Making Career Choices

 

 

 

 

 

In selecting a career, a lot is riding on your decision. Consider an occupation that offers success for many years to come.  Pick an occupation that is suitable for you, can support you financially far into the future with growth and development potential.

 

The topics at the right will lead you through a process that will assist in selecting a career.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Select a Career Carefully

 

The Career Planning Process

 

Career Action Plan

 

Writing a Career Action Plan

 

Your Personality and Your Career

 

Your Interests Help Choose a Career

 

 

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Select a Career Carefully

 

Dawn Rosenberg McKay

https://www.thebalance.com/what-not-to-do-when-selecting-a-career-525489

 

 

There's a lot riding on your career decision. You want an occupation that can be successful for years to come. While you can change careers, it can be an effort. Pick something that is suitable for you and can support you financially in the future. Increase your chances of making a good decision by avoid these common mistakes.

 

Mistakes to Avoid When Selecting a Career:

 

1. Listening to People Who Tell You What You Should do.  Many people think they should have a say in your career - your parents, friends, your significant other. In most cases, your decision will have little impact on the other people in your life. You, however, will have to deal with your choice for years to come. Make sure the career you choose is something you want to spend your day doing.

 

2. Following in Someone Else's Footsteps: You may be haunted by your parents' expectations to go into the same occupation they are in. You may know it as the one that put food in your mouth, a roof over your head and even paid your way through school. It is hard to ignore the pressure you may feel to please your mom and dad. Remind your parents, that they made their own choices and now it's your turn.

 

What was right for them may not be for you. In the long run, they'd rather see you happy in a career of your choosing than unhappy in one you picked to please them.

 

3. Not Doing Your Homework: Don't choose a career without taking time to learn about it. In addition to a job description, you should gather information about typical job duties, educational requirements, earnings and job outlook.

 

4. Not Talking to Those in the Know: Your homework isn't complete if you skip talking to someone who currently works in the career field you are considering. Those who are engaged in an occupation can provide you with a truthful account of what it's really like to work in it. Talk to a few people to avoid individual biases

 

5. Going for the Money: Bringing home a paycheck is important, but the size of it isn't actually a great predictor of job satisfaction. In other words, you can make six figures but if you hate the work you'll find it hard to enjoy the fruits of your labor. Look for a balance between making money to support yourself and work that fulfills you.

 

6. Ignoring Who You Are: Your personality type, interests, values and aptitudes make you better suited for some occupations than others. These traits are intrinsic, which means you can't change them. If you don't take them into account when selecting a career, there is an excellent chance you will wind up in an occupation that is unsuitable for you.

 

7. Not Considering Location, Location, Location: Jobs in certain occupations are concentrated in specific cities—New York or Los Angeles for example—or in certain types of locations—such as cities versus rural areas.

 

8. Not Looking Beyond a "Best Careers" List: Lists that tell you what careers have the best opportunities of the year or decade or, can be helpful when it comes to selecting a career. However, making a decision based solely on one of those lists is a terrible idea. Even an occupation with a great outlook can be a bad fit, so you have to scratch below the surface to find out whether you and a career are a good match.

 

9. Ignoring the Future: You shouldn't make your choice solely on an occupation's appearance on a "best careers list," to ignore employment outlook is careless.

 

There's a good chance you don't have a crystal ball that can tell you with certainty whether an occupation will grow, or at least be stable, during the course of your career. However, you can do more than hope for the best. The US Bureau of Labor Statistics makes predictions about the outlook for most occupations. You should consider whether a career has a promising future before you begin to prepare for it. You can at least eliminate something if its future looks bleak.

 

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The Career Planning Process

 

Dawn Rosenberg McKay

Selections from: https://www.thebalancecareers.com/the-career-planning-process-524774

 

 

Think about the amount of time you will spend at work, it is clear this decision is a big deal. Over your lifetime, this comes out to 45 years you will spend working, from beginning your career until retirement. Select a career that is a good fit for you.

To increase your chances of finding a satisfying career, follow these four steps:

 

Self Assessment

 

You will identify careers that might be a good fit for you during a self assessment.

You will use a variety of tools to gather information about yourself. Learn about your:

 

Interests:  The things you enjoy doing.

Work-related Values:  Ideas and beliefs that are important and guide your actions

Personality Type:  Your social traits, motivations, strengths and attitudes

Aptitudes:  A natural talent or an ability learned through training and education

Work Environments:  The type of workplaces you prefer, for example, indoors or outdoors, office or factory, and noisy or quiet

Developmental Needs:  Your cognitive abilities have an impact on the type of training or education you can complete and what kind of work you can do.

Realities:  Circumstances influencing your ability to train for or work in an occupation

 

Career Exploration

 

Career exploration focuses on learning about the occupations that seem to be a good fit based on your self assessment and any other professions that interest you. Use online and print resources to get job descriptions; learn about specific job duties; and gather labor market information including median salaries and job outlooks.

 

After preliminary research, you can start eliminating professions that don't fit and get more details about those that do. Conduct informational interviews and arrange job shadowing opportunities. During informational interviews, you ask people who work in an occupation that interests you questions about their jobs. Job shadowing involves following someone at work in order to learn more about what they do.

 

Match

 

Finally, it's time to make a match and decide which occupation is the best for you based on what you learned during self assessment and career exploration.

 

Identify the most interesting occupation and one or two alternatives on which to fall back on. Give serious thought to how you will prepare to enter your chosen career, the costs of education and training, and whether you will face any barriers. With a chosen a career, proceed to Step 4, leading toward your first job in your new career.

 

Action

 

Write a career action plan. It serves as a guide to reaching your ultimate goal of getting a job in the career you deemed to be a good match. Identify what long-term and short-term goals you will have to reach to get to the ultimate one.

 

Investigate appropriate education and training programs: colleges, graduate schools, or apprenticeship programs. Then start preparing for admission.

 

Be ready to seek employment, develop a job search strategy. Identify potential employers. Write resume and cover letters. Begin practicing for job interviews.

 

What Else You Should Know

 

It is important your career planning process never ends. At points in your career, you may need to go back to the beginning, or any phase as you redefine yourself and goals. You may change your career or pursue better options in your current one.

 

You can attempt to go through the career planning process on your own, or you can hire a career development professional who will help facilitate your journey. The way you decide to undertake this process—with or without assistance—is less important than the amount of thought and energy you put into it.

 

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Career Action Plan

Dawn Rosenberg McKay

https://www.thebalance.com/career-action-plan-524755

 

What is a Career Action Plan?

 

A career action plan is a road map that takes you from choosing an occupation to becoming employed in that occupation to reaching your long-term career goals. It is also referred to as an Individualized (or Individual) Career Plan or an Individualized (or Individual) Career Development Plan.

 

Before You Begin

 

Writing a career action plan is the fourth step in the career planning process.

 

You must complete the first three steps of the process before you can tackle this one. Steps one through three, in order, are:

 

Self-Assessment: During this step you will use several self-assessment tools to learn about your values, interests, aptitudes and personality type. Your goal is to identify a variety of suitable careers. Ideally you should have between 10 and 15 occupations on your list.

 

Career Exploration: Now that you know what occupations are suitable based on your self-assessment, you can begin to explore the ones you are interested in. You don't have to investigate every single career on your list but you never know what you may learn when you do. The occupation that appears on the surface as something you wouldn't like could end up being the one that interests you the most once you learn more about it.

 

Match: Armed with information about several careers, you should start thinking about making a final decision. Consider the pros and cons of each of your options and then

choose the one that you decide is the best choice for you. You should base your decision not only on what you would enjoy doing the most, but also on what is a

 

feasible choice in terms of the requirements associated with it. For example, if it requires earning an advanced degree, you will need to decide if you are willing to put in the time, energy, effort and financial resources pursuing one would involve.

 

Setting and Reaching Your Goals

 

When you know what you want to do, career-wise, you can then set your goals. Your career action plan will be made up of these goals and the steps you will have to take to reach them. Here's what you need to do:

 

First brainstorm to come up with a list of all your goals.

 

Then break your goals down into short-term and long-term goals. Short-term goals are those you can reach in one year or less. Long-term goals are ones that are attainable in one to five years. For example a long-term goal may be completing your college degree. Completing your college applications would be a short-term goal.

 

Identify any barriers that could threaten your ability to reach your goals and then figure out what solutions can help you overcome them. If you can't find viable solutions, you may need to reformulate your goals. An example of a barrier to your goal of earning a college degree might be a learning disability. A solution that could help you get past it would be learning about the resources available to you at the college you plan to attend and then taking full advantage of them.

 

Writing Your Career Action Plan

 

You can now write your career action plan. It will list all the goals—both short-term and long-term—that you identified. It will include the steps you will have to take to reach them, the barriers that may get in your way and the solutions you have come up with for dealing with them.

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Writing a Career Action Plan

Dawn Rosenberg McKay

Summary of: https://www.thebalance.com/writing-a-career-action-plan-525464

 

Once you have identified an occupation to pursue, you should develop an action plan. An action plan can be considered a road map that will get you from  A—choosing an occupation—to  B—becoming employed in that career.

 

You can develop a plan yourself. A plan is dynamic, amend your action plan as your goals change, your priorities change, and your career grows.

 

Let's begin now to take a look at how to develop a career action plan step-by-step. Create a worksheet you can use to outline your career action plan. It should contain four sections. Here are instructions for completing it.

 

Employment History/Education and Training

 

Title the first section of your worksheet "Employment History/Education and Training." This is straightforward. List any jobs you've had, in reverse chronological order—most recent to oldest. Include the company, job title, and the dates worked at that job.

When you eventually write your resume, having organized this information will prove very helpful. Then—Education and Training. List the schools you attended, the dates you attended them, and the credits, certificates, or degrees you earned. Next, list volunteer or other unpaid experience. these activities may be relevant to your occupational goals. You may have developed skills that apply to your future career.

 

Self-Assessment Results

 

The next section of your worksheet should be "Self-Assessment Results." If you met with a counselor or took a self-assessment test, this is where you record the results, including the occupations that were suggested to you.

Out of all the occupations you explored, you narrowed your choices down to one of them, the one you plan to pursue. You may even have two occupations—one to aim for in the short term and one to strive for in the long term. They should be related, the second being one that is a step up from the first.

 

Short Term and Long-Term Goals

 

The next section should be a place for you to list your occupational and educational goals. They should correspond to one another since reaching occupational goals are dependent upon reaching educational ones. Short term goals are those you can reach in a year or less; long-term goals those you can reach in five or fewer years.

 

For example, If your long term occupational goal is to become a lawyer, here's what your short and long term plans might look like:

 

Year One: Complete my bachelor's degree (12 credits left to go), apply to law school, get accepted to law school (a positive attitude is a good thing)

Year Two through Year Four: Enter law school, study hard and earn good grades, graduate from law school with many job offers

Year Five: Begin working in a law firm

 

Barriers to Reaching Goals

 

As you try to reach your goals you may face some barriers. In this section of your action plan, you can list anything that may impede being able to reach your goals. Then list possible ways to overcome them. For example, being the primary caregiver of elderly parents interfering with your ability to complete your degree.

You can deal with this barrier by enlisting the help of your spouse or another relative. Perhaps you can arrange for child or adult daycare.

 

You're on Your Way

 

A well-thought-out career action plan will prove to be a very useful tool. You've gone through the career planning process carefully, choosing a suitable occupation. Setting goals and planning what you need to do to realize them will ensure that you reach your career destination.

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Your Personality and Your Career

Dawn Rosenberg McKay

https://www.thebalance.com/personality-type-and-career-choice-526171

 

Are you trying to decide what career to pursue? You should find out what your personality type is. Certain occupations are more suitable for particular types than others. Personality should not be the only factor considered in choosing a career. A self-assessment should look at your values, interests, and aptitudes. These factors taken together serve as a way to find the right career than any one of them alone.

 

Career Personality Tests

 

The best way to learn about your personality is through the use of "career personality tests."  We can more accurately call them personality inventories. A career development professional, such as a career counselor, can administer a personality instrument and help you utilize what you learn from it. This information with what you learn from the other parts of your self assessment can help you choose a career.

 

The career development professional will choose from among several personality inventories. The Myers-Briggs Type Indicator (MBTI) is one of the most popular. Most personality inventories consist of a series of questions that you answer by filling in circles on a scan sheet or selecting responses on a computer or other device.

 

Your practitioner may have you complete it in the office or at home. While personality inventories are often called "career personality tests," there are no right or wrong answers as there would be on an exam. No personality type is better than any other, so it is important to be completely honest when answering the questions.

 

Getting Your Results

 

After you complete the inventory, you will return it to the practitioner to score. He or she will either send it back to the publisher for scoring or will do it him or herself. Once that is complete, the career development professional or the publisher will generate a report that the practitioner may discuss with you at this time. He or she may choose to wait until all other assessments are finished since, as mentioned previously, the personality inventory is just one of several assessment tools.

 

Your report will tell you what your personality type is. It will probably also explain how this conclusion was drawn based on your answers. Also included in your report will be a list of occupations that are suitable for those who share your personality type. Does this mean that all of these occupations are right for you?

 

Absolutely not. Some will be a good fit, while others won't be, based on characteristics other than your personality, such as the aforementioned values, interests, and abilities.

 

The level of training you are willing to undertake to prepare for a career will also affect your choice. You may not want to earn a Ph.D. Other things that could rule out a particular occupation are a weak employment outlook or a salary that is too low for you to live on. When you finish your self assessment, you will move on to the exploration stage of the career planning process. During this stage, you will research occupations and eventually choose your best option based on what you learn.

 

Online Personality Inventories

 

You will find some personality inventories offered online, sometimes for free and other times for a fee.

 

There is a version of the Myers-Briggs offered online, for a fee, by the Center for Applications of Psychological Type (CAPT). It includes one hour of professional feedback. Since Isabel Myers Briggs, one of the MBTI's developers, we can be fairly sure the online version is as accurate as one administered locally.

 

Unfortunately, the same cannot be said about all online self assessment tools. Some may not be as accurate as those a career development professional would use and will often not be accompanied by adequate feedback. However, you can still benefit from using them, particularly if you can't, or choose not to, hire a professional. Use common sense when looking at your results and always thoroughly research any occupations that the results of self assessments indicate could be "right for you." That is true whether you are working with a professional or using an online tool.

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Your Interests Help Choose a Career

Dawn Rosenberg McKay

https://www.thebalance.com/interest-inventories-526168

 

Would you rather build a bookshelf or balance a checkbook? Which sounds better to you: completing a project independently or doing it as part of a team?

There are no right or wrong answers to any of these questions. Your responses merely indicate your likes and dislikes, for example, which activities you enjoy or don't, what type of work you like to do or prefer not to, and how you want to work.

 

These preferences are called interests.

 

How to Take an Interest Inventory

 

A career counselor or other career development professional can administer an interest inventory as part of a complete self assessment which should also look at things such as your personality type, aptitudes, and work values. You will have to fill out a questionnaire containing a series of items about your likes and dislikes.

These items may measure, for example, your interests regarding leisure activities,

work-related activities, people with whom you prefer to work, and school subjects. To get the most accurate results, it is important that you respond to each item as honestly as possible. There are no right or wrong answers, and the counselor won't judge you based on your choices.

When responding to items related to work-related activities, do not worry about whether or not you have training or a particular skill. For the purposes of completing an interest inventory, that doesn't matter. All you are being asked at this point is whether that activity is of interest to you. There will be plenty of time later on, as you begin to explore your options, to decide whether or not you want to become skilled in a particular area.

 

Getting and Understanding Your Results

 

After completing an interest inventory, you will receive a report containing your results. The professional who administered the inventory should go over it with you

 

and help you make sense of it. Your report should include a list of occupations that may be suitable for someone with your interest Some of those occupations will appeal to you while others won't

It is important to remember that just because an occupation shows up in the results of an interest inventory or other self assessment tool, that doesn't necessarily mean it's the best choice for you. Before you choose a career, you must carefully explore your options.

An occupation may not be suitable for you for a variety of reasons regardless of the fact that you share interests with other people who work in it.

 

How to Discover Your Interests on the Cheap

 

If you want to try using an interest inventory on your own, there are some free or low coast ones available. The Self-Directed Search (SDS), published by PAR (Psychological Assessment Resources, Inc.), can be accessed online for a small fee. After completing the assessment, you will receive a printable report containing a list of occupations that most closely match your interests.

 

The O*Net Interest Profiler is a free assessment that is one of the several tools that are part of O*Net Online, a project sponsored by the U.S. Department of Labor/Employment and Training Administration. There are a few versions of the Interest Profiler including a short-form web-based one, a mobile one, and a pen and pencil version that you can print out at home.

 

Career Cruising is an assessment tool that many public libraries make available to their patrons. It generates a list of occupations after a user answers questions about his or her interests. One can then explore those careers from within the Career Cruising database. Check with the reference staff at your local library to see if they subscribe to this resource.

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