sitetitle
 

 

Five Ways for Women to Accelerate Their Career

Career in the Toilet

Pass Guaranteed com Offers IT Career Enhancement Opportunities

How to Pick the Best Career For You Part 2 From Exposure to Opportunity

How an Autistic Child Changed A Career For the Better

What is Career Management Horsepower

The 37 Cent Career Design Secret

How to become a Career Coach for Profit

Dog Walkers Your Career

Home Business Career With Expanding MLM Nutrition Supplements Company

Career To Do s for the New Year

Career Tip Improving Skills Leads To A Better Job

Sports Ticket Broker Career

Finding Your Ideal Career

I Am Finally Living My Dream How I left the corporate world at age 44 to pursue a career as a musician

My Career As A Hermit

Petite Modeling The 1 Biggest Secret to Success in Your Petite Modeling Career

Business Career Success Know Your Ruling Star


Your Job Is Not Necessarily For Life. Should You Switch Careers?

 Executive search firms regularly come across people who have decided to switch careers. There was a time where you chose your profession and stuck with it until retirement and many people still follow that path. An increasing number of people, however, are deciding to give up their first choice and try something new. For many, it is a move to a new country, or an exploration of a new skill, but for others, it's moving the skills they already have to a new sector.

If you're taking the plunge and switching careers, can you convince an executive search agency that it's all for the best? How do you demonstrate that you haven't lost any of your abilities?

Switching careers is a brave thing to do. It can affect your income, your working hours and even where you live. It's not a decision that people take lightly, and it's one that's viewed differently by everyone. If you take a career break to travel or to study, you should be prepared to turn that experience into positive ways you can contribute to your new company.

Executive search firms look for the right candidates for the job. If you have switched careers or taken a break and want to sign on with an executive search firm, then it's a good idea to make an appointment to go and see them. This will allow you to sit face-to-face with the consultant and explain why you took a year out, or why you decided to change from medicine to law. Whatever your experience, you should be able to use elements of it to illustrate how you could be valuable to a company in a senior position.

For example, if you spent your time volunteering for a charity and working in Africa, you will have gained better communication and diplomacy skills than most people. If you were involved in a building project, you can illustrate how you managed to project, getting people to work together as a team to achieve a common goal. Whilst sorting out a problem business area isn't the same as building a school, the things you learned from your project can be applied in any situation.

It's not whether you have changed careers that interests an executive search firm; it's why, and what you've learned that could benefit their clients. It could be that your career switch gives the client exactly what they're looking for. It's up to you to turn it into the positives that could win you your next job.

About the author:

This article was provided by Burns Carlton, a professional supplier of business and executive recruitment solutions with offices in Harrogate and London. Burns Carlton specialise in executive search and selection, recruiting across a wide range of industry sectors.

 Burns Carlton

More Articles 

How To Start Your Voice Over Career, Part 1 - D C Douglas
If you have ever been told that you have a great voice, then you may have thought of making use of that great voice in a professional way, as a singer, announcer or as a voice over talent. Voice over, or adding your voice to advertisements...

Portable Careers for Military Spouses - Victoria M Parham
"Pack your Career and Let’s Go" How many times have you relocated? How many jobs have you held in the past 10 years? Do these questions sound familiar? I bet they do. Military spouses face unique challenges when it comes to their professional...

MEN: IS YOUR DRESS HINDERING YOUR CAREER PROSPECTS? - Sue Donnelly
REPRINT GUIDELINES =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-= You are free to publish the following article in its entirety in your eZine or on your website. Our only condition is that you MUST keep the information about the...

Paralegal Training Programs for Career Advancement - Sara Jenkins
With the recent year’s significant increase in legal world’s activities, lawyers and attorneys are also equated with intensified workload that they cannot uphold these duties on their own anymore. With this matter, paralegals or legal assistants...

#1 Fear that Holds People Back in their Careers - Scott Brown
Surveys have shown the average American is more afraid of public speaking than they are of death. No wonder many people have let promotions at work pass them by for fear of having to speak in public. It may not even have been a conscious decision,...

Closing the Gap on Your Career Goals - Shannon Bradford
If you still picture a steady progression up the ladder when you think of your career goals, it is time to shift your thinking. For most people, climbing the career ladder is no longer an option. The working world has changed so dramatically that...

Ten Career Tips to Share With Your Children (And you too!) - Cathy Goodwin Ph D
Q. "What do you want to be when you grow up?" A. "Something that hasn't been invented yet." Most of us were brought up to study hard, get good grades, choose a "practical" college major, and strive for a "good job." Talk to a stranded midlife...

Business Career Advice: Stop Feeling Guilty about Time Off! - Paul Megan
Are you sitting at your desk dreamily imagining yourself on a South Seas vacation? Or maybe a rollicking holiday with the family? Or maybe you'd prefer to stay home and watch some DVDs. Wanting to take some time off shouldn't make you feel...

2 Smart Things You Can Do Right Now to Get Ahead In Your Executive Career. - Wayne Richardson
Your executive career advancement is an on-going process, not just of series of job changes. Proactive executives know that the best time to start looking for a new job is when you are gainfully employed. This strategy gives you a backup Plan...

Career Planning Advice: Avoid the 10 Success Killers! - Paul Megan
Sticking to fundamental business principles is the basis for successful career planning. To us this means that our customers are able to lock up job high-paying offers in as little as 14 days or less. Old-fashioned methods that require...

Time for a Career Change? . . . How Do I Know? - Paul Megan
The beginning of a new year is often a time for reflecting on career progress. Questions like these can be in the front of our minds: --Do I hate getting up on Monday morning to go back to work? --How can I determine if this is the...

It Is Still Possible To Find Work At Home Careers? - Daegan Smith
So you are considering work at home careers but don’t have any ideas? A stay at home business doesn’t necessarily have to be a computer business. Your unique hobbies and talents can give way to a business opportunity. Many people have used their...

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Copyright sitetitle @2007  Turnkey Websites
[an error occurred while processing this directive]