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skills

Finding Our Purpose begins with Being Authentic

April 10, 2017 by Jim Peacock 1 Comment

Working with clients I typically begin with helping them identify their skills, but as I finish teaching my 5 week online seminar, Finding Purpose, I think it is more about being “authentic” and finding our true selves, which includes identifying our skills, but much more than that.

Being authentic is finding the core of who we are and doesn’t change as we get older; it should only get clearer.

The “authentic me” can often be found backpacking with good friends. Most importantly it is about being with people for me.

Fairly recently, within the past 5 years, my dad told me that he knew I’d be great at working with people because often when he came home from work he’d find me talking to the neighbors, Mr. Craig or Mrs. Marsh. My focus was on communicating with people even back then. Interesting that I majored in Forestry :-O Probably not the best choice. I wished my dad had talked to me more about the ‘authentic’ me.

We need to find our strengths and build on them. Finding the authentic person inside us and our clients takes time and effort. I encourage you to watch this YouTube video by Marcus Buckingham called, The Truth About You. (23 minutes you will not regret). He explores this topic in a very provocative way and makes a powerful message about finding our strengths, discovering the real you, and why that is so important in our careers where we typically spend over 2000 hours each year. 

So how do you discover your strengths? Pay attention to ALL your experiences, at work, at play, and at rest. Which ones give you energy? Which ones leave you tired or dreading to do? Repeat the ones that give you energy. Then, “rinse and repeat”. This is where the authentic you is hiding. Some people need help doing this and that is where we as career practitioners can come in. I like to use skills card sorts. Other times I ask those probing questions that highlight people’s skills. 4 Steps in Helping Clients Describe Their Skills

Carol Vecchio wrote an article titled Achieving Life-Career Satisfaction in the National Career Development Association’s “Career Developments” Fall 2013 magazine that speaks to finding your “True Self” as a way of finding what our purpose is. True Self is the essence of who you really are and asks the question, “What is my purpose in life?”  To discover this True Self requires deep active listening to feelings and intuition on the part of individuals and also on the part of career practitioners when working with clients.

Trusting our instincts is something I talk about with all my clients. Far too many people want to believe that the answer is in an assessment or a computer search. I tell people the answer is within ourselves. You know what you don’t want to do…which means at some level you know what you DO want to do. You need to listen that voice in your head..the instincts within..your guardian angel.

Besides skills, we need to pay attention to our values and what is truly important to us. I am working with a client right now who keeps talking about what are important traits in his next job, like having “work-life balance” and “moral fulfillment” and “job tranquility”. These are his values speaking to him and are a reflection of his unhappiness in his current job…which is missing these traits.  These are not skills he possess, but values he desires. The authentic you is a multi-dimensional being. Values are what is in our soul and needs to be a part of the conversation with our clients and ourselves.

After a recent blog post I heard from Nik Crain who wrote that “purpose”  is “what gets you out of bed to go to work”  and the answer can be either be “passion” which is when there is an alignment with the organization mission – even though they don’t love the actual tasks of the job. Or it could be more about their “skills” and they love the work, even though neutral about organizational mission / product / etc. Either one feeds the soul.

I love this view because too many people are searching for ‘passion’ and then a job that feeds it. That may be the case, but we may find purpose really being the driving force at work and ‘passion’ being something you do outside of work.

The “Authentic” Will Keim could always be counted on to be “present” and “loving”.

All relationships require a level of trust. Trust can only be gained by being authentic with each other. My good friend, Dr. Will Keim often spoke about the “Education of Character” and one of his favorite quotes was, “Say what you mean. Do what you say. And when you don’t, admit it.” He was greatly influenced by the work of Dr. Martin Buber who said, “Education worthy of the name is essentially the education of character.” Character is where you find the authentic you.

As I think about this topic of “finding purpose” in our work, I can’t help but come back to the first steps of understanding ourselves, skills, and values. What is important to me? What feeds my soul? What gives me energy? And then being the authentic person by living those out in everything I do. By showing my true character and ‘say what I mean. Do what I say.’ in my work, my play, and my life…then I will find my purpose.

What do you think about helping your clients find purpose in their careers?
What questions do you ask?
What activities do you assign?

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.

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: finding purpose, purpose in life, reflection, skills, strengths, trusting your instincts

4 Steps in Helping our Clients Describe their Skills : The foundation of the career development process

March 13, 2017 by Jim Peacock 2 Comments

I believe the core of our work as career coaches / counselors is to help our clients articulate their skills.
This is an essential foundation for the career development process. I am working with a number of clients right now that struggle with defining what skills they bring to the workplace. Our work together is focused on really mining out
what they do and what makes them unique. In other words, what value do you add to the workplace.

For example, after three meetings with this client, he was able to state this as his value-added statement.

I have the ability to find solutions for complex problems by utilizing my work experiences and skills. I enjoy the personal satisfaction of keeping the customers happy by fixing problems quickly and maintaining the equipment to prevent outages. In doing this I have helped Critical Alert maintain a professional reliable reputation with customer service being at the highest priority. I would like to work for a company where I can transition my skills to work in other electronic fields, communications, or cellular areas where that same dedication to critical messaging is at their highest priority.

Once we had this refined, we were able to develop his resume, cover letter, LinkedIn Profile, and prepare for an interview.

[Read more…] about 4 Steps in Helping our Clients Describe their Skills : The foundation of the career development process

Filed Under: Career Tagged With: 30 second pitch, elevator speech, skills, skills for work, value added statement

Skills can be developed a wide variety of ways

March 13, 2017 by Jim Peacock Leave a Comment

Skills can be developed through on-the-job training, short term certificates or diplomas, even on-line through YouTube or Lynda.com, as well as college degrees. Our economy needs ALL kinds of skills to run. This struck me as I have been working with a number of clients recently who have done very well in the world of work without a college degree.

Bryan Alexander says “Goldman Sachs shared their analysis of higher education for investors a few weeks ago, and it’s an important document for people in higher education to consider.  Goldman is enormously influential in the finance world, and also in government, two realms with a lot of clout in academic institutions. Is the ROI of attending college worth it?”  (Read his analysis) [Read more…] about Skills can be developed a wide variety of ways

Filed Under: Career Tagged With: identifying skills, motivated skills, skills, skills for work

What You’re Really Meant To Do. By Robert Steven Kaplan

March 15, 2015 by Jim Peacock Leave a Comment

What You’re Really Meant To Do. A Road Map for Reaching Your Unique Potential. By Robert Steven Kaplan

Just finished this book and really liked how the author laid out his thinking. Much of his book, the second half, is about how to keep a job and advance in a job which I really liked because most books are only about how to FIND a job.

[Read more…] about What You’re Really Meant To Do. By Robert Steven Kaplan

Filed Under: Book Reviews Tagged With: career coaching, skills, strengths

Strengths Finder 2.0 by Tom Rath

February 10, 2015 by Jim Peacock Leave a Comment

I had read this book before but did not have a code to actually take my own assessment. This time, new book, my own personal code to take the Strengths Finder assessment, and here I am!!

Communicator / Winning Others Over- WOO / Empathy / Positivity / Adaptability

Much of my work is focusing on people’s strengths and that is clearly what Gallup has built here, a way for people to identify their strengths with specific tips on how to highlight your strengths, deal head on with others who may not understand you, and how to work with people by identifying their strengths and honoring them.

[Read more…] about Strengths Finder 2.0 by Tom Rath

Filed Under: Book Reviews Tagged With: skills, strengths

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