Three steps to building your career: tips from a former Olympian
In today鈥檚 competitive economy, recent graduates may be tempted to settle for the first job that comes their way. But are they making a mistake?
In a weekly series from , Professor Bruce Kidd, former Olympian and the warden of Hart House, recently shared tips on how to build a career that鈥檚 more deliberate than desperate.
Three Steps To A Great Career
If you鈥檙e graduating soon, you鈥檙e probably eager to get started on your professional path. Maybe you鈥檙e concerned about looming student loan payments. Maybe you want to prove that it was worthwhile to invest all this effort and time and money into 茄子直播.
But if you can afford to be patient 鈥 if you can take the time to develop the right strategy 鈥 you will be rewarded in the long term. After all, great careers are more akin to a marathon than a frantic sprint. Run too fast, and you鈥檙e more likely to end up in a dead end of a job.
Plan ahead, be selective, keep your goal in mind, and you will be successful.
First, make a stronger candidate out of yourself鈥 one who stands out among your peers. This is where co-curricular activities like come in handy. Think about it 鈥 given a choice between two Commerce graduates, would you not choose the one who has purchased soon-to-be Canadian art masterpieces, planned major campus-wide events, or hosted a dialogue with the likes of Noam Chomsky or Pico Iyer? (Also, according to Professor Kidd, many alumni end up in careers that emanate from the passions that they discovered while taking a Hart House class or .)
Second, realize that your first job is much more than a quick way to make money or to fill a line on your resum茅: it鈥檚 the stepping stone for a series of increasingly better jobs down the line. So ask yourself where you want to be in five years and work backwards from that. Do not consider any potential jobs until they give you the skills and experience to advance your career plan. Once you鈥檝e determined what kinds of positions match your criteria, contact the appropriate companies鈥攅ven if they鈥檙e not hiring.
鈥淔ind out who your manager might be and ask for an interview. This won鈥檛 always work, but if they do give you the time of the day, you鈥檙e more likely to be remembered next time they have an opening,鈥 says Kidd.
Third, when you attend job interviews, keep in mind you鈥檙e not the only one being interviewed.
"It goes both ways,鈥 says Kidd. 鈥淵ou owe it to yourself to ask questions and do your best to determine whether that鈥檚 a place you want to be a part of, one whose culture matches yours and where you鈥檙e confident you can do good work.鈥