How many of you have changed careers?
Posted: Sat Jun 27, 2009 9:00 am
And if you did, how did you go about getting into another career?
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RoundEye wrote:The hardest part of changing careers is starting near the bottom and working your way back up to a respectable position again. Sometimes one aspect will blend into the new career though. Most of my jobs were with some type of troubleshooting. First fixing stereos and TV’s, then motorcycles, then computers, then back to bikes.
More then likely you’ll have to retrain in something but that helps keep you from starting out so low. There’s some bad and good to changing careers but there is nothing that beats doing something you enjoy. Makes it worth getting out of bed everyday.
Interesting question, Are you thinking on doing this? If so, what do you plan on doing?CableDude wrote:![]()
I think that is one of modern mans most difficult quest. To find a job that you like to do and are good at it too.CableDude wrote:![]()
depends where you are looking. cincy ohio is hiring pretty handily in a range of IT areas.24giovanni wrote: the IT field is greatly hard to find a job in right now. Do others feel that way as well?
thoughts?
thx
I have not really changed careers I suppose,if you could call what I have done a career, I could say that I have done different jobs in the same industry for 31 years.CableDude wrote:And if you did, how did you go about getting into another career?
I plan on moving out of IT for a while starting as soon as I can cause it doesn't appear its taking off as well as I hoped. I was makin good money where I was at the last 2 years but it was part time with full time hours. I figured it a foot in the door type job but the school I was at is state funded and the economy is of course hurting so its trickling down.24giovanni wrote:Interesting question, Are you thinking on doing this? If so, what do you plan on doing?
Sava, Same question for you.
To me, from what I hear from a lot of people, the IT field is greatly hard to find a job in right now. Do others feel that way as well?
thoughts?
thx
Yes.24giovanni wrote:Are you thinking on doing this?
I have no idea, that is a major part of the problem.24giovanni wrote:If so, what do you plan on doing?
It does not appear that there are any high end IT jobs where I'm at.24giovanni wrote:the IT field is greatly hard to find a job in right now. Do others feel that way as well?
thoughts?
What industry if you don't mind me asking?Dan wrote:I have not really changed careers I suppose,if you could call what I have done a career, I could say that I have done different jobs in the same industry for 31 years.
retail/insurance replacement car stereo/12v electrical repair/nav video,ignitions,steering column/interior repairCableDude wrote:What industry if you don't mind me asking?
Dan wrote:retail/insurance replacement car stereo/12v electrical repair/nav video,ignitions,steering column/interior repair
basically all automotive interior repair
Join the club. Wanna open up a brunette modeling agency with me?CableDude wrote:Yes.
I have no idea, that is a major part of the problem.
Me neither and that sux.
It does not appear that there are any high end IT jobs where I'm at.
So what are you planning on giving a try at? Any ideas?Sava700 wrote:I plan on moving out of IT for a while starting as soon as I can cause it doesn't appear its taking off as well as I hoped. I was makin good money where I was at the last 2 years but it was part time with full time hours. I figured it a foot in the door type job but the school I was at is state funded and the economy is of course hurting so its trickling down.
no clue yet...24giovanni wrote:So what are you planning on giving a try at? Any ideas?
24giovanni wrote:Join the club. Wanna open up a brunette modeling agency with me?
so,CableDude wrote:You know what......
You are now my favorite member.![]()
![]()
If it could only truly happen.CableDude wrote:You know what......
You are now my favorite member.![]()
![]()
I am talking desktop support, Administration. If so, where cause there are none in Ma. that many people I know can't find any. I assume Sava and CD feel the same way but I can't really talk for them.YeOldeStonecat wrote:IT fields quite strong, just gotta look. Yes with some corporate/enterprise a few are doing some downsizing, but many others also growing.
SMB consulting in crazy huge demands. Absolutely exploading field.
Yeah, you too.Dan wrote:so,
uh,
it's not me anymore ?![]()
How do you like it?JBrazen wrote:Started off in the IT Dept of a large Engineering/Architectural firm in NYC while I was in school studying CAD. Eventually moved into the design dept as a CAD Specialist.
Desktop support is really easy and at times carefree so you don't have to worry about much, you get paid well and you get the perks that most others get. Around here there just isn't too much of a need for it. I'd say more than 50% of the people in this small area commute about 30miles+ a day to get to their jobs. Love the area but too many older people want to keep it a retirement community or the mormons just want to take over the rest. A few places to eat at around here stopped selling alcohol cause of the promises to send more business their way if they did so it pushes us "town folk" away more and more.24giovanni wrote:I am talking desktop support, Administration. If so, where cause there are none in Ma. that many people I know can't find any. I assume Sava and CD feel the same way but I can't really talk for them.
http://money.cnn.com/2009/07/02/news/co ... 2009070208NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- The battered U.S. labor market took a step backwards last month as employers trimmed more jobs from their payrolls in June, according to a government report Thursday.
There was a net loss of 467,000 jobs in June, compared with a revised loss of 322,000 jobs in May. This was the first time in four months that the number of jobs lost rose from the prior month.
The June job losses were also far worse than the forecast of a loss of 365,000 jobs by economists surveyed by Briefing.com.
The unemployment rate rose for the ninth straight month, climbing to 9.5% from 9.4%, and hitting another 26-year high. Economists had been expecting that the unemployment rate would hit 9.6%.
Nearly 3.4 million jobs have been lost during the first half of 2009, more than the 3 million lost in all of 2008.
The job losses don't tell the full picture of the pain the labor market either. The average hourly work week fell to 33 hours from 33.1 hours in May, a record low in readings that go back to 1964. Average hourly wages were unchanged, so the shorter week shaved $1.85, or 0.3%, off of the average weekly paycheck.
Those who have been out of work for six months or more, and thus have run out of unemployment benefits, climbed to nearly 4.4 million, a record high.
You said that when I left my job last year.Sava700 wrote:might not be a good time to leave a job if you have one cause all that money the Govt sunk into the country trying to do something good isn't working.
http://money.cnn.com/2009/07/02/news/co ... 2009070208
Well you got lucky...read the numbers, and around here its prob far worse than up that way or at least it seems like it. Following your heart doesn't pay the bills.Debbie wrote:You said that when I left my job last year.I gave myself a damn good raise too.
All I can say is follow your heart and don't be ruled by fear.
Stats don't mean **** to me.Sava700 wrote:Well you got lucky...read the numbers, and around here its prob far worse than up that way or at least it seems like it. Following your heart doesn't pay the bills.![]()
numbers...not stats. 2+2=4 not 5Debbie wrote:Stats don't mean **** to me.I don't run my life based on stats.
It is called manifesting what you want. But then again, that is a whole new thread now isn't it?![]()
I think that’s why I hate math so much. Everything is always so clear-cut and defined. No margin for error or imagination.Sava700 wrote:...numbers...not stats. 2+2=4...
Very true..I haven't found it yetRoundEye wrote: You may hunt your entire life for a job that makes you happy and pays the bills though.
What really sucks is that once I found something I did well and seemed to fit in I got sick.Sava700 wrote:Very true..I haven't found it yet
RoundEye wrote: You may hunt your entire life for a job that makes you happy and pays the bills though.