Is It Time for a Proactive Career Change?

shutterstock_209915911When was the last time you searched for a job while employed, found one you liked better, and gave your employer your two week notice? Have you ever even done this at all? If not, you may be living in the past.

Whether we like it or not, the average tenure in a job these days is three years or less. Examine the resumes of two or three friends and you are likely to confirm what I am saying. As I mention in my book,

Face the facts. The employer/employee loyalty “worm” has turned. Employers were the first to abandon the longstanding unwritten contract that had promised employment security in return for employee loyalty and hard work. You don’t need to make a choice regarding abandoning this contract because it no longer exists.”

There are two basic strategies for dealing with these short job tenures. The traditional strategy is doing the best job you can and, when surprised by job loss, launch a search for new employment. The alternative strategy is to initiate a proactive job search while employed.

I meet and speak with unemployed people every week who are not happy about being unemployed. For some, it can take quite a toll. I want you to experience as little of such negative impacts as possible. Making more proactive job changes can help.

Here are some times to consider starting up a proactive search:

– You don’t get along with your boss and you don’t see this changing in the future

– You don’t like your job and don’t see any near-term positive opportunity for change

– You are underpaid, undervalued, or disrespected

– Others around you are losing their jobs, but you are being told you are “safe”

– There isn’t any opportunity for advancement or personal growth

Do any of these remind you of your current employment situation? If so, then I encourage you to think seriously about launching a confidential job search. I did it several times in my career and I can tell you it was an empowering feeling to be able to tell my boss that I had a better offer I couldn’t refuse.

And making more money working for a better boss and/or company felt even better! If 2015 is your year to make your next move, then I wish you the best.

Picture of Richard Kirby

Richard Kirby

Richard Kirby is a Vistage Chair, executive coach, and author of the book/eBook Fast Track Your Job Search. He helps business owners improve their business operations' financial performance and helps individuals improve their career financial performance. Richard is a Board Certified Coach (BCC) in career coaching and an ISO-recognized Certified Management Consultant (CMC).

TRENDING AROUND THE WEB

People who sing loudly in their car, dance in their kitchen, and have full conversations with their pet aren’t eccentric — they’re in contact with a version of themselves that only exists when no one is measuring it

People who sing loudly in their car, dance in their kitchen, and have full conversations with their pet aren’t eccentric — they’re in contact with a version of themselves that only exists when no one is measuring it

The Vessel

Psychology says children raised between 1950 and 1965 were taught that love and duty were the same thing, and most of them honored that belief so completely that they built entire lives around obligation without ever asking whether they were happy — and the question finally arrives in their 60s like a guest who’s decades late and no longer welcome

Psychology says children raised between 1950 and 1965 were taught that love and duty were the same thing, and most of them honored that belief so completely that they built entire lives around obligation without ever asking whether they were happy — and the question finally arrives in their 60s like a guest who’s decades late and no longer welcome

Global English Editing

Psychology says people who are a mass of contradictions aren’t confused about who they are — they’ve simply refused to flatten themselves into a single coherent story that makes other people comfortable

Psychology says people who are a mass of contradictions aren’t confused about who they are — they’ve simply refused to flatten themselves into a single coherent story that makes other people comfortable

Global English Editing

Psychology says the deepest loneliness widowed retirees face isn’t about missing a spouse. It’s the sudden loss of what researchers call ambient companionship, the passive presence of another human that gave every room a reason to be occupied.

Psychology says the deepest loneliness widowed retirees face isn’t about missing a spouse. It’s the sudden loss of what researchers call ambient companionship, the passive presence of another human that gave every room a reason to be occupied.

Global English Editing

I’m 65 and nobody warned me that the hardest part of retirement wouldn’t be the boredom, it would be the silence at 9am on a Monday when every cell in my body is still wired to be needed somewhere and the realization that I’m not hits with the same force every single week even though I’ve technically known it for months

I’m 65 and nobody warned me that the hardest part of retirement wouldn’t be the boredom, it would be the silence at 9am on a Monday when every cell in my body is still wired to be needed somewhere and the realization that I’m not hits with the same force every single week even though I’ve technically known it for months

Global English Editing

Research suggests the loneliest demographic in most developed countries isn’t who you’d expect — it’s not the elderly, the single, or the isolated, it’s married men between 55 and 75 who have a partner in the house, adult children who call occasionally, and not a single person on earth they would describe as a close friend, and most of them don’t identify it as loneliness because they were never taught what connection is supposed to feel like

Research suggests the loneliest demographic in most developed countries isn’t who you’d expect — it’s not the elderly, the single, or the isolated, it’s married men between 55 and 75 who have a partner in the house, adult children who call occasionally, and not a single person on earth they would describe as a close friend, and most of them don’t identify it as loneliness because they were never taught what connection is supposed to feel like

Global English Editing