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You are here: Home / Archives for Career change

Career change

Career Reinvention

June 25, 2020 By //  by Rachel Brushfield

Many people at the moment, because of shrinking sectors are being forced to rethink their careers. They may have been with the same company or in the same profession for their whole lives, so this can feel very very daunting.

In times of economic growth, I help people change career direction because they want to, e.g. for better work life balance, to have more fulfilling work, or to turn an enjoyable hobby into paid work.

Experience of career reinvention

I also have alot of experience of helping people reinvent themselves, because they have to, i.e. redundancy. My company was one of the first to be awarded a contract to do ‘Steer your career’ workshops after the credit crunch in 2007/2008, so we have lots of experience to support people being made redundant at this time.

I have also done many career events and workshops for membership organisations including the Law Society, ICAEW and the Chartered Institute of Personnel Development (CIPD) on portfolio careers, career reinvention, career strategy, personal branding to name a few.

Why I love career reinvention

I love career reinvention because it is helping people to see what they find it hard to see themselves as they are too close and seeing their confidence grow as they work out what they are going to do and how they are going to make it happen, with my support.

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Career coaching is both practical and creative. One of my favourite client briefs is starting with a ‘blank sheet of paper’ i.e. a client who doesn’t know what else they could do, but do know that they have to or want to reinvent themselves in their career.

I have reinvented my own career. See my LinkedIn profile for detail: Rachel Brushfield’s LinkedIn profile

One trick pony

Often my career coaching clients feel that they are ’one trick ponies’ having done the same thing for years, when actually they have hugely transferable skills and just need help to see this and to market themselves, as they feel rusty, not having updated their CV or had an interview in ages.

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Career transition client examples

My clients’ career reinvention transitions include:

  • An insurance broker becoming a teacher of children to learn the piano
  • A barrister becoming a company secretary
  • A direct marketing expert becoming a self employed photographer
  • A human rights lawyer retraining as a dance therapist
  • An education lawyer moving into music management
  • A project manager setting up a company doing cheese holidays in France

Common barriers to career reinvention

There are many barriers in people’s minds to career change, some actual and some perceived:

·       Fear of change/uncertainty

·       Resistance from partners, peers or parents

·       Worrying about money, making the wrong decision or taking a step down the ladder having worked so hard to progress up it

·       Not knowing what you don’t know

·       Being in the dark about how to find out about new options 

·       Believing they are ‘too old’ to change

·       Pleasing others e.g. parents living their lives through their children’s success instead of focusing on their happiness

·       Lack of time

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·       Not wanting to let go of a benefit of the current job e.g. being admired at parties for being a Doctor

11 Tips to reinvent your career

1.  Research employment growth areas; sectors and jobs

2.  Think about when you have felt most alive and fulfilled in your work and how you can have more of this

3.  Source examples of achievements and initiatives from outside your career to demonstrate your marketability

4.  Think your career change through thoroughly and create a long term vision with small short term steps

5.  Make time regularly to make your change happen

6.  Research your options and ensure they will give you what’s important to you e.g. security, learning or challenge

7.  Consider retraining and acquiring new skills to become more marketable

8.  Analyse what makes you distinctive to other people in your field – that unique combination of your skills, qualities and life and work experiences – this is your unique ‘brand’

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9.  Speak to people already doing what you want to do to get inside knowledge

10.               Be creative about how you can get experience to prove your capability and demonstrate the transferability of your skills in a new area e.g. do voluntary work, help out a friend’s business etc 

11. Enlist the support of an experienced career coach

Get in touch

Client testimonials

“Energise helped me focus on my strengths at a very negative time for me, during redundancy. I found the whole process very rewarding.”

“Coaching has given me extra confidence. The process was very rewarding. The CV now looks punchier, and I feel ME again.”

“Coaching with Energise has given me choices, freedom and liberation.”

“Coaching gave me an objective, practical and understanding sounding board when I needed to get my life back in gear again. It really is a personal service that works around who you really are and what you really want to do. “

“Coaching gave me a positive attitude, confidence and insight. It has been instrumental in my success and by setting targets and deadlines it has speeded up the whole process of finding another job.”

More client testimonials

Filed Under: Career change Tagged With: Career change, career pivot, career reinvention, energise the talent liberation company, portfolio careers, rachel brushfield, redundancy, the talent liberator

What’s your career insurance?

June 23, 2020 By //  by Rachel Brushfield

It is vital in uncertain times to have career ‘insurance’ – a plan ‘A’, ‘B’ and ‘C’ for your career. 

Do you?

Not having an insurance policy for your career is like driving a car in winter with only one headlight, a 10 year old map, a nearly empty tank of petrol with no spare petrol can in the boot and with one wing mirror hanging off.

You wouldn’t, would you?

Why then, do most people do the equivalent with their career?

You only have to look at what has happened during the coronavirus period to see the danger of how fast a sector can change.

So – what’s your career plan ‘A’, ‘B’ and ‘C’? 

Reasons for neglecting this vital area include:

·        Fear: Of feeling regret and disappointment

·        Time poor: Let other’s needs take precedence

·        Overwhelm: Don’t know where to start

·        Empty toolbox: Don’t have the tools and frameworks

·        Short termism: Focus on the here and now

·        Life stage: Feel no point with other life priorities

·        Habit: Fell into a career and leave it to chance

·        Resigned: Don’t feel deserve anything better/different

·        Unaware: Never done any personal development

·        Blinkered: In the dark about the fast changing world of work 

Do you relate to any of these? What additional factors would you add?

Inspiring quote

“The best way to create the future is to invent it.” Alan Kay.

Self-reflective question:

What 1 action can I take straight away that would most help my future career security & prospects?”  

7 tips for your career reassurance

1.  Support: enlist an experienced career coach

2.  Headspace: book a career retreat/away day

3.  Think: replace mindless time frittering e.g. FaceBook

4.  Focus: write your ideal role/career description & plan ‘A’, ‘B’ & ‘C’

5.  Habit: make ‘dead’ time fruitful e.g. a commute to create options

6.  Prioritise: ring fence a monthly time slot & budget

7.  Informed: look inwards (self-awareness) & outwards (trends)

What tips would you add?

Get in touch https://www.inspiringportfoliocareers.com/portfolio/connect/

Filed Under: Change and uncertainty Tagged With: Career change, coronavirus, energise, rachel brushfield, redundancy, the talent liberator, uncertainty

Are you ready for career change?

June 20, 2020 By //  by Rachel Brushfield

Some of our clients have been unhappy at work for up to 10 years before they contact us and in some cases, have are ill having resisting the change that they need to make – they are so ready for change.

The outcome for some of our other clients is that they choose to stay put rather than change career, and improve what they can influence where they are.

In a challenging jobs market with increasing uncertainty, taking responsibility for your career is not something you can afford to ignore.

Self reflective questions   

What’s stopping me from making the change I seek from work a reality? 

What’s the question I most need to ask myself?

4 tips to check if you are ready for career change 

  1. Identify your personal values so you know if there’s a mismatch between you and your organisation.
  2. Keep a diary of how you feel about work for 2 months and notice the patterns and factors that affect your highs and lows. Review what’s frustrating you and what you can influence.
  3. Do a satisfaction audit of the different aspects of your role. What does it tell you?  
  4.  Are there opportunities to progress in the way you want at work? Explore job redesign as an option with the changing needs of the organisation.

Get in touch https://www.inspiringportfoliocareers.com/portfolio/connect/

Filed Under: Career change Tagged With: Career change, career transitions, energise the talent liberation company, rachel brushfield, redundancy, the talent liberator

Big or small career change?

January 1, 2017 By //  by Rachel Brushfield

Happy New Year!

Career change can feel very daunting and ‘all or nothing’, which is especially challenging at times of uncertainty.

At a time of slow economic growth, combined with the rising cost of living, but salaries not keeping up, is making a career change a good idea or not?

There are many types of career change, from evolutionary to revolutionary, internal and external.  It doesn’t have to be a big change e.g. completely changing career direction or leaving the security of a full time job.

Here are 30 different types of ‘career change’:

  1. Changing your attitude to your current job
  2. Job-redesign – staying with your current employer but doing a different role
  3. Studying for a further qualification to increase your long-term career prospects (your employer funds or you fund yourself)
  4. Taking on additional responsibility at work to build visibility, gain new experience and skills and pave the way for a future promotion internally or externally
  5. Volunteering to be a mentor to develop new skills and help others
  6. Getting involved in your employer’s Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) programme to make a difference, broaden your network and increase your own career fulfilment
  7. Setting up a business
  8. Evolving a current business in a different direction
  9. A career breakthrough e.g. getting a pay rise, promotion or new job
  10. Moving from full time employment to interim or freelance work
  11. Changing from the private sector to work in the public sector
  12. Moving from private practice to in-house
  13. Creating a portfolio career – a career with multiple work strands
  14. Changing career direction completely
  15. Securing a more junior role for less stress and better work life balance, rather than a senior role
  16. Creating an ‘encore’ career pre-retirement
  17. Getting on the right career path as a graduate
  18. Switching careers without training
  19. Returning as a Returner post maternity leave back into employment
  20. Returning into employment having taken a career break to travel
  21. Evolving your career to have more meaning and fulfilment
  22. Creating a business from a natural gift or hobby
  23. Achieving a dream job
  24. From redundancy/gardening leave into a new job
  25. A career secondment internally
  26. A career secondment externally
  27. Taking a career sabbatical to take stock and rethink what next
  28. Moving from full time employment to part time employment
  29. Moving from full time employment to a part time job plus freelance work
  30. Moving from a full-time job to a full-time job plus a non-executive director position

What other career changes can you think of?  What’s your career goal in 2017 and how can we help?

Here are some examples of clients we have worked with and how a career change does not have to be big and scary.

TH negotiated to stay with their current employer but from a full time 5 day a week job to a permanent contract working 4 days a week, freeing them up to develop their future portfolio career.

DW decided to improve their career fulfilment by staying with their employer working 4 days a week and using the fifth working day each week being a trustee for a couple of charities that meant a lot to them.

NW achieved a full-time role working at a less senior level saying no the high level salary and bonus plus stresses and responsibilities of a director level position, and gaining better work life balance and doing the work they enjoyed at a more junior level role.

Having already made one successful career transition with our support from working as an engineer for British Gas to working on oil rigs, DM got in touch as they had to re-think their career direction as a result of the fall in oil prices and reduced use of contractors. Result? They have found a new engineering role on land near to their home with their employer funding a qualification which will enhance their career prospects and options longer term.

EM’s employer was merging with a much larger company giving them a forced career crossroads and a culture that did not appeal to them. They decided with our coaching support to accept a full-time job with a different employer, without the responsibility of managing a department, a new role at a reduced salary but with the stimulation of lots of learning, something that was very appealing to them.

What career change are you seeking and how can we help?

What next?

Why not download one of our free reports?

Pain free career change:

https://www.inspiringportfoliocareers.com/talent-liberation/

Find out your transferrable skills

https://www.inspiringportfoliocareers.com/what-is-a-portfolio-career/

Discover portfolio careers

https://www.inspiringportfoliocareers.com/who-has-portfolio-careers/

Read what our clients think about our services:

https://www.inspiringportfoliocareers.com/testimonials/

Filed Under: Career change Tagged With: a career change, Career change, energise, New year resolutions, portfolio careers, rachel brushfield, talent liberator

Guest blog Barrie Hopson part 2

September 7, 2016 By //  by Rachel Brushfield

Barrie Hopson

This is a 2 part guest blog by Barrie Hopson. This is Part 2.

Barrie is a psychologist specialising in career development and lifelong learning and is a serial entrepreneur. His life mission is helping people to become architects of their own future. His latest project is developing an online learning programme to help people design their retirement ‘Live Happier’ to help people design their retirement, launched and free to use in August 2016.

He is a Non Exec Director of the Aspire-Igen Group and of Disability Sport Yorkshire. He chairs the national Quality in Career Standard Consortium Board. He was Chairman of Axia Interactive Media 2007-2013. He is a writer, presenter, consultant and was chair of his local community association for 8 years. He is on the advisory board of The Open Retirement Club. He is a Fellow of the British Psychological Society and of the Royal Society of Arts. He has written 39 books – the latest being ‘And What Do You Do? 10 Steps to Creating a Portfolio Career’, written with Katie Ledger. He gives presentations on the future of work, portfolio careers, and how to ‘design a retirement you’ll love’. He established the Counselling and Career Development Unit at Leeds University in 1976 and went on to found Lifeskills International in 1983. The company formed a joint venture – Hay-Lifeskills Ltd. – with Hay Group International of which he was co-chair for its first 3 years. His books include the bestselling 12 Steps to Success through Service, The Lifeskills Teaching Programmes and Build Your Own Rainbow. In 2008 he wrote The Rainbow Years: the Pluses of Being 50+ and an accompanying website for Learndirect www.fiftyforward.co.uk. The latter were all co-authored with Mike Scally. Barrie has worked widely as a consultant to commercial and educational organisations in the UK, USA, Asia, Canada and Europe. He sees one of the payoffs of his Portfolio Career as being able to follow Yorkshire County Cricket Club. He adores running and runs 10k, 10 mile and half marathons for the Stroke Association as he is now a carer for his stroke survivor wife.

The rest of this blog are in Barrie’s own words.

Here is part 1 in case you missed it:

https://www.inspiringportfoliocareers.com/guest-blog-barrie-hopson-part-1/

Who or what helps you to manage your portfolio career?

No-one. Just me, my intuition and ensuring I have people who I respect and love spending time with and who are the sources of my inspiration. I never work alone. I have written 39 books and 2 online learning programmes and not one of them just by myself. The fun of creation comes for me in bouncing ideas off others. I am massively influenced by the quotation, “I never know what I think about something until I have heard what I have to say.”

How do you approach marketing your portfolio career?

I still look for meetings relevant to what I do and make an intuitive decision about whether or not to attend. 90% of the time, my intuition does not let me down. You need a website – at least one, and a really good LinkedIn profile. Spending time with creative people is also beneficial.

What, if any, is the personal brand used for your portfolio career?

‘Helping people to become architects of their own future.’ I have only been using this for the past 10 years or so as I realised that a succinct brand message communicates a lot and of course is actually an invitation to people to ask further questions.

What skills/experience/qualities does someone need to have a portfolio career?

Well of course, Katie Ledger and I through our research came up with a whole list of these and you can answer them for yourselves for free on www.portfoliocareers.net

What advice would you give to someone considering a portfolio career?

At the risk of being cheeky, read our book, And What Do You Do? 10 Steps to Creating A Portfolio Career, A&C Black, 2009

What benefits do portfolio careers bring specifically to women and mothers, rather than to men?

A portfolio lifestyle, which, interestingly, seems to be attracting men now as well.

What are your top 5 tips to successfully manage a portfolio career?

1) Know exactly what are your ‘motivated skills’ and only look for opportunities to practice them.

2) Only pick assignments consistent with your values.

3) Learn to say ‘no’.

4) Ensure you develop a portfolio lifestyle not just a portfolio career – which means organising downtime, having fun, taking holidays and spending time with people you love and respect.

5) Continue to reinvent yourself. This is one of the real joys of a portfolio career. There should never be a full stop – just a hyphen!]

 

What next?

For more information about portfolio careers, click on this link:

http://portfoliocareers.net/

To find out more about ‘Live Happier’, click on this link:

https://livehappier.aviva.co.uk/

To find out more about Barrie’s book about portfolio careers, click on this link:

https://www.amazon.co.uk/What-Do-You-Creating-Portfolio/dp/1408116308

Want to create your own portfolio career? Click on this link:

https://www.inspiringportfoliocareers.com/

Download your free report ‘Discover portfolio careers’:

https://www.inspiringportfoliocareers.com/who-has-portfolio-careers/

Download your free report ‘Pain free career change’:

https://www.inspiringportfoliocareers.com/testimonials/

Unsure what your transferable skills are, download your free report ‘Skills’ from this web page:

https://www.inspiringportfoliocareers.com/what-is-a-portfolio-career/

Read more guest bloggers accounts of their portfolio career:

https://www.inspiringportfoliocareers.com/blog/

 

Filed Under: Portfolio career Tagged With: aviva, barrie hopson, Career change, encore career, portfolio career

Inspiring client examples part 2

March 31, 2016 By //  by DigitalJenIPC

Pony on top of horse

You may think you are a ‘one trick pony’ from having one career to date, but I can assure you that you do have transferable skills which can lead you to a different second career or a portfolio career.

Reading stories of other people’s career changes can be helpful to inspire you to make your own. Here are some examples of what our clients have achieved. They inspire us – hope they inspire you too.

Here is part 1 in case you missed it:

https://liberateyourtalent.wordpress.com/2016/03/31/inspiring-client-examples-part-1/

Reposition in current employer (Rebecca)
http://archive.constantcontact.com/fs042/1102862873131/archive/1106786590619.html

Starting a charity (Mary)
http://archive.constantcontact.com/fs042/1102862873131/archive/1106770362344.html

Strength into a business (Cory)
http://archive.constantcontact.com/fs042/1102862873131/archive/1106768988528.html

Turning a passion into a business (Debbi)
http://archive.constantcontact.com/fs042/1102862873131/archive/1106787631322.html

50 something becoming self employed (Paul)
http://archive.constantcontact.com/fs042/1102862873131/archive/1106768912605.html

Interview confidence and overcoming employer objections (Robert G)
http://archive.constantcontact.com/fs193/1102862873131/archive/1112056859585.html

A dream job is possible (Emily)
http://archive.constantcontact.com/fs193/1102862873131/archive/1112027555365.html

A motivating second career to retirement (Jenny)
http://archive.constantcontact.com/fs193/1102862873131/archive/1112027555089.html

100 day support in a new role (Hemal)
http://archive.constantcontact.com/fs193/1102862873131/archive/1112072645153.html

From public sector to private sector (Kerry)
http://archive.constantcontact.com/fs193/1102862873131/archive/1112114912854.html

From civil servant to self-employment (Stephen)
http://archive.constantcontact.com/fs193/1102862873131/archive/1112027911248.html

What next?

Download our free report:
http://careerstrategies.co.uk/changingcareersreport/

Contact us
http://careerstrategies.co.uk/careercoaching/what-next/

Filed Under: Career change Tagged With: Career change, client examples, energise, rachel brushfield, talent liberator

Inspiring client examples part 1

March 31, 2016 By //  by DigitalJenIPC

'Great Britons' awards, LWT Southbank, London, 21/5/07 Pic shows: Duncan Goose (Campaigner of the Year), Geri Halliwell PIC CRED: DAVE HOGAN
‘Great Britons’ awards, LWT Southbank, London, 21/5/07
Pic shows: Duncan Goose (Campaigner of the Year), Geri Halliwell
PIC CRED: DAVE HOGAN

Reading stories of other people’s career changes can be helpful to inspire you to make your own. Here are some examples of what our clients have achieved. They inspire us – hope they inspire you too.

Meaning and purpose (Duncan)
http://archive.constantcontact.com/fs042/1102862873131/archive/1106786590378.html

From employee to self-employed consultant (Chris)
http://archive.constantcontact.com/fs042/1102862873131/archive/1108094305074.html

An enjoyable second career to relish to retirement (Hannen)
http://archive.constantcontact.com/fs042/1102862873131/archive/1107733368948.html

A mid life career reinvention (Anne)
http://archive.constantcontact.com/fs042/1102862873131/archive/1108092201346.html

Child friendly self-employment and getting started (Sarah)
http://archive.constantcontact.com/fs042/1102862873131/archive/1106786138068.html

Defining USP (Alison)
http://archive.constantcontact.com/fs042/1102862873131/archive/1106787432800.html

Employment to contracting (Tony)
http://archive.constantcontact.com/fs042/1102862873131/archive/1106770362848.html

Evolving business focus (Lorna)
http://archive.constantcontact.com/fs042/1102862873131/archive/1106770475879.html

Family friendly business (Francesca)
http://archive.constantcontact.com/fs042/1102862873131/archive/1106769308248.html

Hobby into a business and child friendly (Martin)
http://archive.constantcontact.com/fs042/1102862873131/archive/1106786138295.html

Leaving corporate life – portfolio career (Pippa)
http://archive.constantcontact.com/fs042/1102862873131/archive/1106787631164.html

Life work balance – (Jon)
http://archive.constantcontact.com/fs042/1102862873131/archive/1106769307989.html

Persistence to realise a career vision (Anna)
http://archive.constantcontact.com/fs042/1102862873131/archive/1106812347557.html

Public sector to private sector (Louise)
http://archive.constantcontact.com/fs042/1102862873131/archive/1106770362741.html

We have lots of detailed case studies too. Get in touch for more information. Thanks!

What next?

Download our free report:
http://careerstrategies.co.uk/changingcareersreport/

Contact us
http://careerstrategies.co.uk/careercoaching/what-next/

Filed Under: Career change Tagged With: Career change, client examples, energise, rachel brushfield, talent liberator

The agony of feeling trapped in the wrong career

May 31, 2015 By //  by DigitalJenIPC

Fed up woman with pile of paper at desk

So there you are. Feeling trapped. Feeling stuck. The agonising pain of needing a career change.

So, what do you do? Do you take action? Do you do research?

What do you do?

Is it any of these?

•You chew your pencil (there must be a few pencils still left out there in a world of tablets!)
•You bite your nails.
•You have a moan to your partner or a friend.
•You go shopping. Alot.
•You go to an expensive restaurant.
•You go to an pricey hairdresser and have a haircut and your colours done.
•You visit a Spa for a day to pamper yourself and make yourself feel better.
•Your body gets ill, waves you a ‘red flag’ and goes on strike to take you away from the office and give you some time to create the future. You sleep.
•You drink too much.
•You search for free career change resources on the web.
•You do drugs.
•You get depressed.
•You comfort eat. Multi packs are your new ‘best friend’.
•You moan to your partner or friend. Again.
•You plan a weekend away or holiday to distract yourself from how bad you feel.

And then you come back from a break and return to work and your life. Things are exactly the same. Only they aren’t. You have money on your credit card to pay off.

If you convinced yourself that you couldn’t afford to change career before, you definitely can’t now. Your mortgage is too big. Your credit card bill too large. Your tiredness and lack of energy too much to make a change.

So what do you do?

You start planning your next holiday to escape from your life and your job. A temporary refuge from the agony of being stuck in the wrong career. And feeling it is too late to do anything about it. It isn’t.

Can you relate to this? Does it remind you of someone you know; a partner, friend, family member or colleague?

If you are ready to create a virtuous circle and invest in yourself rather than keep recreating a vicious circle, get in touch. If you are not, please don’t.

What next?

Please share this post with someone who you feel needs to read it.

Read our client testimonials:

https://liberateyourtalent.wordpress.com/energise-client-testimonials/

Download your copy of our free report:

http://careerstrategies.co.uk/changingcareersreport/

Read inspiring client examples:

https://liberateyourtalent.wordpress.com/client-examples/

Energise Career coaching:

http://careerstrategies.co.uk/careercoaching/services-1/services/

Filed Under: Career change Tagged With: Career change, energise, feeling stuck, new career ideas, rachel brushfield, talent liberator

Does a portfolio career appeal to you?

June 8, 2014 By //  by DigitalJenIPC

Career opportunities next exit

Our last blog looked at what a portfolio career is, the components and why they are growing.

http://liberateyourtalent.wordpress.com/2014/05/25/could-a-portfolio-career-make-you-dance/

This blog shares the pros and cons of a portfolio career and some examples.

Pros of a portfolio career

• Variety & stimulation
• New experiences
• ‘Weather’ economic storms/market shifts
• Honour your different needs and wants
• Balance financial security & dreams
• Time for hobbies and travel
• Time to invest in new skills

Cons of a portfolio career

• Need to market yourself
• Need to be good at managing priorities
• Multi-tasking ability ‘a must’
• Uncertainty can be uncomfortable for some
• Can be ‘full-on’
• Have to explain to others what it means

Examples of a portfolio career

My portfolio career comprises; career coaching, executive coaching, content creation, content curation, events, writing, facilitation and consultancy.

Below are some other examples of a portfolio career.

• Lesley combines associate freelance work, a part time job and volunteers for a charity
• Ben works long hours earning for 6 months of the year to fund his travelling the world for 6 months
• John is a non-exec director and also does paid project/contract work
• Claire has 2 paid retainers, volunteers and is studying to increase her skills and marketability
• Charles Handy and his wife Elizabeth split their year 50:50. Half the year his career is the priority and the other half she calls the shots

One of the great things about a portfolio career is that you can design it to suit you and the mix of the components changes over time, so you don’t feel stale.

Last week for example, my portfolio career comprised; a 2 hour session on personal branding for women in advertising, executive coaching/business development mentoring, career coaching with current and new clients, editing some content, writing on diversity and inclusion and attending an industry awards on best practice in learning and development.

What next?

Are you at a career crossroads?

Now is a great time to take action. Career coaching helps you focus, create change and achieve more faster. Starting now, 6 weeks on a fast track programme would enable you to move forward before the summer holidays. Get in touch for more details.

What do our clients say?
http://liberateyourtalent.wordpress.com/energise-client-testimonials/

Follow us on Twitter:
https://twitter.com/talentliberator

Filed Under: Portfolio career Tagged With: career, Career change, energise, personal branding, portfolio career, portfolio working, talent liberator

Need to market yourself, but juggling priorities?

April 20, 2014 By //  by DigitalJenIPC

Woman juggling clocks

Many people want to make a career change, but don’t start. Lacking time, they are always juggling priorities but investing time in marketing themselves, essential to create a career change isn’t one of them. Here are some tips:

10 tips to make time for marketing yourself

1. Language – use words that feel motivating when diarising marketing yourself activities, e.g. ‘career development project’;

2. Diarise – block out time regularly – 10 minutes a day adds up over time. So does 0 minutes a day;

3. Goal – have a S.M.A.R.T goal for your career (specific, measurable, achievable, realistic, timed), and a clear step-by-step plan to achieve it;

4. Environment – Do tasks away from the office where client’s needs beckon e.g. in a coffee shop near work;

5. Enjoyable – focus on the aspects of marketing yourself that you enjoy, e.g. some people enjoy writing articles, other people prefer chatting 121;

6. Appealing – focusing your marketing efforts on attractive employers who you feel excited about working with because you relish their culture or because there are opportunities for progression and involvement in decision making;

7. Bite sized – creating timed small tasks e.g. tag LinkedIn connections or e mail an influencer an update reduces overwhelm;

8. Expert help – select an experienced career coach to keep you focused.

What tips would you add?

Making a career change takes time and investment in your own marketing, but if you action at least one of these tips, you will move forwards.

For more insights and tips, follow us on Twitter @talentliberator

Filed Under: Career change Tagged With: bored at work, Career change, career development, career planning, careers advice, energise, lacking time, marketing yourself, new job, rachel brushfield, talent liberator

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