Wednesday, July 8, 2020
The 11 Reasons You Make Bad Job-Changing Decisions
The 11 Reasons You Make Bad Job-Changing Decisions The 11 Reasons You Make Bad Job-Changing Decisions Listen to Podcast Now: Listen in iTunes Download Audio File Do you feel you continue to make poor career choices? Are you confused why you make awful job-changing decisions? There are obviously many factors that contribute to your decisions and decision-making abilities, but there are essentially 11 reasons you make bad job-changing decisions. Below are the summary and highlights from the original podcast. Iâve included a handy, ultimate job interview preparation guide to ensure youâre in order. If you like this material, keep an eye out for an upcoming free video and live workshop on transforming your career Iâll be conducting starting October 27, 2016. All my Tips for Work and Life ® blog subscribers will be alerted as we get closer. INCOMPLETE INFORMATION You didnât gather enough information. How many times have you thought if Iâd only have known that then? There are usually two issues here. Itâs likely your inventory of questions or topic areas to investigate was incomplete. Additionally, you probably didnât dig deep enough (even if you had a complete inventory of questions.) Overcome this issue by creating an exhaustive list of questions to ensure youâre covering everything. Make sure to keep asking âWhy?â until you canât ask âWhy?â anymore. There is no friendlier, joint three-letter word complete sentence I can think of when it comes to your decision-making prowess. For the really ambitious, there is loads (I mean loads) of insight on decision-making in my award-winning book The Hiring Prophecies: Psychology Behind Recruiting Successful Employees. You can get an entire digital experience, including the eBook, audio and guides for free here. You had more options but didnât know it. You were lazy when it came to investigating all your options. Make sure to think creatively and exhaust all avenues. INCORRECT INFORMATION Youâre looking where you shouldnât be (or placing too much weight on the wrong information). Social Media Sites, LinkedIn, and Corporate Sites (Glassdoor, Vault, Wetfeet) are filled with angriness (mostly). Donât place too much weight on information where the deck is stacked. Overcome this issue by keeping all your intake in its proper context. And, make sure to do you own investigation before youâre willing to take someone elseâs (especially a strangerâs) word for it. This is, after all, your career. You expect good advice from someone who doesnât have all the information. Hereâs a scenario. Youâve just given five minutes worth of your (own) bias-filled information to people (a mentor, confidant, co-worker, spouse or whomever) and asked them for advice. If this needs further explaining, go back to You Didnât Gather Enough Information. Theyâre now you. MOTIVES You werenât clear (with yourself) on your (own) motives. Remember your whys! When people go through a lengthy (interviewing) process, for some reason they forget the reasons why they started the process. They also tend to abandon or minimize their (happiness) criteria in favor of the shiny bells and toys the employer has placed in front of them. You were driven by someone elseâs motives. Donât do it for your parents, friends, coworkers, spouse, or anyone else. Youâll resent them. This is your life! FEAR You fear loss. Youâre worried youâll lose what you already have (your reputation, easy commute, a job you can do in your sleep, your friendships with coworkers, etc.) Make sure to keep your outlook balanced. Youâre gaining much too. You fear hardship. Boo hoo this new job will be hard. Youâre not sure youâre up for the challenge. Chances are, if a company wants to hire you, youâre qualified and will kick butt if you put some effort into it! OVERCONFIDENCE Youâre bravado makes you senseless. Overconfidence stems from many sources, but for our purposes assume it comes from your lack of correct or complete information. Just make sure to investigate wholly and youâll be in great shape. (P.S. Do not mistake overconfidence for confidence.) BIASES You have the status-quo bias. You have a strong preference to keep your life as-is! You also think any change is a loss of what you currently have instead of a gain for the better. Do not focusing solely on what youâre losing or place greater emphasis than is necessary. You have the sunk-cost bias. Youâre placing too much weight on time youâve spent and what youâve accumulated (something youâve built, any labor of love, memories, etc.). You need to remove your emotional attachment and rechannel it. One of the easiest wayâs to do this is ask yourself, âIf I wasnât currently working here, would this job, or the new one, align better to my criteria?â Bam. There they are. Eleven nasty ones. I always love to hear from you. What are reasons you think you or others have made poor job-changing decisions? Like this episode? Please share it via social media and review it on iTunes! I can keep this blog and all future podcasts and videos ad-free and sponsor-free ONLY because you share my work! Please share or subscribe to my podcast and YouTube channel too! Want more advanced material? Join the milewalk Academy and grab some of the free offerings that support the instruction in this post!
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