NEW YEAR, NEW CAREER: THE POWER PLAN TO ACHIEVE CAREER SUCCESS IN 2006
Nationally-recognized career consultant Ford R. Myers, president of Haverford, PA-based Career Potential has developed the “New Year, New Career” campaign. This six-step “Power Plan” is designed to help individuals make the most of their current career or find a new and more satisfying one.
Over the next 6 issues, Myers will take AmaZe readers on a journey to, "Achieve ultimate career satisfaction and success." |
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Step One: Performing an Internal Audit
Do you hope to get your career on track in 2006, with more power and momentum than ever before?
Are you prepared to create the focused and productive career that you know you are capable of having -- one that will give you great satisfaction and financial reward? When you think back to prior career transitions, did you also believe that you were finally going to “get it right”?
It is a sobering fact that more than 75% of adults who try to realign their careers lose momentum and give up within a few months. Many are waiting for their jobs to get better, passively hoping that circumstances will improve someday. But deep inside, we know one thing for sure. Careers do not get better by themselves. We have many previous years of work experience to prove this!
So the pressing question is: What will make this transition different from previous attempts to control your career? The answer: plan, then take action!
You have the power and ability to take charge of your career. The following eight principles will provide you with the items you need to perform a candid and effective “internal audit” of your career situation.
1. Understand that success is not an accident, but a planned event.
• Most people actually spend more time planning their vacations than designing their careers.
• Many people think they lack discipline or are lazy, but the real issue is a lack of knowledge.
• Career change takes time, and it is important to understand the necessary components that produce desired results.
2. Accept the fact that you are fully responsible for your career.
• There is a direct relationship between accepting full responsibility for your career and the amount of control you have over your success.
• When you assume responsibility and feel that you are in control, you experience greater personal freedom, power and motivation.
• Don’t make excuses for the problems in your work life. Commit to taking charge of what you create in your career.
3. Create a detailed picture of your ideal career.
• In order to move forward in a powerful way, we must first clarify our career direction.
• This principle is best described in a quote by the popular motivational speaker, Brian Tracy: “Eighty percent of success is being clear on who you are, what you believe in, and what you want.”
• The first requirement is to identify what “success” really means for each of us – in professional, financial, personal and social terms.
• We are often “handed down” definitions of success from our family or culture -- definitions that may not align with our own needs and desires, but definitions to which we remain loyal. We must consciously evaluate these “messages” to see if they are working for us or against us.
4. Identify clear goals based on your own definition of career success.
• One measure of success is identifying meaningful goals and then bringing them into reality.
• Clearly defined goals create focus, direction and positive energy, and they enable you to create an action plan.