What to consider when choosing a career?

AreaCode707

Lifer
Sep 21, 2001
18,447
133
106
1. Salary
This was the first thing on your mind anyway, so let's get it over with. Yes, consider the potential salary range of the field you want to go into. Monster and JobVent both have decent salary estimators, and there are a million more out on the web. Understand that the salaries you see will be your target salaries, not necessarily your starting salaries.
Monster
JobVent

2. Demand
Let me say this again. DEMAND DEMAND DEMAND DEMAND.
Take into consideration how easy it will be to break into your chosen field. You want to be an SAP module configurer? Great, you have it made. You want to be a marketing manager? You've got serious competition. If you want to go into a highly saturated field, spend some time thinking about how long you're willing to be on the job search, what you'd do in the meantime, and what your backup plan would be in case you need one.

3. Love of the work
No matter how great the salary and benefits are, if you don't enjoy what you're doing, the perks won't be worth it in the long run. Choose work you like, or can at least tolerate. If you absolutely intend to do something you don't enjoy just so you can make bank for a while, decide how long you can and will do it, and what you would do afterwards. It's too easy to get sucked into staying somewhere you abhor once you get used to the $$, and life's too short to really be worth it.

4. Location
Is your dream job available (keeping in mind demand) in the area you want to live? If not, are you willing to relocate? Is the work available in an area you would relocate to?

5. Career path
So you've picked your ideal job. How do you get there? Where do you go from there? When you've got a job in mind, it's only a stop on the way to retirement. You're most likely going to hold other jobs as you work your way up, and you may move into new jobs afterwards. Figured out the career path yet? Then apply the salary, demand, etc. to those other stops and see if they fit the life you want to live.

6. Education
Are you able to learn what you need to know, and can you stay interested while you're learning it? Education is very different from the work itself a lot of the time, so this isn't a primary consideration but it is something to think about. Bear in mind, a degree in a particular field usually doesn't guarantee you work in that field. Also, what post-graduate education might you want to get to get further in your field? That might be a few certifications or that might be a PhD. How does that sound to you?

Anybody want to add other things to think about?
 
Feb 24, 2001
14,513
4
81
While I haven't had many jobs and going from cubes to offices and different salaries. All that matters, to me anyway, is #3. The rest doesn't matter.
 

Jawo

Diamond Member
Jun 15, 2005
4,125
0
0
Originally posted by: BrunoPuntzJones
While I haven't had many jobs and going from cubes to offices and different salaries. All that matters, to me anyway, is #3. The rest doesn't matter.

I would agree!!!
 

AreaCode707

Lifer
Sep 21, 2001
18,447
133
106
Originally posted by: Jawo
Originally posted by: BrunoPuntzJones
While I haven't had many jobs and going from cubes to offices and different salaries. All that matters, to me anyway, is #3. The rest doesn't matter.

I would agree!!!

Demand matters, because it may determine whether you can get the job you love or not. ;)
 

aswedc

Diamond Member
Oct 25, 2000
3,543
0
76
Are you dedicated enough to get what you want? I've seen way too many people go to college and drop out. If you're not going to put in the work, might as well start flipping burgers now so you don't waste a year of college tuition failing classes.
 

AreaCode707

Lifer
Sep 21, 2001
18,447
133
106
Originally posted by: BrunoPuntzJones
While I haven't had many jobs and going from cubes to offices and different salaries. All that matters, to me anyway, is #3. The rest doesn't matter.

Other thought on this, I think location is more important than loving your work. Your location determines your community, your real life. Your work life is second to that.
 
Feb 24, 2001
14,513
4
81
Well you'll spend 24 years working. 24 years sleeping. And the 24 that's left, well I guess location could be important :)

May be personal preference. I would rather be some place that is poor location wise if I love what I do. I can always make do in my own little abode. At worst I'd be in the inner city hood. But I'd have broadband :)

And if I was out in the farmland away from broadband...then that's ok because then I'd have work and location covered, I like the country :)
 

Willoughbyva

Diamond Member
Sep 26, 2001
3,267
0
0
Some college is better than no college. I don't have a degree, but I have some college and it made a difference in getting jobs. The jobs I have had don't pay a whole lot, but it is better than some other jobs out there.


Perry
 

irishScott

Lifer
Oct 10, 2006
21,562
3
0
Well, I'm a college freshman Computer Engineering Major

1. I like computers

2. Computer Engineers will be in high demand for the foreseeable future

3. I have an ongoing PAID Software Engineering Internship with Lockheed Martin

4. Computer Engineers have an average starting salary of 70-80k

I'd say I'm pretty set. Also looking to double major with Biology. Maybe get into Biomedical Engineering. Or maybe go the opposite way and get into microfluidics. Either way, I'll have my CE degree to fall back on.
 

Jeff7

Lifer
Jan 4, 2001
41,596
19
81
Originally posted by: PaulNEPats
7. You don't get rich working for other people.
8. Odds are, you won't ever get rich. If it was easy to get rich, everyone would be. Of course, if everyone was rich, we'd all be middle class, and whaddaya know, most of us are.


Ok, so that's all good and such to excel at something. How about doing average? Let's say I think I might possibly perhaps maybe almost want to do mechanical engineering, but I really don't care to have to work my way to the top, or to be the best of the best. I just want a quiet job, without having to manage people or constantly worry about what's going on at my job to the point that I would wind up hating something I had enjoyed prior. How easy is that to achieve?:)
 

Reckoner

Lifer
Jun 11, 2004
10,851
1
81
Originally posted by: Jeff7
Originally posted by: PaulNEPats
7. You don't get rich working for other people.
8. Odds are, you won't ever get rich. If it was easy to get rich, everyone would be. Of course, if everyone was rich, we'd all be middle class, and whaddaya know, most of us are.


Ok, so that's all good and such to excel at something. How about doing average? Let's say I think I might possibly perhaps maybe almost want to do mechanical engineering, but I really don't care to have to work my way to the top, or to be the best of the best. I just want a quiet job, without having to manage people or constantly worry about what's going on at my job to the point that I would wind up hating something I had enjoyed prior. How easy is that to achieve?:)


You're right. A lot of self-starters fail. Even money aside, I think it's a lot more rewarding working for yourself rather than for someone else. YMMV.
 

Jeff7

Lifer
Jan 4, 2001
41,596
19
81
Originally posted by: PaulNEPats
You're right. A lot of self-starters fail. Even money aside, I think it's a lot more rewarding working for yourself rather than for someone else. YMMV.
I start to wonder that the whole idea of "you can get rich!" is a way for those in power to keep the middle and lower class motivated to keep laboring as they have done for generations.
"If I do this and this, just as those with money said I should, then I too will get lots of money!"

Mhmm, sure. Those with lots of money are being altruistic, and they want everyone else to join their exclusive club. They have lots of money because others don't, and that's the way they want it to stay.

What amused me was some men's magazine that was in one of the campus bathrooms. Among the things on the cover: "10 ways to get rich" and "846 ways to stay in shape."
Wow, if the secrets to perfect health and tons of wealth come in a magazine for less than $10, that's a damn good deal. Gullibility sure is profitable, isn't it?
 

Special K

Diamond Member
Jun 18, 2000
7,098
0
76
Originally posted by: Jeff7
Originally posted by: PaulNEPats
You're right. A lot of self-starters fail. Even money aside, I think it's a lot more rewarding working for yourself rather than for someone else. YMMV.
I start to wonder that the whole idea of "you can get rich!" is a way for those in power to keep the middle and lower class motivated to keep laboring as they have done for generations.
"If I do this and this, just as those with money said I should, then I too will get lots of money!"

Mhmm, sure. Those with lots of money are being altruistic, and they want everyone else to join their exclusive club. They have lots of money because others don't, and that's the way they want it to stay.

What amused me was some men's magazine that was in one of the campus bathrooms. Among the things on the cover: "10 ways to get rich" and "846 ways to stay in shape."
Wow, if the secrets to perfect health and tons of wealth come in a magazine for less than $10, that's a damn good deal. Gullibility sure is profitable, isn't it?

The information the average person needs to get in shape can be had for free, although the amount of misinformation out there makes it quite difficult to find.

Unfortunately the same is not true for getting rich.