Monday 4 August 2014

How to find out the right career for you

What we do somehow always forms a large part of the puzzle when it comes to answering who we are. We are living in a society where our professional life and identity define to a great extent our social standing and background. With so much importance on career, it goes without saying that there is immense pressure to choose the right career. Not that you cannot change your career, but we all know what a lengthy and time consuming process that can be, especially when there are other financial and family responsibilities. This is exactly why it is important to carefully choose a career and get the right academic qualifications. Hard work, overtime, sleepless nights and deadlines all seem a lot more meaningful when you actually love your work.

Here are some tips to identify the right career choice for you.
  • Capitalizing on your strengths has a lot to do with the right career choice. For example, if you have a really analytical and mathematical mind and love numbers, then accounting, risk consulting, audit, etc. may be the right industries for you. But if you choose this career only because everyone else thinks it has a bright future, then you are obviously going down the wrong road. Nobody knows your strengths better than you; so it is best to define what comes naturally and effortlessly to you.
  • The next thing to identify is what do you see yourself doing every single day? Some people love the idea of sitting in a fabulous office in a glass building while others simply cringe at the idea of having a desk job. Do you have a more outgoing personality or do you prefer a desk job with a small team? How are your interpersonal skills? What about your convincing abilities? These will all define whether you will do wonders at a back-end job or as front end person.
  • Some jobs involve a lot of traveling, moving around and adapting in new environments, while others may involve constant thinking and analyzing of strategies. Depending on the type of personality and attitude you have, you can decide what kind of high pressure situations you will be best equipped to manage. 
Some of us are luckier in the career department than others. Some people just know at a very early age what they are meant to do when they grow up. If you have always known what career you are meant to live and breathe, by no means take a second guess. Go ahead and become a voracious consumer of all the possible information and knowledge in your industry and dive in head first. 

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