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Regardless of your career change strategy, never
make these 10 mistakes:
- Don't look for a job in another field
without some intense introspection. Nothing is
worse than leaping before you look. Make sure you're
not escaping to a field that fits you just as poorly
as your last.
- Don't look for "hot" fields unless
they're a good fit for you. You wouldn't try to
squeeze into your skinny cousin's suit, so why try a
field because it works for him? People who are trying
to help you will come along and do the equivalent of
whispering "plastics" in your ear. Instead of jumping
at their suggestions, take time to consider your
options. Decide what you really want to do. When you
enter a field just because it's hot, burnout isn't far
behind.
- Don't go into a field because your
friend is doing well in it. Get thorough
information about the fields you're considering by
networking, reading and doing online research. Having
informational interviews with alumni from your
college, colleagues, friends or family is a fun way to
get the scoop on different fields.
- Don't stick to possibilities you
already know about. Stretch your perception of
what might work for you. Explore career fields you
learn about from self-assessment exercises.
- Don't let money be the deciding
factor. There's not enough money in the world to
make you happy if your job doesn't suit you. Workplace
dissatisfaction and stress is the number-one health
problem for working adults. This is particularly true
for career changers, who often earn less until they
get their sea legs in a different field.
- Don't keep your dissatisfaction to
yourself or try to make the switch alone. This is
the time to talk to people (probably not your boss
just yet, nor some coworker who likes to tell tales).
Friends, family and colleagues need to know what's
going on so they can help you tap into those 90-plus
percent of jobs that aren't advertised until somebody
has them all sewn up.
- Don't go back to school to get
re-treaded unless you've done some test-drives in the
new field. You're never too old for an internship,
a volunteer experience or trying your hand at a
contract assignment in a new field. There are lots of
ways to get experience that won't cost you anything
except your time. A new degree may or may not make the
world sit up and take notice. Be very sure where you
want to go before you put yourself through the pain
and debt of another degree program.
- Be careful when using placement
agencies or search firms. Do some research to be
sure to find a good match. Ask those who work in the
field you’re trying to get into or other successful
career changers for suggestions. Try to find a firm
that knows how to be creative when placing career
changers -- not one that solely focuses on moving
people up the ladder in the same field.
- Don't go to a career counselor or a
career transitions agency expecting they can tell you
which field to enter. Career advisors are
facilitators, and they'll follow your lead. They can
help ferret out your long-buried dreams and talents,
but you'll have to do the research and the decision
making by yourself. Anyone who promises to tell you
what to do is dangerous.
- Don't expect to switch overnight. A
thorough career change usually will take a minimum of
six months to pull off, and the time frequently
stretches to a year or more.
Changing fields is one of the most invigorating
things you can do. It's like experiencing youth all over
again, except with the wisdom of whatever age you are
now.
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