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New Survey Reveals
Top Five Reasons Women Change Jobs
PORTLAND, Ore., March 9 2004-- A recent survey
conducted by CareerWomen.com reported the top five reasons
women are changing jobs. While the number one reason cited was
family obligations, women also move on to new positions to
expand opportunities, create higher earning potential,
relocate or because of job burn out.
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Family Obligations
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Expand Opportunities
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Earn More
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Relocate
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Burn Out
"A career change doesn't mean that your first
choice was a bad one. Every job should be considered an
experience and a stepping stone to something else," said Jill
Xan Donnelly, president of
Career
Women "People change and evolve over the course of
their lives and it is unrealistic to expect that one career,
or one job, will always be satisfying."
The poll found that sixty-four percent of women who responded
had made a change mid-way through their career.
Five Tips For Getting Ready
to Change
1) Review, update
and re-write your resume every year
Having a current resume on hand will allow you to
quickly respond to
opportunities as they present themselves. Consider creating
several
resumes for a variety of career directions that can be posted
in an
online database for easy retrieval and sending.
2) Look inside as well as outside
Consider an internal job change if your current
position is not meeting
your career expectations. Leaving your current employer may
not always be the best decision, especially during high
unemployment phases. One survey respondent suggests, "be
flexible, look for opportunity and constantly broaden your
horizons."
3) Consider challenge and service as criteria
When evaluating new career opportunities, women
report being inspired by challenge and service in addition to
compensation. Investigate how a new position will allow
opportunities for additional career challenges as well as
possibilities to better serve customers,
community or the corporation.
4) Find mentors -- one Male and one Female
Advice from the right mentor can help you locate
and manage
opportunities. Male mentors coach negotiation skills as well
as offer networking and advancement opportunities, while a
female mentors offer informal fellowship, guidance within the
corporation, motivation and encouragement.
5) Plan for a smooth transition
If you do find a new position, make the transition
seamless for your
current employer. Clean up messes, offer to train your
replacement,
be available for questions after your departure and thank your
current
employer for the experience. Leaving on a positive note will
only
enhance your future career options. |