Career Planning Ideas and Guide

Career Planning Surveys Section


 

Career Planning Surveys
Navigation


|

Career Network Home Page
Partners
Tell A Friend about us
College Career Planning |
Career Planning Tools |
Career Planning: Are You Following A Planned Career Path Or Simply A Series Of Jobs? |
Career Planning Tools |
Career Planning Portfolios |
Career Development Planning |
Financial Planning Career |
Planning Career |
Information On Career In Wedding Planning |
Financial Planning Career |
College Career Planning |
Career Planning Development |
Whatscollegeandcareerplanning |
Planning Career |
Planning Career |

List of career planning Articles


Career Planning Surveys Best seller

Buy it Now!





Social bookmarking
You like it? Share it!
socialize it

Newsletter

Subscribe to our newsletter AND receive our exclusive Special Report on career planning
Email:
First Name:



Main Career Planning Surveys sponsors


 

 

Welcome to Career Planning Ideas and Guide

 

Career Planning Surveys Article

Thumbnail example. For a permanent link to this article, or to bookmark it for further reading, click here.


You may also listen to this article by using the following controls.

Career Development Planning: The Road Ahead

from:

At some point in every person’s life, he or she will leave school and go into the work force. Many young people think that is the point at which career development planning begins. For a few people, yes it is. But for most people, career development planning begins well before they leave high school. By their mid-teens, most people have developed values and interests. They have personality traits, as well as likes and dislikes. Most people have some idea of what sort of work they would like to do.

Most people spend most of their adult years engaged in some sort of work. Of course it is important to earn money. But it is also important that a person do the kind of work he or she likes to do. That is why career development planning is necessary. It begins while you are in high school, when you choose courses that are going to be useful to you on the road ahead. This is also a “trying out” period, in which you can get a hands-on experience with various subjects to find out if you like them. Here, too, students can consult with counselors who can tell them what is involved in various types of work, and what a person has to do to prepare for a career in that field.

By this time most young people will have had some sort of part time job. This, too, is important for career development planning. Your after school, part time job might not be the sort of work you want to do for the rest of your life, but it can provide you with some vital tools for starting out. It is through this job that you gain employment experience, learn to be punctual, and demonstrate a willingness to learn new skills. It is through this part time job, in the form of a recommendation from the employer, that you can show future potential employers that you are a reliable, trustworthy employee who works well with other people.

Career development planning means knowing about the labor market, but more importantly it means knowing about yourself. What are your strengths and abilities? How well do you present yourself? A personnel officer is going to make the decision on whether or not to hire you, based on what is in your resume, and how you conduct yourself during an interview.

Knowing about the labor market means becoming familiar with the world of work. Career development planning gives you a systematic method by which to find a job. There are many more jobs than those listed in newspaper want ads. Career development planning shows you how to explore this “hidden” job market. It also makes you aware of training programs that will make you eligible to seek employment at higher levels.


Other Career Planning Surveys related Articles

Career Planning System
Career Planning Tools
Career Planning: Are You Following A Planned Career Path Or Simply A Series Of Jobs?
Career Planning Test
Career Planning

Do you want to contribute to our site : submit your articles HERE


 

Career Planning Surveys News

Obama's Southern Discomfort (The Note)

By MICHAEL FALCONE (@michaelpfalcone) and AMY WALTER (@amyewalter) NOTABLES: WHITE VOTER PROBLEMS. The results of yesterday’s primaries in Arkansas and Kentucky, as well as fresh polling numbers from Florida today, highlight a key challenge President Obama faces this election cycle: He not only has to...

Read more...


Top 10 Trends in the Executive Employment Market

ExecuNet’s 2012 Executive Job Market Intelligence Report reveals what’s happening in the executive workplace, according to search firm recruiters, corporate talent acquisition professionals and successful executives.Norwalk, CT (PRWEB) May 18, 2012 http://www.ExecuNet. ...

Read more...


Retirement advice can be hard to hear

Retirement planning may mean deferring gratification or making tough decisions. Don't blame the messenger.

Read more...


Robex Resources Inc.: Progress Report on the Nampala Project

QUEBEC CITY, QUEBEC-- - Robex Resources Inc. is pleased to confirm that construction work at the Nampala mine is progressing well and that a number of key steps have been completed in recent months. Bumigeme Inc., which has been entrusted with the detailed engineering of the plant, has finished its flow ...

Read more...


Obama Primary Results Show Southern Discomfort

By MICHAEL FALCONE (@michaelpfalcone) and AMY WALTER (@amyewalter) NOTABLES: WHITE VOTER PROBLEMS. The results of yesterday’s primaries in Arkansas and Kentucky, as well as fresh polling numbers from Florida today, highlight a key challenge President Obama faces this election cycle: He not only has to...

Read more...


Randstad: U.S. Workers Feel Secure in Jobs, Optimistic Towards Future Prospects

ATLANTA, May 7, 2012 /PRNewswire/ -- A new study released today from Randstad, the second largest HR services and staffing company in the world, revealed that U.S. workers are feeling more secure in their ...

Read more...