Saturday, May 30, 2020
The Sneaky Way To Break Into A New Career
The Sneaky Way To Break Into A New Career Expert Advice > How to move into your new career The Sneaky Way To Break Into A New Career * Image by Victor1558 Can't decide between a few new career ideas? Or know what you'd like to do but don't know how to break into the new work area? John Williams suggests a proactive way to help with indecision and build up your experience. There are two big challenges to changing career: discovering what career youâd actually like to pursue and then breaking into it. Years ago, I stumbled upon a counter-intuitive technique career-shifters use to solve both problems. First If youâre in the âDonât know what I want to doâ camp, then you need to know this: thinking (and, for that matter, researching) will only take you so far. The simple truth is that you donât work out what you enjoy by thinking about it, you find out by doing it. Itâs experience that enables you to make a career decision. Anything else is an empty guess. Second, when youâre moving into a completely different field, the normal ways to get a job donât work so well. HR departments look sniffily at your CV when they donât immediately see five yearsâ closely-related experience. Recruitment agencies aren't much better. That's not surprising, really, because their business model is to fill a post with a tight match as quickly as possible and that doesnât favour you, with years spent in a different field. Work less - play more Given all this, are you ready for a bit of rule-breaking? How about doing something fun that sidesteps these problems? If you get it right, rather than plugging away with CVs and interviews trying to persuade someone to take you on, you might find employers come to you. To make this work, you need to start thinking less like a employee or worker and more like an a âplayerâ â" by which I mean someone who breaks the rules, follows their own heart, focuses on the things that are most exciting for them, and takes their career into their own hands instead of waiting for someone to hand them the right opportunity. Stop thinking - start doing Hereâs how to do it. Choose a field you think you think youâd like to move into (even if youâre not sure) and throw yourself into it right away â" in your spare time, if necessary. Run what I call a âplay projectâ lasting around 30 days: do a project youâd enjoy doing in the area you want to move into and produce something to show for it at the end. Donât just spend 30 days researching - do something in the real world. Here are 5 examples: Start a blog and write about the field you want to move into. Sarada Chaudhuri enjoyed organising some events as part of her job in a charity and now wanted to shift career altogether into the events industry. She started a blog called The Event Detective and started helping me run my monthly Scanners Night event for creative people. Before long, Sarada had won her first two clients, enabling her to quit her job. Try a bit of âthought leadershipâ by writing a white paper. Often you can get the content by emailing or calling a bunch of experts in your new field and asking them a set of questions. Youâll be surprised how accessible these people often are! I did this back when I was a consultant and got quotes from the heads of technology at several of the UKâs major broadcasters. I then sent this out to other broadcasters to help me get noticed and win work. If you want to move into a creative field in which you donât have a track record, create something to show the kind of work you want to do. Build a website, design an ad for a friendâs business, or design a one-off magazine. Ask to help organise the national conference for your new field or start your own meetup or networking event. Are you a programmer wanting to move into app development? Create an app you'd like to use yourself and get it on the app stores. A play project is a deceptively powerful thing: itâs the ultimate cure when youâve got stuck in your head trying to think of the perfect career. But donât be surprised if a play project leads you into a completely unexpected direction â" once your creative juices are flowing, all sorts of new ideas occur to you. Your play project will also allow you to experience this new line of work and see if you like it â" without quitting your job. It gets you out (or online) meeting people, and you open the door to those kind of happy coincidences that happen once youâre in motion. Display your end product Once youâve completed your play project, youâll have something to show potential employers. And if it goes really well, you might get noticed by someone who can hire you while youâre still out there making it happen. The more daring and significant your play project, the more likely you are to get noticed. So, whatâs your play project? What 30 Day Project would be exciting for you to do and produce something tangible that you can then point people to? What idea can you trial out in the next month on a small, inexpensive way? Leave a comment below. John Williams is author of bestselling book âScrew Work Letâs Play (How to do what you love and get paid for itâ). Hide this article from listing pages:
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