Millennium Magazine_18th Ed_ Laurie Urbancik

Thankfully, there are ways to get out of this rut and find a line of work that inspires you. The first method is to identify your passion and match it to your strengths. Applying your strengths to a role makes it easier to achieve your goals, which improves your sense of well-being and confidence. Career coaches can help you identify what you might like to do, fine-tune your CV, and guide you toward excelling in interviews. By talking through and examining your former professional experience, they can also help you identify alternative roles that tie in with your experience to date and advise you on how to acquire the role of your choice. This could involve further highlighting relevant experience on your CV and planning out answers to commonly asked interview questions. You could also meet with a life coach. Life coaches can help you gain resilience and focus to achieve your goals. Changing your career can be a drastic change, and a life coach can help you overcome any trepidation and suggest strategies to help you tackle foreseeable obstacles. GETTING OUT OF A CAREER CUL-DE-SAC It’s all too easy to find yourself stuck in a role that doesn’t inspire you. Perhaps there were certain opportunities you missed out on or weren’t afforded, and now you find yourself in what feels like a dead-end role. You may have decided to play it safe and focus on a simpler career, which might pay well but isn’t fulfilling. Or maybe you didn’t know what you wanted to do but now work approximately 40 hours per week, draining your energy. Another approach involves working on building inspiration by finding a mentor. This could be someone who excels in the industry you hope to work in. Working with a mentor can help you gain knowledge via personal insights and keep abreast of trends in your sector. You could also attend talks delivered by well-known professionals. You might join a club or society to connect with like-minded individuals and practice skills associated with your industry, much like a book club. Likewise, you could join a volunteer organization to gain relevant work experience. For example, if you are interested in environment-focused work, you could volunteer for the British Trust for Conservation or the National Trust. Sometimes the answer is less obvious. You might find yourself considering a portfolio career if you cannot identify one primary interest. This would involve applying your skillset to two or three different options. For instance, if you excel in visual skills, you could consider working part-time as a graphic designer and part-time as a video editor. You could alternatively find yourself pursuing a freelance career where you have an opportunity to practice your profession for numerous companies at the same time and experience the variety of a range of working environments. Ultimately, following these tips will help you refocus yourself in a new direction and land a job you love.

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