
HAPPY HOLIDAYS!! We're rounding the corner to a new year but before it slips away, I want to thank all of you for your support of Activ8 Career Coaching and for referring your friends, family and business associates. Here's hoping you have a superb holiday season and a prosperous 2008!! BOOK SIGNING THIS SATURDAY, December 8, from 1:00 p.m. to 3:00 p.m. at Borders in Ballwin, 15335-A Manchester Road. Ask your friends to join you at the signing, drop off your business card and win a career kit including:
- From Cornered to Corner Office
- a copy of From Road Kill to Road Map - The 12 Biggest Mistakes Job Hunters and Career Changers Make and How to Avoid Them, and
- the teleconference From Hi to Hired - How to Ace Your Interview Every Time.
DECEMBER SPECIAL - Online Only - Pick up a copy of From Cornered to Corner Office for yourself or a friend. Hard cover edition just $15 (regularly $23) through December.
MIDLIFE CAREER CHANGE - Any Advantage?
When we were younger, we heard about the midlife career change or midlife crisis. Now that were older, we begin to see the reasoning. Weve been in the same job or same industry for our entire working life and were ready for a change. And, yes, Im for the most part talking to Baby Boomers! They are the tenured employees staying 10, 15 even 20 years with the same employer. We also know that the generation that follows the Boomers Generation X - already changes jobs frequently to advance their careers. But even with job hopping, these managers get caught up in the same industry and asking when quality of life will fit in. And we know that the generation after Gen X those Millennials or Generation Y already know about quality of life and are instituting many of the things well talk about in this newsletter. They have learned from our lives (mistakes?) and get it! No matter where you are in your career, you may be looking for a change. And many of us are considering that midlife career change. So if youre one of those looking for change, you might be asking yourself, how hard is it to completely change careers? Is it even feasible? Luckily the Baby Boomers, in their excitement about reaching retirement and now having the time and money to do what they have always wanted to do, are forging the way. They are using their connections, money and a desire to follow their dreams to begin the career theyve always wanted to do. Working through this process can be challenging so here are several things to consider: Midlife Career Change Argument #1 Employers are looking for brain power in our service-based society. No longer is youth or physical power as important. As we age, we naturally have more brain power and sometimes more time to learn a new skill. Lets face it, we dont retire anymore. We are living longer and finding ways to be productive whether we volunteer our time or find a new career. Midlife Career Change Argument #2 - Security no longer rests in the corporate retirement package. It rests in our own skill. What companies and contacts can help us develop our knowledge, skills and expertise? Or do we need to go back to college? We cant rely on corporations or social security to take care of us through retirement. It is imperative that we have a plan to develop and rely on our own skill level and what it can afford. Midlife Career Change Argument #3 What about a boomerang job which allows you to take some time off or semi-retire and then re-enter the industry or organization after a few months or even a few years usually with limited hours and lighter responsibilities? Could this be your version of a midlife career change? Midlife Career Change Argument #4 - If you really cant justify leaving the job or the industry youre in, can you still work quality of life into you position? Can you find flexibility or another needed perk? Can you talk to your employer about shorter hours, flex time or job sharing? Make the career or industry work for you and work so that you get what you need and want from the job and life. Midlife Career Change Argument #5 If youre in those next generations after the Baby Boomers, sprinkle leisure time into your career path now. Dont hold all of your leisure time for retirement. Throughout your working career try to work in blocks of time that you can devote to rest, relaxation and regeneration. It is during these times of reflection that you can look objectively at your past work history and where you would like to go in the future. Who knows, you may change careers every 10-15 years instead of once at midlife or retirement! If these arguments have convinced you to make a midlife career change or look at other areas for skill development, join us next month when we look at what an interview for a job change in a new industry might look like and how to field challenges regarding your background and expertise.
Success Story
After being in the workforce for 45 years (30 with the same company), I was ill-equipped to find myself out of work, feeling unneeded and sometimes unwanted. Collaborating with you helped me identify my core strengths, but most of all you taught me how to present my strengths to others. Now I see that my job and career are not what define me, but that I have more to offer an employer that just my education and experience. You showed me how to build a network of contacts that could get me in front of the right hiring people, instead of responding the old school method with a blind resume. There are three words that sum up our relationship - coach, mentor, and friend. Thanks again, David, for all of your help and best of luck to you and all of your clients! Jim St. Louis, MO
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