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It’s Your Life What are you gonna do with it?. It’s Your Life The average lifetime includes 100,000 hours at work ! You’d Better LOVE what you do!

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Presentation on theme: "It’s Your Life What are you gonna do with it?. It’s Your Life The average lifetime includes 100,000 hours at work ! You’d Better LOVE what you do!"— Presentation transcript:

1 It’s Your Life What are you gonna do with it?

2 It’s Your Life The average lifetime includes 100,000 hours at work ! You’d Better LOVE what you do!

3 (NCDA/Gallup, 1999) Gallup Polls indicate 65% of working adults do not believe they are in the right job. 100,000 hours @ work

4 Life After High School 1. Don’t Care: I don’t want to think about it. 2. Unsure: I’ve given it some thought. 3. Curious: I’m aware of some good career choices for me. 4. Confident: I know all my options Where are you in the process of deciding?

5 Education “Knowledge is power. Education is paramount to anything you’re going to end up wanting to do. The person that knows the knowledge is the person that is going to get paid.” Is a college degree your only ticket to success? How else can you “get the knowledge” ???

6 Options 2 and 4 year colleges Technical Colleges Corporate training programs Apprenticeship training Adult education There are many options after high school: On-the-job training Workplace experience Intern/Apprenticeship Military Volunteer/Community Work Entrepreneurship Self-employment

7 Take a look @ Yourself How do I know where to start?

8 Natural Intelligences Bodily/Kinesthetic “body smart” Linguistic “word smart” Logical/Mathematical “number smart” Musical “music smart” Naturalist “nature smart” Interpersonal “people smart” Visual/Spatial “picture smart” Every career requires different skills. One way to find a career that suits you is to consider

9 Focus on your strengths! The secret to achievement What kind of activities have you loved to do since childhood? What can you do that’s as easy as breathing? What sort of thing really excites you? Imagine you were famous in your lifetime, what would it be for? Ask yourself:

10 What Interests You? (work should be identical to play) Realistic: work with your hands, tools, machinery Investigative: work with ideas with an emphasis on the scientific or technical Artistic: creative self-expression Social: people-helping occupations (teacher, counselor, social, religious) Enterprising: group leadership, management, entrepreneurship Conventional: emphasize precision and accuracy in management of details (accountant, financial analyst, secretary) Can you identify your top 3 interests?

11 It’s all about you! who: When: Why: Your high school or Community College career counselor. Your high school or Community College career center. Because It’s Your Life! What: Where: Make an appointment TODAY! Using personal, career and interest assessment tools to help guide you along the path to your future. There are resources and educators available that can help you identify your strengths, skills, and interests.

12 prepare How do I for the future workplace?

13 Look to the Future How about 3 to 5 radical career shifts in your lifetime? How do you prepare for that? The average employee has 9- 13 jobs over the course of a career. The average job in America only lasts 3.6 years.

14 Have Skills, will travel Your best defense against the future’s lack of job security is: Know your best skills Get better and better at them Reshuffle your “skills deck” to fit various job opportunities (remember 9 to 13 job changes?) Consider this your “transition survival kit!” Marlowe Embree UWMC 2004

15 Diversify Pick several skills (3 to 5) that are different yet related (i.e. web development and teaching) Pick skills that represent your natural gifts (what were you good at when you were 8 years old?)

16 Think Like an Entrepreneur You are not “entitled” to a paycheck! Is your benefit to your employer (as a problem-solver, profit-generator, etc.) greater than your cost (the paycheck)? More simply, what are you offering and why would anyone want it?

17 Do you have a ‘Plan B’ ??? Can you bounce back from hard times? Can you see the possibility instead of the threat in change? Things in life rarely go as planned. How many times have you been disappointed but things worked out better than you thought?

18 Out of bed What will get you in the morning?

19 - Aldous Huxley “Experience is not what happens to you; it’s what you do with what happens to you.”

20 Balance Work is about three things: Making a Living Making a Life Making a Difference What do those three things mean to you?

21 Connections Matter because… 1.You can’t do everything (need to swap favors with others who are weak where you’re strong) 2.People hire people they know & trust (or who are known & trusted by people they know & trust) 3.People who need people are the luckiest people in the world.

22 Motivators Security & Stability Technical Competence Management & Responsibility Autonomy (do it your own way) Entrepreneurship (run your own show) Service to Others Pure Challenge Lifestyle Balance Choose which two of these things are your most motivating and least motivating:

23 Survive Will you in today’s work world?

24 “When we hire…we look for someone committed. They have to have a spark for life, they have to get on well with everyone and then have the education, skills and qualifications.” -Employer Quote

25 Checklist Check off the words that describe you:  DEPENDABLE I keep my promises.  ADAPTABLE I don’t freak out when things change.  PREPARED I show up ready as well as able.  PROFESSIONAL I look as well as act the part.  SELF-DIRECTED I get things done on my own.  POSITIVE I pitch in without complaining.  CURIOUS I like to learn more about whatever I’m doing.  PROUD I am courteous to others.  AMBITIOUS I work hard to reach my goals. ____ Total s

26 88% of top executives said character, leadership and communication skills are better predictors of success than test scores. - National Urban League 2001

27 What’s next 1. Don’t Care Wait until you do care. 2. Unsure Go to the career Center at your school to research a career field you think would be interesting. Go to college night, a career workshop or career fair. Show your parent or school counselor this website and ask for their help and direction. 3. Curious Go to the career center and research careers and colleges. Talk to a person doing a job you’d love. Research all your options to get you where you want to go.

28 Continued … What’s next 4. Confident Conduct an informational interview of someone in the career you’ve chosen. Find out what their suggestions are for education and next steps. Spend a day job shadowing. Think about your “Plan B” in case your plans change. 5. Why Because “IT’S YOUR LIFE!” GO FOR IT!


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