starting your job search

27
Starting Your Job Search: Figure Out What You Like to Do

Upload: wiley

Post on 21-Apr-2017

15.602 views

Category:

Career


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Starting Your Job Search

Starting Your Job Search: Figure Out What You Like to Do

Page 2: Starting Your Job Search

Then

“What do youwant to be when

you grow up?”

“What exactly do you want your day-to-day

job experience tobe like?”

Now

Page 3: Starting Your Job Search

If you could choose your ideal job

(within reason, of course), what would

you actually be doing and under what

conditions would you be doing it?

Page 4: Starting Your Job Search

Consider:

Big or small company?

By yourself or in a team?

In an office or on the road?

At a desk or outside?

Financial motivationor emotional motivation?

Animals? People? Kids?

Page 5: Starting Your Job Search

To help you answer that question,

do the following 4-step exercise.

Page 6: Starting Your Job Search

1. Develop a listof activities

Page 7: Starting Your Job Search

Write down as many activities as

you can think of (job-related and

otherwise) that you have done

over the years. It doesn’t matter

whether you enjoyed the activity.

Page 8: Starting Your Job Search

If you have had limited professional

work experience, don’t worry.

Write down leisure activities or

specific tasks that you performed

on your own or in an organization.

Page 9: Starting Your Job Search

Examples:✔ Recruited and hired new waiters and waitresses

✔ Conducted training programs

✔ Greeted and seated guests

✔ Developed and wrote training manuals

✔ Sold ra� e tickets door to door

✔ Managed Little League baseball team

✔ Served food in homeless shelter

✔ Collected stamps

✔ Worked as a stage manager for an amateur theater group

✔ Did volunteer work in a hospital

✔ Headed PTA fundraising drive

Page 10: Starting Your Job Search

Write down as many of these tasks

as possible. The more activities the

better this exercise works.

Page 11: Starting Your Job Search

2. Measure yourlikes and dislikes

Page 12: Starting Your Job Search

Assign a satisfaction/dissatisfaction

rating to each item on the list.

Don’t overthink.

Page 13: Starting Your Job Search

Use a scale of –10 to +10.

Enjoyable tasks get a 9 or 10.

Unenjoyable tasks get a -9 or -10.

Page 14: Starting Your Job Search

3. Analyze your list

Page 15: Starting Your Job Search

Isolate tasks that come out on

opposite ends of the spectrum

(7 or above & -7 and below)

Page 16: Starting Your Job Search

Think about each item and ask

yourself, “What about this activity

did I enjoy or find awful?”

Page 17: Starting Your Job Search

4. Look for patterns

Page 18: Starting Your Job Search

Read over and analyze your

answers to the preceding questions.

See if you can uncover certain

patterns and common threads.

Page 19: Starting Your Job Search

If you find that a common

thread among the activities that

brought you satisfaction is people,

it’s a safe bet that you’re an extrovert.

Page 20: Starting Your Job Search

If one of the common threads

is helping other people, your

tendencies are service-oriented.

Page 21: Starting Your Job Search

But don’tstop there.

Page 22: Starting Your Job Search

Narrow the “people” pattern down.

Do you like working with people as

part of a team, managing people,

training people?

Page 23: Starting Your Job Search

Do the activities that you find

satisfying (or unsatisfying)

call for problem-solving skills or

creativity? Is there a competitive

aspect to those activities, or are

they cooperative?

Page 24: Starting Your Job Search

The important thing about this

exercise is not to judge yourself.

Don’t think in terms of whether you

SHOULD OR SHOULDN’T FINDan activity satisfying.

Page 25: Starting Your Job Search

If you list enough activities — 25 is

not an excessive amount to work

with — you should be able to find

some patterns.

Page 26: Starting Your Job Search

DON’T RUSH THIS EXERCISE.

The more insights you gain from

this stage of job targeting, the easier

it will be for you to complete the other

stages of the job searching process.

Page 27: Starting Your Job Search

Jump-start your job hunt with these For Dummies books:

Darts © Getty Images/iStockphotoOnline job � nder button © iStockphotoApplication for employment © Getty Images/iStockphoto

Content from Job Hunting for Dummies by Max Messmer.Learn more: http://bit.ly/JobHuntingFD