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Deborah Shane is the Author of Career Transition-make the shift, a media host, a small business branding strategist , nationally published writer and...
 
 
 
 

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Become More of a Change-Maker for Yourself

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“Don’t wait until you are out of work or laid off to change. If we have learned one huge lesson from the current employment scenario, its pay attention to and keep changing with change.”

JobsIn the summer of 2005, I realized that my 23 year career in broadcast radio was about to change dramatically. I could feel the winds of change blowing in my “corporate culture.” It just felt weird and I just knew.

Personal transition process

I started my personal transition process, in my head, simply by thinking about why I was feeling like it just wasn’t working for me on many levels anymore, and I am the kind of person who wants and needs my career job to be working.

First, I had to honestly assess if there were any more growth and mobility opportunities where I was, and then I had to look at myself, with regard to what I really wanted to do and if I was qualified and prepared to do it.

I spent almost a year going on interviews, both locally and nationally, exploring other industries and employment jobs to try to see what resonated with me. I also looked at what skills and intangibles I brought to the table that made me valuable and interesting. Maybe I didn’t realize it then, but I was reviewing and updated my “personal brand.”

As I look back, it was really a smart process and revealed a lot about me. Back then jobs were much more plentiful and there were a lot of them in my business. Today, I would not have those same choices and options. Today,  ‘sharpening your saw’ is one of the most important professional development commitments you can make.

Here are five lessons that I learned about my career transition process that you can apply to your own career, job, work, and employment situation today.

  • Identify what you want to do and what you are qualified to do. Look at all your “transferable skills,” all those jobs you have done that define all your skill sets. Women tend to have done many things with regard to this, that they may not think count. Did you baby sit, were you a camp counselor, did you work in the family business growing up, volunteer, and let’s not forget stay at home Mom to raise the kids? All those things developed skills!
  • Don’t rush change, trust your process. Opportunities will present themselves, but they may not be all the right or best decisions to make. Qualify the opportunities, based on your situation. Women have so many things they multi-task on. Timing will play a big part in things with regard to raising the kids and possibly taking care of parents.
  • Be prepared and honest when presenting yourself. You really can’t fudge the truth with creating resume writing. Know what your strong assets are and lead with them. Don’t hide your liabilities, but don’t lead with them, we all have “stuff”, or we wouldn’t be human.
  • Evaluate your current skill levels. The business world has changed and what’s now required to get hired has changed. Review your personal, professional, technology, and social networking proficiency. If you need to upgrade skills, take some local courses through local chambers, schools, professional organizations, online. Women need to be as skill qualified as possible to earn the job!
  • Develop a bold, strong personal brand and persona that sets you apart and helps you stand out. Personality, mindset, energy, attitude, image are all-important today to stand out and be noticed. Again, evaluate where you are with regard to your professional image, online and offline networking, sales, communication skills and being a part of your community. Upgrade, improve, tweak, and grow whenever and wherever
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Deborah Shane 5 pts

Deborah Shane
Author | Entrepreneur | Media Host | Speaker | Expert
dshane@trainwithshane.com
www.deborahshane.com

Amen sister..There is nothing more powerful than a "relevant boomer" with a spirit! I launched another business, brand, wrote a book after 50! I'm just getting going!

Deborah Shane 5 pts

Deborah Shane
Author | Entrepreneur | Media Host | Speaker | Expert
dshane@trainwithshane.com
www.deborahshane.com

Spot on Natalie..embracing change with confidence and a spirit of adventure can actually make it fun!

Deborah Shane 5 pts

Deborah Shane
Author | Entrepreneur | Media Host | Speaker | Expert
dshane@trainwithshane.com
www.deborahshane.com

Patty, NP's will always be in demand, but the space is getting more crowded. Stay relevant and up to date. Insurance!

Deborah Shane 5 pts

Deborah Shane
Author | Entrepreneur | Media Host | Speaker | Expert
dshane@trainwithshane.com
www.deborahshane.com

Brenda, thanks for your comment. Keep the faith and do the footwork. Traveling between industries and using your transferable skills is a very good thing. Every job matters!

Jwales 5 pts

I love what you are doing! I address at lot of the same issue in my on blog, www.thefearlessfactor.com ( http://www.thefearlessfactor.com ). I think its hard for a lot of women, especially later in life, they think that change is too hard, to difficult, that they are not capable. I want to spread the word that they are, we all are! I overcame extreme adversity in my life and I know if I can do it, they can do it!

NatalieJ 5 pts

Absolutely! We must all be ready for change. And the first thing we must change is our view that change is bad. Change is opportunity.

Natalie   www.thoughtful-self-improvement.com/Blocking-Belief.html ( http://www.thoughtful-self-improvement.com/Blockin... )

Nobody wants to be Ethel 5 pts

I've been in the same job for 10 1/2 years. That is a milestone for me at 52 yr old. BUT, it is always good to keep the resume and skills up to date because you must always be prepared for shifts in the job market. My career could shift dramatically when the health care reform hits full stride in several years. There will be lots more jobs for nurse practitioners out there. If I chose to jump ship, there will be many opportunities to do so.

The Patty Beat can be found at  http://pattyabr.wordpress.com ( http://pattyabr.wordpress.com/ ) where The Fearless Cook resides ready to take on your most feared items in the kitchen.

Brenda M 5 pts

Brenda

http://www.grrlguide.com/

As a career hopper, this is spot on. In my career, I’ve used my core skill sets to travel between industries. It’s not as easy as I’d like because some employers want a person that has done the same thing all of the days of their professional career. I see that more often now that economy is slow – it’s a hiring manager’s market. Still, keep the faith ( she says to herself). I was inspired by your thoughtful words – excellent, and a refreshing reminder.