How To Find The Right Career

Feb 12
09:39

2008

Ken  Anczerewicz

Ken Anczerewicz

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Do you feel like your job is a good match for youfor your interests, your skills, your personal goals? Many of us are dissatisfied with our current job roles, or are not sure what we should be doing in our professional lives.

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Do you feel like your job is a good match for youfor your interests,How To Find The Right Career Articles your skills, your personal goals? Many of us are dissatisfied with our current job roles, or are not sure what we should be doing in our professional lives. This article is intended to help you focus in on what career is ideal for you.

What do you love doing? What is your hobby, or hobbies? What do you enjoy doing in your free time, when you're off the clock and not getting paid? If you can secure a career that conforms to these interests, you're in luck-that's the career for you.

For example, if you love shopping and clothes, then why not look at a career in the fashion industry? There are job roles that cater to every personality type and skill set. A person who enjoys meeting new people and being social would make a great public relations person for a retail store. A person who is very artistically inclined could work in the design studio. A person with great business savvy and a nose for trends might make a great fashion analyst or retail consultant.

By matching your qualities and skills with your personal ambitions, going to work each day will be enjoyable-imagine that!

What are your goals? Do you want to build up your bank account so you can buy a house, or do you just want enough money to be able to rent and travel at your leisure? What's your personality typedo you crave excitement, or do you thrive on stability? In finding the right career, these considerations are of primary importance. If you are considering a family in the near future with a dog named sparky and a white picket fence then a good paying job may be critical to your happiness in life. Your chosen career should provide stability, insurance, security, a pension plan, and so on.

Also think about the type of environment you hope to work in. Are you happiest behind a desk, or do you feel empty unless you're outdoors? Pick a job that allows you to spend time in the places that make you feel at home. For example, a person with a strong connection to the outdoors might consider becoming a forest ranger, a ski instructor, a landscape architect, etc.

Doing things you love and that are important to you are good indicators of your ideal job. If you enjoy traveling, then a career that enables you to visit foreign countries frequently is going to make you happy. But if you hate leaving home, then that same career could be torture. Think about the career's requirements and how they would impact you down the road.

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