home > Good > business

A Great Ride


by Ronni Mott
December 21, 2011

After nine years with one company, I got a pink slip. It was inevitable. The company had been sold several times, and with each takeover, my department's budget and staff shrank. Nonetheless, when the day arrived, it was a blow. With more than 25 years of experience in marketing and related fields, I knew finding a job to replace the one I lost would be difficult.

A few months later, I had probably sent out hundreds of resumes, resulting in exactly one interview. I didn't get an offer. It was time to try a different approach.

Honestly evaluating my strengths and weaknesses, likes and dislikes, dreams and goals, I quickly realized that I didn't want to spend another minute marketing other people's stuff, but I wasn't clear what my options were.

One afternoon at Lemuria Books, Julia Cameron's "The Artist's Way: A Spiritual Path to Higher Creativity" (Jeremy P. Tarcher/Putnam, 2002, $16.99) kind of jumped into my hand. I had considered myself an artist once upon a time, but that was long ago. Perhaps, I thought, what I needed was a jump-start back to that way of thinking. I paid for my copy and began reading and following Cameron's suggestions that very day.

Long story short, that book was the beginning of my journey to change careers. At the tender age of 50, I began an internship with the Jackson Free Press that, five years later, has me in the managing editor's spot. It's been great fun and hard work. Best of all, I've learned more in the past five years than in the last 10 years of my previous career.

Changing careers at mid-life isn't all that unusual. Sometimes, as in my case, a change occurs because of a layoff or a company closes its doors. Other folks just reach the point where they find their work boring and unsatisfying. AARP reports that about 6 percent of workers over 50 re-evaluate their jobs and careers.

At midlife, we're frequently empty nesters and often single again (or for the first time). Often, our passions have cooled for big money and power. It's natural to become more reflective, interested in simplifying and making a lasting impact.

If you're considering a career change, here are tips for a successful transition:

• Take inventory. Make lists of your accomplishments, competencies and satisfactions. "Affirming your valuable experience and successes helps ground you in your strengths and remind you of what you do well. It serves as a compass and provides refueling for the journey ahead," writes Ellen Ostrow on About.com. If you find yourself struggling, ask your family and friends to help with your lists.

• Clarify your values. What's important to you in your work—creativity, autonomy, intellectual stimulation, power, money, making a difference?

• What do you love to do? What if money were no object? I love yoga, for example, and I love to teach. I combined the two and learned how to teach yoga. It doesn't pay much, especially because I only teach a couple of classes a week, but I enjoy it.

• Gather information. Once you've narrowed down what's important, it's time to figure out what kinds of jobs or careers might match. Check job sites and classified ads. Visit a college career library. Make a list of possible and interesting matches, even if they sound implausible.

• Talk to people already in those jobs or careers. Ask what they love and hate about their job, how they got where they are and if they can offer any advice.

• Learn new skills. It's never too late to go back to school. You may need to brush up on some things, need special certification or even a different degree.

• Offer to work for free or take a pay cut if you can afford it. An internship is a great opportunity to try out a new career. Also look for intra-company opportunities.

• Network. Go to where people in your desired career network, including professional association meetings and chambers of commerce. Mine your contacts for information. In addition to face-to-face networking, don't forget social networking sites such as LinkedIn.

• Rewrite your resume to highlight the skills you have acquired throughout your career that are relevant and transferable to your new job.

• Relax and enjoy the journey. Nothing is written in stone. Changing a career can be scary and frustrating, but it can also be invigorating, exhilarating and liberating. If you can embrace it, this can be one of the most rewarding times of your life.

Resources:
• About.com Job Searching (http://jobsearch.about.com)
• Forbes magazine "Making a Midlife Career Change."
http://www.midlife-career-change.com
http://www.careerchangepathways.com

 
posted by .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address) on 12/21/11 at 06:16 PM. [printer version]    Share |

COMMENTS

You are not logged in. To post a comment, you must be a registered user and logged in. Click here to register or click here to log in.

Log in to JFP using Facebook

:: recentcomments

May 23, 2012 | 01:37 PM
Bryant Signs Voter ID Bill
golden eagle: Wow, my English was bad on the previous post. You know how it is on these iPhones.
May 23, 2012 | 12:30 PM
Bryant Signs Voter ID Bill
golden eagle: @Jess, I think the word you're looking for is "assassination". @Darryl, do we really know that the majority of MS'ians wanted this, when you consider that this was a ...
May 23, 2012 | 12:18 PM
Bryant Signs Voter ID Bill
DonnaLadd: I can only hope that the reason that this bill passed is that, for once, our lawmakers listened to the majority of Mississippians and crafted this bill. Considering that the ...
May 23, 2012 | 11:57 AM
Bryant Signs Voter ID Bill
justjess: @Darryl 5/23 "....for once, our lawmakers listened to the majority of Mississippians and crafted this bill." My question is still on the table: What were you "majority ...
May 23, 2012 | 05:26 AM
Bryant Signs Voter ID Bill
Darryl: justjess, I can only hope that the reason that this bill passed is that, for once, our lawmakers listened to the majority of Mississippians and crafted this bill. But, recall, that ...
May 22, 2012 | 04:26 PM
One Night at Fenian's
DonnaLadd: ... because if there is anything The Clarion-Ledger can muster the resources to do, it's show up any night of the week and take drunk pictures. Meantime, they crib our sports stories. ...
May 22, 2012 | 03:53 PM
One Night at Fenian's
Rico: Next time just call Metro Mix at the C-L and have them come and take some pretty pictures for the newspaper. Hell, the got some on karaoke night Monday.
May 22, 2012 | 02:07 PM
[Editorial] To Do Its Job, Council Must Show Up
RobbieR: And Chokwe wants to run for Mayor? Hopefully the citizens of Jackson don't fall for this clown's rhetoric.
May 22, 2012 | 01:15 PM
Catholics Sue Over Birth Control Rule
Brian C Johnson: I cannot decide whether this is a vanity lawsuit, in the sense that the bishops know they stand little chance of prevailing in court. Or to put it more charitably, ...
May 22, 2012 | 01:00 PM
Bryant Signs Voter ID Bill
Brian C Johnson: Darryl, I think it is simply a statement of fact that African Americans in Mississippi are less likely to have the required photo ID. If so, the new law is discriminatory in ...
May 22, 2012 | 11:25 AM
Bryant Signs Voter ID Bill
Duan C.: I am in agreement with Golden Eagle - requiring I.D. ties a fee into voting, the only reason why its considered "discriminatory" towards black, is because it places back into an era ...
May 22, 2012 | 10:22 AM
Person of the Day: Rep. Andy Gipson
RobbieR: What? I was clearly referring to Bennie Thompson, not Rep. Gipson. Rep. Bennie Thomson represents Mississippi's 2nd Congressional district; Darryl noted that he rep'd the ...
May 22, 2012 | 09:59 AM
Bryant Signs Voter ID Bill
justjess: Darryl, out of my "simple ignorance" I ask you this "little question:" Why are registered voters here in the State of Mississippi being asked to produce a picture ID? When the State ...
May 22, 2012 | 08:49 AM
Person of the Day: Rep. Andy Gipson
Duan C.: @ Robbie R - you lost me on that one? They have him listed in the 77th District - covering Rankin, Simpson, and Smith counties?
May 22, 2012 | 08:47 AM
Bryant Signs Voter ID Bill
bill_jackson: I would be interested to know what percentage of the voting age population does not have identification in this day and age.

100 recent comments »

 


click to view "flip" version of this week's print issue

 

Guests online: 289
Logged-in members: 1
Anonymous members: 2
Elapsed time: 2.5766
The most number of visitors ever was 1961 at once on 03/27/2012
currently online: Queen601

 

© Jackson Free Press, Inc. - portions of code by CC with EE. User agreement and privacy statement.
phone: 601-362-6121 (ext 11 sales, ext 16 editorial, ext 17 publisher)
fax: 601-510-9019 * P.O. Box 5067 * Jackson, MS * 39296