The Sunday
Times July 6, 2008
YOUR PERSONAL
ADVISER: CAREER
Q "I have been a writer for over 15 years,
working for just one employer. I feel jaded and seem to have lost my
enthusiasm for work. As my job requires me to move around, interview
people and then rush back to write my stories, I need fairly high energy levels
to do a good job.
My greatest concern
is that I am no longer that hungry to chase after stories. My supervisor has noticed this lack of
enthusiasm/energy and has given me several pep talks. I fear I might be fired
if I continue in this vein.
Over the past six
months, I have been scanning the recruitment advertisements, but I haven’t
found anything suitable. Just this month, it suddenly dawned on me that I don’t know what I’m looking for as my
next career.
I am single and have
limited financial obligations. If I
leave my current job without another in hand, how would this look to prospective
employers? I feel really lost. On a number of occasions, I have been tempted
to just throw in the towel and take off somewhere to 'find
myself'. Can you please advise me on what I should do?
A As you have been writing for a living
for a long time, and with just one employer at that, I feel there could be two
key reasons for the way you are feeling.
You could be feeling burnt out – and you
certainly seem to be exhibiting the symptoms.
However, you also mention that you have been looking for alternative
employment over the past six months, so burn-out might not be the main problem.
It could be that you
really need to find that next chapter in your career/life.
Everyone has what
career coaches term ‘embedded life interests’ (ELIs).
These refer to intrinsic interests that come about through your
experiences, people we meet and interact with, and changes in your personal
life. Most of the time, these interests
tend not to change too drastically. However,
a dramatic incident in your life could cause changes in your ELIs.
For example, since
the Sept 11 terrorist attacks on the World Trade Centre in the US, some of the
people who were working there have cut back on their careers to spend quality
time with their loved ones. They witnessed death with their own eyes and
realized that they could be ‘here today, and gone tomorrow’.
Throwing away your
current job to go off to some soul
searching and find yourself sounds like a scene out of a Hollywood
movie. Chances are, it would not improve
the situation or make you any the wiser.
Instead, a more practical
strategy would be to find out what your current ELIs are. There are psychometric tools in the
marketplace and trained career coaches with whom you could work with to pinpoint
your ELIs.
You should also
identify what your key transferable strengths/skills are. Besides writing, you should also be well-versed
in the art of interviewing and working
with people, for example. If you are doing
financial reporting, then you are probably also good with financial numbers and
at reading company data. I am sure you also
have a wide network of contacts.
Once you have a better
awareness of your ELIs
and key transferable strengths/skills, you can be more focused when looking for
your next job.
As you have been in
one industry and with one company for so long, I suspect you might need to take
a while to find an employer who is willing to hire you for a job you might not
have performed before. Nevertheless, the task is not impossible - it is just
more challenging. Whether you will
succeed also depends on factors such as your academic background, age, the state
of the job market, and how well you write your resume and do at your interviews.
Two final pieces of
advice: One, motivate yourself to do all that is necessary in the meantime to
ensure you do not get fired. Second,
even if you are able to afford it, try not to resign from your current job
without first finding another one. Most
employers do not look at such a decision very positively. Of course, you may want to look at
self-employment.
Paul Heng, Founder
NeXT Career Consulting Group, Asia