Career Planning Ideas and Guide

Geophysicist Career Planning Section


 

Geophysicist Career Planning
Navigation


|

Career Network Home Page
Partners
Tell A Friend about us
Whatscollegeandcareerplanning |
Career Training The Key To Your Future! |
Career Planning Portfolios:Resume On Steroids |
Career Planning: Are You Following A Planned Career Path Or Simply A Series Of Jobs? |
Career Planning System |
Your Career Toolbox Use All The Tools! |
Career Development Planning |
Career Training The Key To Your Future! |
Career Planning |
Career Planning System |
Career Planning Start With The Basics To Win! |
Career Planning Portfolios:Resume On Steroids |
Career Planning And Development |
Business Career Planning |
Career Planning Test |

List of career planning Articles


Geophysicist Career Planning Best seller

Buy it Now!





Social bookmarking
You like it? Share it!
socialize it

Newsletter

Subscribe to our newsletter AND receive our exclusive Special Report on career planning
Email:
First Name:



Main Geophysicist Career Planning sponsors


 

 

Welcome to Career Planning Ideas and Guide

 

Geophysicist Career Planning Article

Thumbnail example. For a permanent link to this article, or to bookmark it for further reading, click here.


You may also listen to this article by using the following controls.

Career Planning: Are you following a planned career path or simply a series of jobs?

from: John Groth

Successfully managing your own career is critical for your financial and personal well being. Yet it is rarely pursued on a strategic or informed basis. Career planning, particularly in the technology field, is more and more the responsibility of the individual. Mostly, since most people today end up working for many employers. The overall basis for more successful career management includes developing career plans that are applicable at different stages in your career.


Although living in the information age, there is few comprehensive career information and planning resources available online. Exploring career versus job information is more readily available once you have focused on a career path, such as technology or even further, within a specific industry. Career training in college consists largely on how to interview and write a resume. There seems to be limited formal training programs available about career choices.

When employed the employer generally provides training, successive jobs, and a defined career ladder to the degree that it unites with the organization's needs and objectives. Career coaches mainly work via large employers and focus on building leadership skills, not generally on developing career plans. Outplacement counselors generally help people focus on job searches rather than career plans. Recruiters are looking to fill job positions with top candidates for employers who are their clients and normally do not provide career planning services for individuals.

We can generally fit career planning as having three major phases: early stage from ages 16 to 33; middle, from 34 to 52; and later, beyond 53. Many times, early career choices are highly influenced by parents, relatives, teachers or close friends. The choices of technical schools, colleges or graduate schools, as well as majors, begin to focus interests for career paths.

It is important, in the early stages of a career planning, to carefully make choices, as initial decisions can have a major impact on longer term career success and ultimately, happiness.

Mid-stage career planning and effort usually reflects the initial experiences and jobs one has had with his or her early career. It generally is an extension of that experience. At this stage, there may be a thread of a career track, but job moves and knowledge growth during this phase that are not well planned or executed can result in important limits to career-growth.

Late-stage career planning frequently results from the need to find the right position in one's career after an early retirement or a reduction in force. Career choices at this stage generally reflect more entrepreneurial, part time, or flexible working arrangements. This is when traditional employment limitations as well as long developed interests come more into focus.

Career planning at each stage of a person’s working career can best be analyzed by considering the following:
(1) Take stock of your career. Define your career and objectives at regular intervals preferably at least once a year. Do it in writing. (2) Research and identify possible career options that could meet those career objectives. (3) Evaluate your skills, personality, training and experience. Develop a plan so you can pursue your career objectives. (4) Make a decision as to which career options are the best. Build a plan in the near, medium and long term to reach your career objectives. (5) Be flexible as you monitor your progress. Refine the plan, challenge yourself.

It's critical for you to invest in career planning during each stage of a successful career for short-, medium- and long-term achievement. Ask yourself, are you following a well defined career roadmap or simply working a succession of jobs? If you said yes to the latter, it’s never to late to get started.


Other Geophysicist Career Planning related Articles

Career Planning: Your Key To Your Future
Financial Planning Career
Career Planning System
Career Planning Development
Career Planning Portfolios:Resume On Steroids

Do you want to contribute to our site : submit your articles HERE


 

Geophysicist Career Planning News

Meet the Judges: Ron Huxter - ITWorld Canada


Meet the Judges: Ron Huxter
ITWorld Canada
Ron Huxter talks about how his geophysics career morphed into 25 years in government IT Ron Huxter is the corporate chief technology officer for the ...

Read more...


Memories and new goals for expats leaving the UAE - National


Memories and new goals for expats leaving the UAE
National
Adil is a geophysicist and Jane is a senior lecturer in tourism and event management. They plan to move to Edinburgh within the next five years. ...

and more »

Read more...


How To Drive On Mars - Jalopnik (blog)


How To Drive On Mars
Jalopnik (blog)
NASA geophysicist Brian Glass, the SPR-Bravo traverse leader, reads out his GPS coordinates and a weather update. Read is the wrong verb. ...

Read more...


A Cosmologist Resists Academia's Work-Life Norms - ScienceCareers.org


A Cosmologist Resists Academia's Work-Life Norms
ScienceCareers.org
Bridle encountered her first real panic about balancing career and home life while planning to have a baby early last year. "I worried a lot about having a ...

Read more...


Water Detective: Tracing the Source of Widespread Arsenic Poisoning - truthout


Water Detective: Tracing the Source of Widespread Arsenic Poisoning
truthout
M.King Hubbert, a geophysicist who died in 1989, is best known for correctly predicting in 1956 that US domestic oil production would peak within 10 to 15 ...

Read more...