Source - Management Forensics Institute
Audience Rating - Leadership, Management, Operations, General Audience
Coach - Buddy Bacchus
Audience Rating - Leadership, Management, Operations, General Audience
Coach - Buddy Bacchus
How to Discover Your Career
Courtesy ManagementForensicsInstitute.com
Introduction
Your career or potential career is that field, track, domain, professional, or vocational pursuit you aspire to work, earn, and profit within. It is important to understand what is your passion and how does it align with potential career choices. Additionally, you need to consider the cost of your choice.
What is your Passion
First, in order to attempt to identify the right career, one should first identify one's motivation, inclination, or disposition of "thinking" and ideology. This identification most likely aligns with potential career choices. Are you so passionate about a certain type of "thinking" that you will be happy whether you were compensated or paid or not? Are you so passionate about for example discovering properties of chemical action or reaction that you aspire to be a career Chemist or enter the field of Research and Chemistry? Or, are you passionate about the flow, transport, and movement of goods and services through the economy that you aspire to enter into a career of logistics? Therefore, assessing your "thinking" passion, ensuring it meets ethical, moral, and legal standards all sum up to your first objective towards your career choice.
Selecting or trying your Career Choice
Second, your next objective is to determine how your passion aligns with careers within existing societal institutions at least at the economic, political, social, or other level. Numerous careers exist within numerous economic sectors of society such as finance, business, manufacturing, etc. For example, if you are inclined towards the investigation of chemical properties, then you will most likely explore sectors of the economy such as research, education, manufacturing or pharmacy among others. If your passion does not align with existing economy sectors then perhaps you are on the verge of an innovation and development of new value.
Investing in your Career Choice
Third, your next objective is to assess how much effort and resources are required to realize your passion as it relates to your selected career choice. If you've determined that your career choice is that of for example a Chemist, then determine what stage are you at occupationally, educationally, and financially in order to embark on your desired career journey. Whether you're currently in grade school or you're in an existing professional occupation, your achievement of your desired career will depend on your motivation as well as the required life-cycle of assessment, planning, and implementation to achieve your desired career goal.
Investment in your career marks or tests the seriousness of your goals. This involves your time, effort, and resources that are all very very very limited. The better you were at identifying your passion, aligning with your career choices within potential economic sectors, and planning your investment, that much safer and rewarding will be your investments in your ultimate career choice.
Your investment in your career choice eventually becomes a life-cycle of investments which entails your initial training, your continuous research and investigation into your career choice, your commitment to the profession, and your continuous progression through the job categories and occupation levels from entry-level to advanced positions.
Summary
Generally, the better you are at identifying your passion and aligning it with existing career choices within the economy, then the more cost-effective is your investment and returns on your choice. Since career choices are not necessarily a science, one may need to restart the process until a desired and satisfying career choice is achieved.
What are your thoughts on the subject? Blog now.
For additional mentoring on career choices, advocacy and support, and how one can improve work habits, performance, and personal safety-awareness, registration is complimentary. Register now.
Your career or potential career is that field, track, domain, professional, or vocational pursuit you aspire to work, earn, and profit within. It is important to understand what is your passion and how does it align with potential career choices. Additionally, you need to consider the cost of your choice.
What is your Passion
First, in order to attempt to identify the right career, one should first identify one's motivation, inclination, or disposition of "thinking" and ideology. This identification most likely aligns with potential career choices. Are you so passionate about a certain type of "thinking" that you will be happy whether you were compensated or paid or not? Are you so passionate about for example discovering properties of chemical action or reaction that you aspire to be a career Chemist or enter the field of Research and Chemistry? Or, are you passionate about the flow, transport, and movement of goods and services through the economy that you aspire to enter into a career of logistics? Therefore, assessing your "thinking" passion, ensuring it meets ethical, moral, and legal standards all sum up to your first objective towards your career choice.
Selecting or trying your Career Choice
Second, your next objective is to determine how your passion aligns with careers within existing societal institutions at least at the economic, political, social, or other level. Numerous careers exist within numerous economic sectors of society such as finance, business, manufacturing, etc. For example, if you are inclined towards the investigation of chemical properties, then you will most likely explore sectors of the economy such as research, education, manufacturing or pharmacy among others. If your passion does not align with existing economy sectors then perhaps you are on the verge of an innovation and development of new value.
Investing in your Career Choice
Third, your next objective is to assess how much effort and resources are required to realize your passion as it relates to your selected career choice. If you've determined that your career choice is that of for example a Chemist, then determine what stage are you at occupationally, educationally, and financially in order to embark on your desired career journey. Whether you're currently in grade school or you're in an existing professional occupation, your achievement of your desired career will depend on your motivation as well as the required life-cycle of assessment, planning, and implementation to achieve your desired career goal.
Investment in your career marks or tests the seriousness of your goals. This involves your time, effort, and resources that are all very very very limited. The better you were at identifying your passion, aligning with your career choices within potential economic sectors, and planning your investment, that much safer and rewarding will be your investments in your ultimate career choice.
Your investment in your career choice eventually becomes a life-cycle of investments which entails your initial training, your continuous research and investigation into your career choice, your commitment to the profession, and your continuous progression through the job categories and occupation levels from entry-level to advanced positions.
Summary
Generally, the better you are at identifying your passion and aligning it with existing career choices within the economy, then the more cost-effective is your investment and returns on your choice. Since career choices are not necessarily a science, one may need to restart the process until a desired and satisfying career choice is achieved.
What are your thoughts on the subject? Blog now.
For additional mentoring on career choices, advocacy and support, and how one can improve work habits, performance, and personal safety-awareness, registration is complimentary. Register now.
Feel free to submit your questions, comments, or suggestions which will be included in future article updates.
decisionSmartDS+(C)2017 Management Forensics Institute