Tags: career change

It's a recession - should you forget career shifting for a while and hang on tight?

By Rosie Walford a...

Far too often people ignore their feelings of discontent at work and with recession hitting the market many feel that it would be best to sit tight. But career coach, Rosie, warns that during recession there are even greater risks of sticking with a job you have little passion for than taking the leap and making a career shift.
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Finanacing a change of career

By Sonia Lakshman

This is a brilliant comprehensive guide by career coach, Sonia Lakshman, on financing your carer change, packed with useful tips and information on everything from applying for a study grant to apprenticeships to winning the money you need for a career change. A must-read if finacance are holding you back in making a career shift.
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Books to inspire and guide you as you shift your career

By Selina Barker

We've asked our expert career coaches to recommend their pick of inspirational books to help get your career change on track. From understanding what makes you tick, to ideas for a portfolio career, we've got a great selection to get you started.
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Herminia Ibarra's career change lecture

By Richard on 15 July 2008 at 07:10 in Careershifters Blog

HerminiaThe FT have just posted a video of Herminia Ibarra, a professor at INSEAD business school in France, talking on how professionals can make a mid-career switch.

Here's a summary of what she says, which we think is first-rate advice for anyone going through a career change:

The bad news first:

  • Changing careers mid-career takes a long time: 3 years on average
  • The process is non-linear: chaotic, messy, often unpleasant

The core principles in a career shift:

  • Action beats introspection
  • You have to figure out 1. what you want to do, 2. how to be a credible entrant

Three themes for a successful reinvention:

  1. Get involved in side activities
  2. Expand your network outside your usual circles
  3. Work on your story for the benefit of yourself and gatekeepers to potential new careers

Her closing remark: "You don't have to have it all figured out before you make a move. It's much more helpful to take an experimental approach."

Finding our life's work

By Richard on 14 July 2008 at 15:43 in Careershifters Blog

From the excellent DailyOm site, passed on by our friend Thalbir:

"Sometimes it takes us the better part of a lifetime to discover our life’s work, even though we may have been doing it our whole lives without necessarily realizing it. Our life’s work is not always what we do to make money, although we often think it should be, and sometimes this way of thinking prevents us from seeing clearly what it is. It may be the work of having children, caring for them, and running a household. The way we know our life’s work is by how we feel when we are doing it. When we are doing our life’s work, we feel an uncanny sense of ease and alignment. This doesn’t mean that the work is always easy, and it doesn’t mean that it’s the only work we have to do; it just means that there is a conviction deep inside us that tells us we are in tune with our innermost self.

"When we are engaged in our life’s work, our bodies feel more alive, because our energy is devoted to a cause that, in turn, feeds us. We may be tired after engaging in our life’s work, but we are almost never depleted. We feel grounded in the world, knowing that we belong here and have something important to offer. When we are deeply unhappy, depressed, or subject to one illness after another, this may be due to a sense of disconnection from our life’s work. At times like these, finding the work we are meant to do is an essential act of healing. Most of us remember a time when we felt fully engaged in some act of work, service or creativity, and it is here that we may rediscover the work we are meant to do now. On the other hand, it may be time to explore what inspires us through volunteering, taking a class, going back to school, or just doing whatever it is we long to try. We all have callings, and when we find them, we owe it to ourselves to nurture and protect them, because while they may or may not be our livelihood, they are the keys to our wellbeing."

How do I write an effective CV when I'm going for a totally new job?

Careershifter question

By sunri5e on 11 June 2008 at 16:28

I want to change career. A job has come up that I would really like to go for, but it's a totally different job to the one I'm currently in and I'm concerned that my CV won't get me to interview stage. Can you help?

ShiftDoctor answer

By Jessica McGrego... on 24 June 2008 at 21:38 in ShiftSurgeries

Jessica McGregor Johnson's picture

People often think that you have to show that you've done a similar job before when going for a new role, but it's actually a matter of demonstrating effectively that you have the skills required for the job. Here's how to do it...

Read full case file


How to shift away from a career in SALES!

By Kaycareerscoach

We get a lot of calls for help left on the Careershifters site from sales people desperate to make a career change - they are sick of the relentless targets, the constant pressure and of being viewed as only as good as their last sale. So we asked careershift coach, Kay, to write an article with practical advice and exercises to help all those sales people to get realistic and find a way out... More

Unemployment Week 1 – Inspiration Vs. Frustration

By love_redundancy on 19 June 2008 at 13:27 in ShiftLogs

One week in; a lot of CVs sent; a lot of coffee drunk; a lot of pondering done. So far so good. More

Counting down...

By love_redundancy on 10 June 2008 at 12:18 in ShiftLogs

The countdown begins! Suddenly, a month has whizzed by and I now have exactly three days of meaningful employment left! More

Redundancy: A blessing in disguise?

By love_redundancy on 2 June 2008 at 11:45 in ShiftLogs

I was recently informed that I am to be made redundant. “Disaster!” You may think. “What on earth are you going to DO?!” More

25 Top Tips to Kick-Start Your Career

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