Finding the Right Career



Follow your dreams to Finding the Right Career

Finding the right career should involve doing what you love to do.


It wasn't that many years ago that us 30, 40 and even 50 somthings were considering what we wanted to be when we grew up. Fact was that much of what we thuoght were great careers ended up being outsourced or eliminated due to the electronic revolution. Those of us who have made it however, found the right career based on a love or interest in the work and not on the paycheck.

Twenty or thirty years ago, finding the right career was limited by lack of global internet tools, restricted by more old-fashioned (if you will) values and opinions, and less important than “finding yourself.”

I recall when my therapist, the savior of all saviors as far as I’m concerned, laughed with me over how I had gone about finding the right career: I had taken all the courses I found interesting and many I hoped were somehow related, then tried to decide on a major/career.



She gently joked that many people decide first, then do the footwork of taking the required and necessary and relevant courses, doing internships, and getting in at some entry-level…. Clearly, I didn’t have the tools we do today for finding the right career, or I didn’t know about their existence and usefulness, at least.

For example, a lot of students will use personality testing and employment/goal assessments for finding the right career—right from the start of their semesters in college. ERIK, Psychometric testing tools, and career skills assessment batteries will help to define aptitude and save you time futzing around with majors and minors that you

THINK you MIGHT like…when six years later decide you need to start all over finding the right career, as offshore drilling is not for you or interplanetary travel studies will take too long or anthropological studies of tribes now extinct are wiped off the college catalogs three quarters of the way into your educational plan.

A fantastic implement of guidance, information, and statistical projection for finding the right career is the Index to Careers Guide, created, updated/maintained, and provided both online and off (in college and high school career centers, for instance) by the U.S. Department of Labor/Bureau of Labor Statistics.

If finding the right career is a task you feel or think requires a knowledge of salaries, working conditions, descriptions of the nature of the work involved, training and other qualification requirements, the number of jobs/positions held in that field and the competition involved, and projected job openings, then go to www.bls.dol.gov and type in any career title or browse the index of thousands of positions/job types.

Another brilliant tool is one that comes in workbook form and accompanies the What Color is Your Parachute and The Boxes of Life books by Richard Bolles.

The workbooks (and books) have you take intensive (but interesting, fun) quizzes that lead you to slowly but surely deduce or do a process of illimination experiment that helps you in finding the right career FOR YOU…not your Mom, your dead Grandfather, or the culture around you

who has all kinds of opinions about who you are and who you should be but who does not pay your rent or feed your kids when push comes to shove. Nor are they the ones who need to live in your skin, sleep through the night, or answer to your higher needs and greater consciousness….

 



Small Business Definitions & Terms

  • Single-unit Company (SU) -- Companies in which the location and the company are one and the same. See also Multi-unit (MU).


  • Internal Revenue Service (IRS) -- The U.S. Treasury Department agency responsible for collecting taxes, administering business, and individual tax programs.


  • Annual Trade Survey -- Provides detailed industry measures of sales and inventories for wholesale trade activities. The United States Code, Title 13, authorizes this survey and provides for mandatory responses. Companies with employment that are primarily engaged in merchant wholesale trade in the U.S. These include merchant wholesalers that take title of the goods they sell, and jobbers, industrial distributors, exporters, and importers. Excluded are non-merchant wholesalers such as manufacturer sales branches and offices; agents, merchandise or commodity brokers, and commission merchants; and businesses whose primary activity is other than wholesale trade.


  • Pollution Abatement Costs and Expenditures Survey -- Collects data for establishments include capital expenditures by type of pollutant abated and abatement technique; operating costs by form of abatement; and cost recovered through abatement activities by form of abatement.




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