Do You Know the ABCs of Career Change?
by Deborah Walker, Career Coach & Resume Writer, CCMC. Note: Contact Deb at deb@AlphaAdvantage.com
Do You Know the ABCs of Career Change?
Making a career change is one of the toughest job-search challenges.
For clarification, career change means much more than job change. A
career change means choosing a completely new profession or
industry. A job change is simply changing employers within the
same industry and profession.
The two main reasons people choose to change careers are listed
below:
• The industry or occupation becomes obsolete (or is
outsourced overseas)
• Job dissatisfaction (If you dread going to work on
Monday morning, you're probably in this category.)
What makes a career change so difficult? After all, most job
seekers attempting a career change know exactly why they would do well
in a new profession or industry. The problem comes down to
communication. Most job seekers have difficulty communicating in their
resume their ability to excel in a new career. Resumes, by definition,
focus on career experience (history), but career changers need
employers to see their expertise (current skills) in order to be viewed
as a viable candidate.
If you are attempting a career change, it becomes easier when you
understand the ABC's of career change:
A: Assess
B: Bridge
C: Communicate
Assess what you want changed.
Before you can make a successful change, you must decide what needs
changing. Is it the duties you perform? Your overbearing
boss? Your current geographic location? The industry
you work in? The size of company you work for? The level of
responsibility you hold? Once you pinpoint your exact source of
unhappiness, you're on your way to making the correct choice for
change.
Bridge the gap between what you've done and what you want to
do.
The key to selling yourself based on your expertise rather than your
experience is transferable skills. Transferable skills work like
bridges to help you cross over from one industry to another or one
occupation to another. Transferable skills are those skills you
now possess that qualify you as a viable candidate for your career
change.
Communicate your ability to excel in your new profession or
industry.
Your resume is your front-line communication tool to prospective
employers. No matter how well you interview, if your resume doesn't
sell you, there won't be an opportunity to convince them in
person. Use your accomplishments to prove the strength of your
transferable skills, and you'll get interviews faster and with more
enthusiasm.
An experienced career coach can help you apply these ABCs to your
current resume and your interview skills. Once you practice the ABCs of
career change you'll be on your way to changing your career and
changing your life—for the better!