Monday, June 15, 2020
3 Reasons You Cant Make a Career Move
3 Reasons You Canât Make a Career Move Youâre not alone if you started 2014 with a resolution to find a different job, and youâre still in the same position you were back in January. Even when we drive to work with dread, when we grimace at the sight of another project hitting our e-mail inbox, when our spouse stops asking about our day because itâs a given that the answer will be a rantâ"somehow we stay put. What is that force that keeps us stuck? The bad news is that it stems from more than one source. The good news is that you can remedy each issue with some simple steps. Problem: Paralysis of Analysis When people come to me for career coaching, theyâre exhausted. Theyâve been on the gerbil wheel in their brain for so long, they donât know how to begin to identify whatâs next for them. Do they go back to school? Do they set up automatic alerts on Indeed? Do they apply for an internal promotion? The truth is, most people have flirted with those ideas, perhaps even made a phone call or submitted a resume, but it usually stops there. The variables that impact our careers (income, career progression, location, family timeâ"thereâs not enough space to capture everything!) are so numerous that people may hit on something they really want, but then they spiral into overwhelm. One of my favorite teachers during my coaching training said, âYour mind is like a dangerous neighborhood. Donât go in there alone.â Itâs so easy to get lost wading through this topic. Pull on one thread, and the entire tapestry can unravel. Solution: Make a list of the 6 criteria your next job must haveâ"and get specific. If itâs money, know exactly the amount you have to hit. If itâs location, list where you will live (within 10 miles of Charlotte, Virginiaâs city limits). Six is the magic number to hit for this list. If youâre over that number, you eliminate options. If youâre under, youâre not focused. Precision wins. âSupportive bossâ isnât the same as âBoss who sends me links to professional development opportunities.â Bonus Tip: Flag one of your 6 criteria as your Trump Card. Whatâs the one variable that will domino your days into ones that make you smile when you get out of bedâ"or if itâs not present, will tip you into checking Facebook 391 times a day? Problem: Your Research Isnât Research; Itâs Impressions âI canât work for that company; they hire only contractors?â Really? How do you know? Be wary of making blanket assumptions like this one and ask yourself about the reliability of your intel? How many data points do you have? Is that an impressionâ"or is it based on a conversation with someone who works there now (not 10 years ago)? Most of my clients have firm ideas about companies and jobs they covet, but (especially if theyâre looking to make an industry change or shift into a new line of service delivery) those ideas have no roots. Theyâre based on hearsay, which usually isnât admissible in court because itâs like any rumor: most likely exaggerated. Wouldnât you rather have the facts from a reliable source before you eliminate a possibility? Solution: Pick 4 target jobs. Donât make them your ultimate choice (see aboveâ"if you wait for lightning to strike with your Perfect Job Idea, youâll be like a dog chasing its tail. You can talk yourself out of anything. Weâre not looking for perfection here; weâre looking for forward progress). Your goal is to talk to people who are doing those jobs right now. Youâre not in competition with them or pushing them out of their jobs. Youâre just collecting data. Represent yourself very transparently: âIâm exploring whatâs next for me career-wise, and Iâd like to get advice from people like you who are in X job (or Y field).â Problem: You Wonât Ask for Help âI canât call my former colleague; itâll sound like I want something from her. I donât want her to think I call only when I need something.â I hear this concern quite often. People are afraid to bother anyone. They donât want to inconvenience people or take up their precious time. Thatâs actually a great instinct. Itâs important to be mindful about the larger picture of peopleâs lives. At the same time, people are flattered and honored to help when they can. As long as you ask people questions that they can say âyesâ to, theyâll almost always take an opportunity to extend a hand. Plus, theyâll feel good about helping out. When I was working with a client exploring the financial industry, we cold-called a financial advisor at a major investment firm. âDo you have 10 minutes to answer 5 questions about your job and how you got to where you are now?â I asked. âSure,â he said. We had a list of questions prepared; we zipped through them (learned tons!), and thanked him for his time. You know the tone that someone gets in their voice when they are pleased with themselves? The warm fuzzy tone? That guy felt good about the time he had spent with us. Solution: Always ask questions that get an easy âyesâ from the other person. Donât ever ask people to circulate your resume, donât ask if there are jobs open at their company, and donât ask if they have names of others you can talk to. Theyâll volunteer that information or make those offers if theyâre comfortable and those openings exist. Instead, ask them for advice (who can resist dispensing hard-won wisdom?), follow your natural curiosity, and go into those meetings prepared. Donât wait for 2015 to set another resolution about your job. Get into action now. Take these ideas in bite-sized chunks and get moving! Wouldnât it be great to start the New Year with something that fits you career-wise? Maggie Graham A career change expert, Maggie Graham believes thereâs not just one answer to the classic question, âWhat do you want to be when you grow up?â All of us have many careers and passions in us, and the most important place to focus is on what the next best career move is. Maggie calls her clients Idealists because theyâre done settling for monotony and other peopleâs agendas. Sheâs supported hundreds of clients in finding their focus and getting serious about engineering their next career moves: http://www.careerdesignandcoaching.com/. Sign up for her free course, 100 Days to Career Clarity, which sends one question to your inbox daily. It ends December 31, so jump in now!
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