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Why Is It Useful to Change Jobs?

Started by martina, 2012-02-18 08:47

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martina

Changing jobs is quite natural for many people nowadays. Specialists kept on switching companies looking for a better place to work at. But their functional responsibilities still remain the same. However, such rotation without the change of your occupation is not 100% useful. Psychological research has showed that a person will have more chances to succeed if he changes his vocation once 5 – 7 years. Thus he will acquire new knowledge and experience and he will learn how to deal with new unusual tasks.

Even if you have created a dynamic plan for developing your career from a clerk to a senior manager in a particular company new responsibilities don't substitute old ones, but are just added to the existing duties. In other words, you don't change your activity – but the sphere of your responsibility becomes wider. In fact, a person keeps on working in the same professional area.  However paradoxical it may be, but after a few years since submitting your sales resume you are more likely to lose your sales competence than to gain or improve it.  You get tired of routine work; you fulfill your duties mechanically with no zest and enthusiasm. That is why psychologists suggest changing the content of the work not its place. Human resource managers still make the same mistake:  they are looking for the applicants with at least a year – relevant experience. They don't consider retrained specialists or those who have no experience in the pertinent area. They don't take into account that inexperienced candidates have considerable advantages over the experts: they have no professional stamps/ clichés, they are ready to improve themselves, and they have sincere interest for the new job and others.

Today more and more people are changing their specialty. Social psychology defines this   phenomenon as professional reorientation.   Mostly it applies to young people. Older people have less flexible thinking – their professional life is influenced by prevalent stereotypes and they have too high demands for themselves. People older 35 are afraid of taking risks.  Even if his life-time dream was to become an executive of car manufacturing company, he won't set himself to writing a resume. The idea of cardinal retraining seems senseless and even careless to older people.  Most of them can neither afford no do they want to spend their time and money for obtaining a second education.  Two categories make an exception of this statement. They are housewives, who have adult children and now are free to take up their career.  Another category is retired servicemen. Both groups come across a lot of objective and psychological difficulties. Psychologists admit that only few people with a specific temperament are capable of abrupt changing their professional life. The ability to take reasonable risk in your professional life - is the major factor of success. And on the contrary – fear of changes or failure inhibit your success.  You will always have a well –paid job if you learn to regard studies and job changing as a natural component of your working life. A well – known American businessman, the author of several books on business psychology wrote: "It is not worth sticking to your primary vocation for being rewarded a golden watch when you are retired."  Think, may be it is time for you to stop sending your teacher resume from one school to another and consider better choices.


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martina

Get Sports Betting tips at www.gamblingblogger.com.ng, sponsored guest posts & banner ads are also accepted .

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