Showing posts with label Making Career Decisions. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Making Career Decisions. Show all posts

Saturday, 2 July 2011

Making Career Decisions

By Shawn Bakker

Most of us will make a number of career decisions in our lives. Whether we are choosing a university major, switching jobs, or planning to retire, the decisions can often be very stressful. However, knowledge about the different type preferences, and making use of Sensing, Intuition, Thinking and Feeling can lead to better decisions. By focusing on each of these perceptions in a step-wise manner, we can clarify our options.

Step One: Using Sensing to focus on the facts
Making use of your sensing perception is a good place to start. Identifying the realities of the career issue that you face and the resources at your disposal is very important for making good decisions. Questions you need to ask yourself include:

  1. What have I liked/disliked in the past?
  2. What is my current financial, social, educational status?
  3. What jobs and corresponding salaries are available?


Step Two: Using Intuition to identify possibilities
Your intuition helps you identify the different possibilities in your situation and generate opportunities for change. Using your intuition perception will allow you to think of ways to make the most of your skills. Questions that can help you use your intuition include:

  1. Besides the one perfect career, what other jobs/occupationsrequire people with my skills and preferences?
  2. What are the future possibilities for each of my career options?
  3. What do the careers I find attractive/unattractive have in common?

Step Three: Using Thinking to identify consequences
You need to use your thinking perception to make a critical and objective analysis of your situation. Having already identified both the facts and possibilities of your situation, you need to look at the positive and negative consequences of the different options. Some questions that will help you use your thinking perception include: 
  1. What are the pros and cons of each of my possible career choices?
  2. What would I objectively recommend to someone who had the same choices?
  3. How well do my skills and preferences fit with each of the careers I am considering?

Step Four: Using Feeling to identify what is most important
Your feeling perception will help you identify what you care about most in both your life and career. Using your feeling perception to weigh the outcomes of your choices ensures that you will meet your personal values. Questions to ask that will engage your feeling perception include:
  1. What do I care about most in my life and work?
  2. Which of my career options immediately give me a good or bad feeling?
  3. How would those important to me react to my different career choices?

Making the most informed decisions comes from using all four steps. While these steps will not guarantee perfect career decisions, they will help you be more informed and provide a clearer understanding of your options. The trick is to focus on each of them equally, even though our individual preferences incline us to skim over some and concentrate too much on others.
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