Career Assessment: Stuck In Your Job Search?

November 13th, 2009 by KenMasson Leave a reply »

Corinne SettlowBy Corinne Settlow, Certified Career Counselor

Dan Brown, author of “The DaVinci Code,” “Angels & Demons” and his latest novel, “The Lost Symbol” uses gravity boots when his creativity flow is stuck. Says Brown, “Hanging upside down seems to help me solve plot challenges by shifting my entire perspective.”

“…shifting my entire perspective.” Ah, if we could all just hang upside down whenever we’re stuck. Well, most of us don’t have access to gravity boots but we do actually employ various methods of shifting perspective. When playing with a small child, we turn around so our faces are opposite or bend over to look at them through our legs. How about looking at art? Paintings, graphics and photographs can make us tilt our heads one way or the other or adjust our distance to see the image in a different way. Even just looking in the mirror to get ready for the day, we turn our faces and our bodies at numerous angles to see how our hair looks, or makeup, or whether those jeans make our hips look big!

Once we look at something from a shifted perspective we can then make an informed choice. If we scared the child with our face upside down, then we don’t do it again. If the artwork looks good at every angle, we might buy it. If those jeans actually make you look slimmer, you definitely buy them!

It’s the same with searching for work. Doing some assessments to find out what innately interests you, researching an industry or company, getting informational interviews with people in the business you’re investigating, networking with people who already do the work you want to pursue – all present different and valuable perspectives. Perspective is a key element to any kind of creative process, including the journey to a satisfying career.

About Corinne Settlow

Corinne Settlow is a Certified Career Coach with a naturally intuitive sense for people’s potential and a unique understanding of their individual learning styles. Training/coaching has always been an element in her corporate life and has played a big role in her personal life through sports, theatre and music. Combining these experiences with the passion, enjoyment and rewards of helping people achieve their goals makes career coaching her dream job. Corinne’s viewpoint: “There’s opportunity in every direction.”

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