lift?
How introverted or extroverted are you? How much money do you want to make? After
you answer these questions and a bunch more, the computer system spits out a list
of careers that you would be suited to. Keep in mind that what interested you
at twenty isn't likely to be the same as what interests you at forty. I would
think that you could do an online search and find some of those tests online.
These will give you some ideas you may have never considered. I remember taking
one when I was in my early twenties and I ranked extremely high at "Clergy." I
laughed and thought that was the stupidest thing I'd ever heard of. I wanted to
be a motivational speaker and it took me a couple of days before I realized that
it's a very similar job description. Whether I'm telling you about God or I'm
telling you how to pull yourself up by your bootstraps, it's the same skills and
many of the same daily tasks. I'm preaching a different topic, but I'm still up
on my soapbox telling you what to do and telling you how to live, aren't I? So
be open minded to what the test results show.
So, start out by brainstorming ideas of things that you would love to do if money
was not an issue. Then add to it the results of one of those placement tests.
Take the ideas from those two exercises and start looking at the practicalities
of marketability and how much education and training are necessary. If you can
find a way to do what you love and make a living at it, then you've got the key
ingredients to creating a life of abundance and prosperity that the rest of the
world only dreams of. You don't have to stay with something just because you used
to love it and now you make a lot of money doing it. If you are bored and ready
for something new, then start dreaming and planning your next adventure.
Copyright 2004, Skye Thomas, Tomorrow's Edge
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About The Author
Skye Thomas is the CEO of Tomorrow's Edge, an Internet leader in inspiring leaps
of faith. She became a writer in 1999 after twenty years of studying spirituality,
metaphysics, astrology, personal growth, motivation, soulmates, and parenting.
Her books, articles, and astrological forecasts have inspired people of all ages
and faiths to recommit themselves to the pursuit of happiness. To read more of
her articles and to sign up to receive her free weekly newsletter, go to www.TomorrowsEdge.net. To download free previews of her books, go to www.SkyeThomas.com.
Skye@TomorrowsEdge.net
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