Success Advice
Don’t Stress About Your Career Path, Do This Instead
Unlike your parents’ or grandparents’ careers, people no longer enter a job believing they’ll stay with that employer for the long haul
Today’s career paths no longer follow a linear trajectory. Unlike your parents’ or grandparents’ careers, people no longer enter a job believing they’ll stay with that employer for the long haul.
Employers have come to understand that career paths are seldom a straight line, and if candidates display a seemingly unrelated job history, it no longer carries a stigma but shows that they — like anyone with a bit of mettle — are multi-dimensional.
This new world of expanded versions of job experience lends itself more to a career portfolio than a career path. Some may have run across portfolios in schools or colleges where they’ve been utilized to grade students based on “artifacts” and accomplishments — whether related or tangential to their area of study — rather than tests and papers.
Today’s hiring managers have taken a similar approach to reviewing job candidates’ resumes. They search out those who show initiative, courage, and creativity as much, if not more than, experience in their field.
Passionate pursuits are considered a plus — especially when candidates can make a solid case for the cumulative skills they’ve gained and contributions they will therefore be able to make.
For example, if you earned an MBA, but instead of immediately taking a job in finance, you spent the next two years as an outdoor adventure guide in South America, you may have a leg-up in a company doing business in Latin countries over someone who spent the equivalent time behind a desk.
You can parlay your people and language skills, cultural competency, and leadership abilities into your next stage of discovery along your passion-driven career.
Thinking of your career as a portfolio rather than a straight, ascending path allows you to explore different facets of yourself as you make your way in the world.
You could have, for instance, received formal training as a mental health counselor, but then followed a twisting path of positions from doing art therapy with children, to leading women’s retreats, to writing an advice blog, to working on a research team deciphering the cognition of marine animals.
A career portfolio catalogs your range of experiences that combine to describe your own unique professional journey.
Here’s how to take a portfolio-building approach to your career:
1. Follow your gut
If it appears that some of your peers have their lives entirely figured out while you have no clear sense of what next steps to take, don’t despair.
Stay open and flexible to opportunities that feel right, even if they may not slot in nicely with what others expect when paving your professional future. Trust your instincts to lead you on a purposeful path where you can make your mark.
2. Forget about paying your dues
Avoid any mind-numbing, soul-crushing grunt jobs just to get your foot in the door. Instead, choose to engage in work that allows you to shine because you care about what you’re doing and are able to capitalize on the learning it offers.
If your enthusiasm and initiative stand out to those with opportunities to offer, all the better! One caveat, however — make sure to stay technologically savvy as the vast majority of today’s jobs require an adequate level of understanding.
3. Tout your experiences and capabilities
Your portfolio need not be limited to paid positions, but can include anything that reflects your talents, experiences, individuality, and potential adaptability. If your favorite free-time pursuit is birding, include that, too!
Think outside of the resume box and plug those qualities that combine to give a prismatic sense of you. Effectively share your common denominator with employers so they’re aware of how all the disparate parts of your career portfolio add up to a winning combination.
4. Try out different jobs to learn what’s the best fit
Whether sampling separate industries that call to you or exploring different facets of one profession, take a learn-as-you-go attitude until the stars align.
Finding your optimum professional fit can involve any number of factors — from being able to pursue interesting projects, to landing with a creative and respectful team, to work that enables you to achieve a flow state.
Keep in mind, also, that the best fit for you is likely to change over time.
5. Keep a focus on personal as well as professional development
A career portfolio is a way to leverage your strengths, and this includes your strength of character. Strive to develop qualities of discipline, honesty, and integrity.
This involves surrounding yourself with people you admire — ideally as mentors who can help you develop emotional strength — and building your capacity to navigate your career with purpose, clarity, adaptability, and authenticity.
The forces driving today’s professions call for independent and creative problem-solvers. Candidates who have a diverse range of experiences and life lessons will be sought after, providing they craft their career portfolios boldly and decisively.
Shift Your Mindset
11 E’s That Define Every Great Leader And Why Most People Miss Them
If you’ve ever felt the pull to lead, this is your roadmap to turning inner potential into lasting influence.
What Is Leadership, Really?
Leadership is far more than a title or position. It’s the ability to envision a future, inspire others, and align people toward a shared goal. (more…)
Personal Development
This Silent Habit Might Be Sabotaging Your Career
Your temper might be costing you more at work than you realize. Here’s why it matters.
You may be the last to know that you’re walking around with a giant chip on your shoulder. Meanwhile, your coworkers are giving you a wide berth. (more…)
Change Your Mindset
The One Leadership Habit That Separates the Great From the Forgettable
True leaders don’t just speak their values, they live them, proving that integrity is the foundation of lasting influence.
Leadership isn’t defined by titles, speeches, or charisma; it’s defined by action. The most respected leaders in history didn’t just preach their values; they lived them. (more…)
Success Advice
Inside the TikTok Resume Hack That’s Fooling Recruiters (For Now)
A viral TikTok resume trick promises interviews overnight, yet one wrong move could blacklist you from future jobs.
Your job hunt has stalled out. After weeks of submitting online applications, you haven’t had a nibble. (more…)
-
Business4 weeks agoThinking of Buying A Business? These 6 Sectors Quietly Produce the Best Deals
-
Change Your Mindset3 weeks agoWork-Life Balance Isn’t a Myth: Here’s How to Actually Make It Happen
-
Change Your Mindset4 weeks agoThe Four Types of Happiness: Which One Are You Living In?
-
Life3 weeks ago9 Harsh Truths Every Young Man Must Face to Succeed in the Modern World
-
Success Advice2 weeks agoInside the TikTok Resume Hack That’s Fooling Recruiters (For Now)
-
Change Your Mindset2 weeks agoThe One Leadership Habit That Separates the Great From the Forgettable
-
Personal Development1 week agoThis Silent Habit Might Be Sabotaging Your Career
-
Business5 days agoWhy Your E-Commerce Fulfilment Is Probably Broken (And How to Fix It)


