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Time To Make A Change
Making Healthy Career Transitions
Do you have a healthy career?
If you are confronted with a transition you did not
initiate, will you thrive? Most professionals will change
direction several times during their career, or even
transform their careers completely.
Consider Nathan Myrhvold, who
began with a PhD in theoretical physics, then worked in
cosmology with Stephen Hawking, and was then Chief
Technology Officer at Microsoft (and Bill Gates' right-hand
man). He made the switch after creating a software program -
incidental to his research - that is the mathematics
equivalent of common word processing software.
Everyone will experience a
career transition, whether self initiated because of a
mismatch, or caused by a change in the economic scene. Are
you able to break out of the understandable individual
rigidities caused by being a highly trained professional?
Will credentialism or organizational inflexibility trap you?
Will you be able to implement productive career change
strategies?
You are able to learn the
transition skills required to improve your own career
satisfaction, earning increased responsibility, better
working conditions, fuller use of skills and talents, and
even higher compensation.
My studies of "career-change
champions" have identified the beliefs which account for
their success. Of course, semi-chance events play a powerful
role in career transitions. However, it is up to us to seize
opportunities and use them to advance our careers.
To test your career health
and preparedness for change, ask yourself how often you do
or agree with each of the following... "never", "sometimes"
or "always"?
- I intuitively develop
abiding relationships with my friends and colleagues.
- Professional colleagues,
mentors, advisors and role models were important in my
life.
- Life is full of random
events I attempt to convert to adventures.
- In my professional and
social life, I present my truest and best self.
- I know what I can change,
what I can't and the difference between them.
- I redirect my energies,
instincts and desires into useful pursuits.
- Humility is a great
virtue.
- The harder the work, the
luckier I get.
- I work hard and play hard.
- Decisions I made at
important turning points in my career were beneficial to
my career.
- I am energetic and
optimistic about my career and my life.
- I gain energy, pleasure
and renewal from my work or career.
- Excellent job
opportunities and offers well-suited to me have come my
way as if by chance.
Your career health is good if
you were able to answer "always" to three-quarters of the
questions.
Most professionals will
change direction several times during their career, or even
transform their career completely.
In the 5th century BC,
Hypocrites said that it is less important to know what
disease the person has, than what person has the disease.
Similarly, today it is less important to know what career
the person has than the person who has the career. When
careers and people fit, their careers are as good as they
are.
To establish a gold standard
of "career health" against which we can compare ourselves
and our potential for "occupational mobility", I have
studied the healthy career-change patterns and versatile
vocational strategies of successful "career-changers". While
conducting this research I talked to about 100 top-class
physicists, scientists, and other qualified professionals. I
call them "career-change champions" because they have
successfully transformed their careers often, easily, and
happily.
I interviewed champions such
as Robert Frosch, who received his PhD in theoretical and
quantum physics, and went on to become head of Hudson Labs,
Assistant Secretary of Defense, head of NASA, an executive
at UN Environmental Affairs, head of General Motors Research
Labs, and a Fellow at the John F Kennedy School of
Government, Harvard University. Then there's Joseph Atick,
who began in string theory, became a computational
neurobiologist, and now heads his own biometrics firm,
Visionics Corporation, which has become the leading
developer of face-recognition technology. David Z. Robinson,
meanwhile, began his career in chemical physics, moved into
optical and electronic instruments and infrared detection
devices, then joined the Office of the President's Science
Advisor working on satellite communications policy. He later
became Vice President for Academic Affairs at New York
University and eventually was made the head of the Carnegie
Commission of Science, Technology, and Government, which
assesses how governments incorporate scientific and
technological knowledge in decision-making and policy.
CAUSE FOR CONCERN
These are the success stories. But, unfortunately,
mismatches between jobs or careers on the one hand, and
people's interests, values and skills on the other, are
common. About a quarter to a half of scientists and other
professionals say they are frustrated or unhappy. They would
not recommend their own careers to their children, or even,
given the chance, would not pursue the same career again.
Such mismatches not only distress the individual, but are
unproductive to an employer or organization. Why does this
happen to intelligent, highly-educated scientists?
Almost a century ago,
Thorstein Veblen, in "Theory of the Leisure Class" (1899)
noticed that the more formal training or schooling and
advanced education we receive, the more unable we are to
achieve practical results in mundane but necessary economic
pursuits, and the less versatile we become. The result is a
pervasive decline of essential skills at the expense of
extremely narrow technical expertise. In effect, by
strengthening one "muscle" (or set of career behaviors or
skills), we become "muscle-bound" in that set, while other
more practical skills become enfeebled or atrophied.
Exercising a favorite muscle will do no good if the
marketplace doesn't need it, especially if we neglect other
muscles that are needed to "get the job done". Veblen called
this phenomenon "trained incapacity".
The root of the problem is
inflexibility. We tend to "over-learn" even complex tasks.
Many of us have thousands of "scripted" job or career
behaviors we act upon when cued by something familiar.
Example: sending out unsolicited resumes when dissatisfied
with your current career or job. Once a pattern of behavior
has been learned it is difficult to change.
Even now, when the
marketplace needs specialized niche talents, many who might
fit the bill have trouble finding the openings that are
going begging. Often, and especially among the "trained
incapacitated", educated individuals have trouble learning
how to market themselves with integrity.
LATERAL MOVES LEAD UPWARDS
Organizations can also suffer from institutional versions of
"trained incapacity", "being educated beyond their marketing
abilities", and "over-learning". The enemy of true
occupational mobility can be organized training programs,
credentialism, professional or trade organizations, rote or
even formal schooling, and bureaucracy.
However some large
corporations recognize this danger and strive to encourage
the occupational mobility of their employee pool, to avoid
rigidity or "addiction to expertise". They see themselves as
miniature labor markets, and their employees as salesmen
offering their skills in a dynamic marketplace. As Parry
Norling, planning director of corporate R&D at Dupont, says:
"Our employees can make career changes because we are large
enough...and we find by doing 'satisfaction surveys' (that)
we have higher career satisfaction when our corporate focus
is on training and development. We have people who move
across or up"
Companies must create and
eliminate jobs in response to changes in the market. When a
job is eliminated, individuals and their families suffer
from emotional and financial dislocation. But it is not just
the individuals who bear the cost. The employers must
provide severance pay and cope with the negative effects on
morale and employee relations. Then they must fill the newly
created jobs, often paying a premium for cutting-edge
skills.
Flexible, resilient
individuals are an extraordinary economic asset. Such
versatile workers shift jobs or careers readily. In so
doing, they lubricate the economic machine and increase
productivity.
CAREER WELL-BEING
Since occupational mobility and versatility can help the
firm and the economy as well as the individual, why is it so
hard to find and encourage? To answer this question, I have
examined the themes that emerged from interviews with my
"career-change champions". My purpose was to find out what
career versatility means in practical terms to these people.
What do they believe about their own careers? What were the
salient turning points in their lives? What attitudes
influenced their decision-making patterns? What, in short,
are the hallmarks of career-change champions?
Some persistent themes emerge
from the collective wisdom of our "career-change champions".
They believe their work is a worthy expression of their life
and gain pleasure from it. They enjoy stretching their
talents and drawing resourcefully from their personal
depths. They believe the harder they work, the luckier they
get. They work hard and play hard. They lead a full and
balanced life. They have a strong sense of who they are.
They think about how their careers change them as people.
These may sound like mere
platitudes, but to career-change champions they are very
deeply-held beliefs.
But can all of us learn to do
what the champions do? Can ordinary mortals walk in the
seven-league boots of genius? Just as we monitor our
physical health by having annual medical check-ups, we can
check our career health by using the career well-being
inventory (see my web site). This exercise was developed
specifically to understand and measure the health of our
careers, our resilience and versatility. We need to discover
how readily we can undergo beneficial career mutations to
keep up with the Darwinian demands of a dynamic economy, and
to improve our satisfaction with work.
The ability to change career
direction can advance economic well-being, our
organizational productivity, and our individual
satisfaction. Those unprepared or unwilling to transfer
their skills from one area to another may impede not only
their own careers and fulfilment but also the progress of
their employing organizations and the economy as a whole.
Career versatility is career destiny.
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