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Articles on Jobseekers Advice If you would like to submit an article to Jobseekers Advice, then please feel free to contact us. We are always looking for a wide range of articles dealing with career advice, CV advice, interview advice, working abroad, employment issues, education and training and other recruitment or careers related topics. The articles can be the result of professional experience or personal insight - we are looking to offer all points of view.
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CAREER PLANNING STARTS WITH
SELF-ASSESSMENT
Career Advice for New Graduates and Entry-level Job Seekers One
of the biggest mistakes that individuals make in their careers is to go
aimlessly through school or work in an entry-level position with no clear
direction (goals). They wait until the homestretch — graduation, layoff,
or departure — before taking a stab at other opportunities.
Finding a well-paying job or locating opportunities for advancement
shouldn’t be treated as an afterthought, rather one that has been planned
and prepared for
months or years.
Preparation, preparation, and more preparation! Imagine signing up for a
marathon and waiting until the day prior to begin preparing for the race.
Obviously, you’re not ready because of lack of training, you didn’t seek
the assistance of a coach or mentor, and you didn’t assess the resources
you would need on the day of the race.
Without proper preparation, what are your chances of completing the race? Like
any serious step you’ll take in life, you must first determine the number
of baby steps needed to get from one spot to the next. In other words,
where are you headed and how will you get there?
Outline every obstacle or challenge that will hinder your progress of
taking these steps. Each
small step (short-term goal) will take you closer to satisfying the big
steps, known as
long-term career goals.
First, take a good look at the types of positions you’ve held to date
along with your college major. Ask yourself, do I like where I’m at and
where do I see myself in 5 years? Don’t be ashamed if you’re not sure.
Visit your favorite job bank, type in keywords for your intended career
field, and examine those positions to determine if any meet your
satisfaction.
Second, write down job and career goals (preferably 6 months before
graduating or the start of your intended job search). Job goals pertain to
the position you currently hold now, whereas, career goals are the “big
picture” (e.g. career change in less than two years or targeting a
six-figure salary).
Research 2 or 3 positions that you would love to obtain TODAY along with
those
you’re striving for in a couple of years.
Third, prepare yourself, your credentials, and your résumé based on your
predetermined career opportunities and goals. Prepare to go back to
college, join business groups, serve on committees, or alter your résumé
to encompass all (or any) of these. In a
career journal, make notations of the positions that interest you along
with the skills required for each. Add other entries pertaining to
outstanding credentials, and miscellaneous obstacles in the order that’ll
need to be completed, with resolutions and proposed dates of completion. The
object is to not stand still. Navigate your future by performing a
self-assessment that will get you from a to z in your career. Jay Block
says it best in the book, The End of the Job
Search, Mastering the Art of Career Design: “Defining your career
aspirations is an essential step in the process of transforming abstract
thoughts into tangible realities.
Everything ever accomplished by man or woman first started as a thought.”
I challenge you to assess yourself and create a master plan … it’s ONLY
your career!
BIO
Written by Teena Rose, a certified and published resume writer with Resume
to Referral (
http://www.resumebycprw.com ) and author to "Résumé Designs &
Job-search Strategies for College Grads" (published by CareerEpublications)
— forecasted to release
September 2003.
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