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Life Coaching

How do you find that “sweet spot” when working with midlife career changes?

November 9, 2015 by Jim Peacock Leave a Comment

How do you find that “sweet spot” when working with midlife career changes? Well, my advice is no different than what I often discuss with college students: “What do you bring to the company or organization that you want to work for?”

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The biggest difference for midlife career changers is that they have an opportunity to look back on their lives and years of experience with deeper knowledge and perspective. Whether they want to leave jobs that they’ve held for many years or find meaningful activities to do with their forty hours per week, most of them still want to make an impact somehow. Our role as a career coach or practitioner is to open up discussions to help people find that “‘sweet spot”, and to help them identify and articulate those key pieces that are important to them.

I love using card sorts as a way to get my clients thinking about skills, passions, interests, strengths, and/or values, and then begin to think about prioritizing and connecting the dots between these various areas. The cards are a kinesthetic way of getting their heads away  from the idea that an occupation is what they’re looking for. It allows them to really look at what is truly important to them, and to consider what they bring to the table that will then generate discussion and greater thinking.

In my current Boomer online seminar, we have used cards to look at passions, strengths, and concerns. We’ve also used an online assessment which helps people to determine what values they want to focus on in the near future. When working with passions, I like to explore if there was a passion that they always wanted to pursue, but their job got in the way. Is there a new passion they discovered by chance in their own career development, through their social connections, or just through curiosity? The questions for these people are: “What are you passionate about? How can you explore it more deeply?”

When we look at strengths using the cards, the challenge is to look beyond the top strengths that they developed in their current job. The objective is to also explore some skills that may have been untapped in their work that they could bring to a company or an organization.

The values discussion is often interesting as the assessment I use online does not rate which values are important to the client, but which ones need work right now. Most people know what is important to them at some level, but this discussion is really about where are they going to put their energy now to focus on their values. One client I work with wanted to do something to contribute to his local community but didn’t want to be tied to a specific time each week or day. What we discovered was that by raising his chickens, collecting eggs and donating them to the local food pantry, he was using his time the way he wanted but was still able to contribute to his local community in a positive way.

I’ve found that by spending one week on strengths, another week on passions or interest, and one more week on values, my clients then have a chance to process and think about each of them separately. Then our work begins to connect these different areas to find that “sweet spot” for his / her next move, whether it’s paid or volunteer. Remember that you might be the first person to ask these questions, and to initiate discussions which are often very thought-provoking for your clients. I’m working with a client now in one of the mid-Atlantic states, and I’m always so impressed with how much thinking he has done each week.

So when working with clients keep in mind that whatever their next move is, it is likely to involve trying to find that “sweet spot” between passions, strengths, and values. The power of the discussion is that this is where much of the thinking happens. Our job as coaches is to help them find words that mean something to them and to help them find ways to group them together in meaningful ways that make sense to them.

What do you do to help your clients find the “sweet spot?”

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Jim Peacock is the Principal at Peak-Careers Consulting and writes a monthly newsletter for career practitioners. Peak-Careers offers discussion-based online seminars for career practitioners focused on meeting continuing education needs for CCSP, GCDF and BCC certified professionals as well as workshops for career practitioners and individual career coaching. He is the author of A Field Guide for Career Practitioners: Helping Your Clients Create Their Next Move

Sign up here to receive my  TOP 10 TIPS WHEN WORKING WITH AN UNDECIDED PERSON.  You can also receive the career practitioners newsletter which includes a variety of career topics, industry news, interesting events, and more. 

Filed Under: Career Tagged With: advising boomers, Boomers, career advising, career changers, Life Coaching, skills for work, using card sorts, working with boomers

Twitter confuses me

April 25, 2015 by Jim Peacock Leave a Comment

Twitter confuses me. But so did LinkedIn when I joined it seven years ago, but I was patient with LinkedIn and will continue to be patient with Twitter now. I am not an ‘early adopter’ of technology preferring others to lead and my experience with Twitter is no different. Let me humbly share with you my thoughts on Twitter for career practitioners after two years. My profile says I joined in February 2011 but I think I was shell-shocked the first two years.

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How do you fit an idea in 140 characters?

KEY POINT #1 Be thoughtful and patient. It really is amazing how much you can share in a tweet if you think about the essence of your message.

How can people communicate only using 140 characters? Verbosity is clearly not rewarded here in “tweet world”. I think Twitter was created by an introvert and early on attracted more introverts who found a way to cut down on the noise created by us extroverts. Twitter requires some thought on messaging and has really forced me to be a minimalist.

“How can I say this using less characters, words, and spaces? AND still convey the message?”

As I wrote in a recent blog, “Less is Best” http://bit.ly/peakcareers7 and Twitter challenges this thinking all the time.

[Read more…] about Twitter confuses me

Filed Under: Career Tagged With: Life Coaching, twitter for career counselors, twitter for career practitioners, using linkedin

Boomers to Save the Economy…again.

January 27, 2015 by Jim Peacock 4 Comments

Why not? Boomers have driven the economy since we were born. Our love of toys in the 50’s & 60’s created many new companies. You are welcome Hasbro, Fisher-Price, Legos, and Mattel.

With 10,000 Boomers nationwide turning 65 daily across the country, we are facing a labor shortage crisis everywhere. Here in Maine, nearly a third of the population is in the Boomer age range. Some states are worse than others, but nationally 47% of the labor force is 55+ during the decade 2006-2016. The growth in the labor force for ages 16-54 is less than 1%!  YIKES! Houston, we have a problem.

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A career expert, David DeLong calls them “piling up at the door”.

Here in Maine, the total labor force is 700,000 and with 411,000 people aged 45-64, they will be leaving the workforce in the next 2 decades. Match this with 302,000 residents under the age of 20 years old, this could be a gap of 109,000! And Maine is typical of states across the U.S.

[Read more…] about Boomers to Save the Economy…again.

Filed Under: Career Tagged With: advising boomers, Encore Career, Life Coaching, purpose in life, working with boomers

If you are happier will it lead you to your “purpose”?

October 28, 2014 by Jim Peacock 5 Comments

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My wife thinks I was crazy to register for a college class right now with all that I have to do. She’s right of course. But I could not stop myself from registering for my first MOOC* on the Science of Happiness. (*Massive Open Online Course.) UC-Berkeley stated that over 10,000 people had signed up. I can guarantee you there are not 10,000 in week 7. (I am in week 7, but the class is in week 8.)

Studying happiness with research and science to back it up has been wonderful. What has been more amazing is how intertwined this is with discovering your “purpose” in life. As a career coach or career counselor, here are three specific things you can do to help your students/clients to be happier and three things to think about in helping them discover purpose and meaning in their lives.

Research shows that happiness has a “set point” in all of us at about 50%. This means that we are born with a certain happiness set point that is not moveable. 10% of our happiness is our environment, where we live, with whom we live & work, etc.. This leaves a WHOPPING 40% that we actually have control over! Yahoo! Here are three action steps you can take to increase your happiness that I have learned in the class I do not have time for 🙂

[Read more…] about If you are happier will it lead you to your “purpose”?

Filed Under: Career Tagged With: finding meaning, happiness, Life Coaching, meaningful work, purpose in life

Honoring All Jobs

June 26, 2014 by Jim Peacock 7 Comments

Far too often, the message delivered to young people is that “everyone needs to go to college” to be successful. Evidence of this assumption surfaces everywhere. High schools put up signs with seniors who have been accepted into colleges. NPR publishes articles that say the only downside to getting a college degree is not finishing the degree, picking the wrong college, or choosing the wrong major. As a career practitioner this strikes me as odd. Not only is this detrimental to our economy, but it is disrespectful to all those people whose skills and gifts lead them toward trades / crafts occupations. We need all jobs to be honored in this country. It is clear this is not often the case.

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There are 10’s of 1000’s of jobs that do not require a college degree that are wonderful choices for people, and YES, make very good money.  I know many people who have great jobs with no bachelors degree, from a great career in the radio business, to auto mechanics, HVAC, and many others. Businesses in the trades / crafts areas are desperate for bright people who can problem solve and produce quality work.  Why do we shuffle EVERY student who is bright in math / science to college?  If they want to work with their hands and produce goods, why wouldn’t we make it OK for them to choose a trade?  I think of the German model of education that provides two different tracks in high school allowing bright young men and women who want to work in a craft or trades area to get the training they need… and it is OK to do this, not second class like it is here.

If you have not read Shop Class As Soul Craft by Matthew Crawford, you should.  He has a PhD in Philosophy and was working for a professional journal writing abstracts, but was always drawn back to his work on motorcycles and the problem solving skills it took to do that job. Matthew is one of many people who probably was given one choice in high school. “You are bright, you are going to college.”  Matthew argues that our country has failed an entire population of people by continuing to cut shop classes and offering high school technical education for those people that can’t go to college.  (noticed I said “can’t go to college” which is loaded with all kinds of implications.  Because they do not LOOK like they are college material?  They don’t learn best by reading? Because they are poor?… this list goes on and on.)

[Read more…] about Honoring All Jobs

Filed Under: Career Tagged With: college career advice, crafts people, craftsmen, honor all jobs, Life Coaching, trades people

Graduate to a Great Job. Make your College Degree Pay Off in TODAY’s Market. By David DeLong

April 15, 2014 by Jim Peacock Leave a Comment

graduate-to-a-great-job

Graduate to a Great Job. Make your College Degree Pay Off in TODAY’s Market. By David DeLong

One of my jobs is working part time at Colby College in the Career Center and the Director loaned me this book because David is a Colby alumni and she had recently met him.  Curious, I began reading it when I was covering “drop-in” hours and was hooked immediately.  I finished it over the weekend, great stuff!

This is a book written to college students and their parents and is filled with practical advice on a range of job seeking topics from networking (which is obviously the key piece), the importance of internships, tips on writing a strong resume, interviewing, attitude, and the parents role (one chapter devoted to what parents should and should not do). He also recommends getting into the College Career Center and getting as much as you can out of it while the student is there.

[Read more…] about Graduate to a Great Job. Make your College Degree Pay Off in TODAY’s Market. By David DeLong

Filed Under: Book Reviews Tagged With: academic advising, career advising, career coaching, college career advice, college student advice, David DeLong, Life Coaching

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