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It’s the best way to have a meaningful conversation and it’s the best way to rope in a mentor or look like a star performer. As my career shifts, I find that the key to keeping the shift moving in a productive way is to ask good questions. Anyway, I wouldn’t say redecorating is a careerchange, but maybe just a vocation vacation.
Tweet This Facebook StumbleUpon Email this post to a friend Related Posts How to choose between passion and pay If you've been unemployed for a while, consider a careerchange Recognize when you're being a nutcase The new wave of entrepreneurship: Three things you need for success Careerchange is inevitable, so plan for it Comments (39) (..)
Also, I've written a lot about how careerchange goes better when you can create a story of your life that shows the upcoming change is the next logical step. This research comes from INSEAD.) " I couldn't agree more P!
Lots of job and careerchanges. One could say that your endless pursuit of career flexibility has paradoxically had the opposite effect in your life. For some reason, your voice seems to get through to her much better and smoother than mine on topics like frugality etc. : ) She totally looks up to you as a mentor!
P.S. One of my mentors used to say "anything worth doing is worth doing 'badly'!" Posted by Ann on December 10, 2009 at 4:42 pm | permalink | Reply I graduated in 2005 with a BFA in painting. " It drove many of us crazy. Took me a while to realize what he meant. I have a day job, and I now make $67,000/year.
Posted by Sam on September 7, 2010 at 5:31 pm | permalink | Reply I am currently a grad student and I am doing this because there was no way I could find a job after getting laid off, and wanting to leverage my chances for a careerchange. So you generalizing that grad school is not the way to go is totally wrong.
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