Reverse Strategy in Career Choices Oakland CA

It may be a headache for you to decide which career you should take. However, a reverse strategy may help you a lot: Take a close look at what you don't want to do. That way, you can explore the opposite and start getting at least some sense of what you do want to do.

Local Companies

Alternative Futures
(510) 287-5664
4909 Tidewater Ave
Oakland, CA
First In Emergency Response Training LLC
(510) 282-7663
200 Stantonville Dr.
Oakland, CA
Bob Garner MS MA Ncc
(510) 652-2467
3873 Piedmont Ave
Oakland, CA
Bonnie Bell
(510) 763-5671
1111 Broadway
Oakland, CA
Institute for OneWorld Health
(415) 421-4700
50 California St., Ste. 500
San Francisco, CA
San Francisco Vocational Services
(415) 512-9500
814 Mission St., Ste. 600
San Francisco, CA
The Art Institute of California - San Francisco
(415) 276-4019
1170 Market St.
San Francisco, CA
Saks Lila J
(510) 451-4175
505 14th St
Oakland, CA
Executive Options Inc
(510) 238-0886
Oakland, CA
Robert Half Legal
(510) 271-0910
1999 Harrison St Ste 1100
Oakland, CA

Provided by:

Summary

  • Decide what you don't want to do in your career.
  • Explore opposite possibilities.
  • Make a list and talk with friends about your ideas.

Sometimes the harder you try to figure out what you want to do for a career, the more you wind up beating your head against the wall.

Sound familiar to you? If so, then try the reverse strategy: Take a close look at what you don't want to do. That way, you can explore the opposite and start getting at least some sense of what you do want to do.

Admittedly, this is an unusual approach. After all, it isn't often that you try to accomplish something by first doing the opposite! But I've used this method many times with college students who were in the, "I have no idea what I want to do," stage of their career development.

The method to my madness: I've discovered that, more often than not, lost students can easily pinpoint what they're not interested in, what they're not good at, or what's not all that important to them. "I only know what I don't want to do" is a line these students frequently volunteer in my meetings with them. It's often accompanied by a sort of self-mocking chuckle, as the person seems to be thinking, "I'm an idiot."

There's no need to beat up on yourself for only knowing what you don't want. In fact, you might look at this knowledge as a tool that can help you slowly build a clearer picture of what you do want.

Let's look at a few examples to see how this approach might work for you....


Click here to read the rest of the article at YoungMoney.com.

Featured Local Company

Alternative Futures

(510) 287-5664
4909 Tidewater Ave
Oakland, CA

Related Local Event
Alternative Press Expo (APE 2009)
Dates: 10/17/2009 - 10/18/2009
Location: Concourse Exhibition Center, San Francisco
San Francisco, CA
View Details