Rethinking Your Career
Has working from home given you a new perspective on the work you do?
You might have to navigate a few extra obstacles if you want to change jobs during the pandemic. But the shifting business landscape and the way we live have also created new opportunities if you’re clear on your personal, professional, and financial goals.
Answering these four questions will help you determine how a career change could help you gain some clarity if a career change could help you live a more fulfilled life.
1. Why? Why? And … Why?
Easy answers rarely address core problems. One way to dig a little deeper and arrive at a more proactive solution is to keep asking yourself, “Why?”
For example, why are you rethinking your career?
Because I don’t like my job.
Why don’t you like your job?
Because I can’t do what I’m best at.
Why can’t you do what you’re best at?
Because I should be working in a different department.
Neh! There it is!
Without that self-reflection, you might have started applying for similar jobs at different companies that would have left you similarly unfulfilled. Now that you realize you want to use your top skills more, you have more options. Maybe you aim big and apply for a dream job at a new firm. Maybe you talk to your supervisor about a different position at your current employer. Or maybe, like many other stories we have seen in the news noadays, you take on the dream job at a new company you create yourself.
2. What do I need to improve?
You’ve probably picked up some valuable new skills during lockdown. Zoom, Microsoft Teams, Slacks, Trello, may have become your second languages. You’re more comfortable managing projects and collaborating with coworkers remotely. And now that your kitchen table is also your office and your kids’ classroom, you’ve improved your time management. You have become more efficient in executing and finishing your task.
Take a moment to assess other professional skills that could help you achieve a career change. Have you enjoyed being backup tech support during your company’s digital pivot? Take web design or IT security classes. Would you like to focus on marketing now that so many companies are trying to reintroduce themselves to customers online? Get SEO certification or start a blog or newsletter that will sharpen your writing skills. Is your company trying to expand? Brushing up your leadership skills could put you in line for a a new responsibility.
3. What will the short and long-term effects be?
Weighing the financial plusses and negatives of a career change can get tricky once you move beyond salaries and start comparing benefits packages. But the pandemic environment has created a whole other group of factors for you and your spouse to consider. Will you be able to work from home or will you have to clock in at a socially distanced office? Will your hours be flexible? Can you accomplish key tasks with your current home office setup? Would you need to invest in new technology, or even a larger home with a dedicated office? Another important question, does your superior believe in working from home? Otherwise, you could be in for a very micromanaging work routine that contribute to burnout and stress.
Your “Whys” should be part of this conversation as well. For example, if Covid-19 and certain causes are inspiring your career change, you might be willing to make a horizontal job move to an organization where you’ll be making a bigger impact in your community.
4. Who can help me get where I want to go?
Lockdowns and social distancing might have interrupted your professional networking. Re-establish those key connections with a video chat, send them some Whatsapp message to stay in contact, an invitation to your company’s next virtual event, or a good old-fashioned phone call or email. Getting some new perspectives on what’s going on in your industry can provide vital intel that will help you plot your next move. You’ll also be front of mind if your contacts hear about any interesting job openings.
Many job hunters also form social media groups where they share leads, vent frustrations, and provide mutual encouragement.
If you’re married, your spouse might be your most critical resource as you contemplate this change. No one knows you better, and no one can provide better feedback as you work through the questions on this list.
Finally, making a life transitioning decision require you to put on your thinking cap and also be objective about your personal, as well as professional need. We offer many services that can help you navigate this important transition. Connect here and we’ll crunch some numbers, reexamine your financial plan, and discuss how making a career change could help you get an even better life with the money you’ll have.