Looking forward to speaking again with talented and motivated Atlanta high school students on June 23!
Career Tips for High School Students
99 Motivators for
College Success – Excerpts
©
2012-2016 Perry Binder, LLC
1. Don't let anyone crush your dreams. However, the riskier your
dream, the better your backup plan must be.
2. There is a huge difference between a childhood dream and a dream job. If you dreamed of being a lawyer since the age of twelve, you better make sure you know exactly what attorneys do on a given twelve hour work day.
2. There is a huge difference between a childhood dream and a dream job. If you dreamed of being a lawyer since the age of twelve, you better make sure you know exactly what attorneys do on a given twelve hour work day.
3.
Make sure your dream job is not an avocation (a hobby). An avocation is a
vacation from a vocation, because the pay ranges from little to nothing.
4.
No matter what your part-time jobs or summer jobs are, always be thinking about
how those experiences will enhance your resume and work skills.
5.
The most important thing for deciding on a major or career path is to get out
of the classroom and into an internship which exposes you to the day-to-day ups
and downs of that profession. "Learning by doing" will give you a
better appreciation of the job than learning through textbooks.
6.
Do what you love but don't let your career choices jeopardize anyone you love.
Including yourself. Translation: Take care of others but don't forget to take
care of yourself, sometimes before others. Listen to our airline flight
attendants: "Put your own oxygen mask on first before assisting others
with their masks."
7.
Determine whether you are driven to be your own boss or if you crave the
stability of a steady paycheck. Assess your personality traits and the risks
inherent with both paths. (e.g., the risk of putting up your own money as your
own boss versus the risk of losing a job in a company you work for)
8.
Rather than casually asking career advice from parents or other relatives, set
up a time to interview them, with prepared general and specific questions. This
approach will make them think more thoughtfully about their responses, and may
reveal their personal career challenges and triumphs.
9.
Don't rely on luck or fate in your career. Professional success is about
putting yourself in a position to create numerous opportunities.
10.
Over the course of your lifetime, there may only be a handful of impactful
career opportunities. Assemble an inner circle team of advisors now, so you'll
be able to act quickly to objectively assess the pluses and minuses of future
opportunities.
And
finally, clean up your social media presence online! What's publicly available might not bode well
for your future employment.
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