
Mark Lund
How to Change Your Career
Doing what you love is more practical than you think. If you're trying to find your calling, "the most important factors to
look at are your natural talents and your personality," says Nicholas Lore, director of the Rockport Institute, a career-coaching
firm in Rockville, Maryland. Richard Bolles, author of What Color Is Your Parachute? (Ten Speed, $18, amazon.com), suggests making two lists: one with your top-five skills, the other with your five favorite fields. Show your list around
zealously. "You'll typically get many job suggestions," Bolles says. For an intermediary shift, he says, "either change your
title and keep the field, or keep your title and change the field." He cites an aspiring pilot with poor vision who ended
up working for the airlines by making airplane seats. Anne Steiner, director of the Seattle office of the Johnson O'Connor
Research Foundation, which conducts aptitude tests, says to "volunteer or get a part-time job to learn from people in the
industry you're interested in." Soon you'll be one of them.
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