Thursday, April 18, 2013

CAREER SWOT ANALYSIS

A STRATEGY FOR SUCCESS

“When I was in 1st grade my Dad took me on a Father and Son campout sponsored by our church. It was late spring at Lake Tahoe – cold, gray and drizzly… So when one of the dads broke out some boxing gloves and drew a ring in the sand, I was thinking this whole thing might not be a bust after all.

“I watched while the older boys – 10 and 11 year olds – had their matches. I was pretty confident that I could do better than they were—after all I watched Wild, Wild West every week and had all the moves down. I begged Dad to let me get in the ring. He finally relented, and I was matched up with a 5th grader who weighed twice as much as me. Frankly, I was quite surprised at how easily he knocked me on my can – repeatedly. When it was over, his dad said to mine, ‘I guess my son is too well-built for your boy.’ I remember thinking, ‘Too well-built! He’s 10 and I’m 6!’”

(The previous is an excerpt from a blog I recently read by Lance Boldt, Vice President and Co-Founder of AutoNetTV and a BYU alumnus.)

A buzz word in today’s terminology, SWOT analysis, is all about planning ahead and strategizing to play your strengths and fortify shortcomings. While it’s the same concept as watching Wild, Wild West every week to prepare for battle, its components have proven to be a little more reliable:

1. Identify your strengths and use them to get you the biggest bang for the buck
2. Acknowledge your weaknesses and reinforce flaws till you have overcome them
3. Opportunities for improvement can be identified and turned into positives
4. Threat identification and risk planning can eliminate their likelihood

We have all had situations when the competition has been immense. Figuratively speaking, what are you doing to make sure that you’re not knocked around too much upon entering the job force? We want to know!

Thursday, April 11, 2013

ARROWS IN YOUR QUIVER

USE IT OR LOSE IT


It’s a well-known fact that in archery that if a bow is left strung all the time, it will lose its spring. This inattentiveness diminishes the tool’s power to launch and makes it fairly useless.

While we, too, need to give ourselves a break and not constantly be “strung up,” in a manner of speaking, we must continue to hone and not neglect our skills or they will ultimately disappear. That happens in all aspects of our lives: learning a language, mastering the piano, conquering computer programming; we either use it or lose it.

The myriad of resources made available through the BYU Alumni Career Services help arm those seeking employment or career development with success. These can be assets in our careers, or we can allow them to waste away and go unused, ill-advised, or remain idle. These resources include the following:

·         Resume and cover letter critiques
·         Career assessment tests
·         Career fairs
·         Webinars
·         Networking and mentoring opportunities
·         Job board with positions from all over the nation

There are nearly 300 LDS Employment Resource Service Centers worldwide that help members with employment, education, and self-employment. While their programs include a plethora of the same resources, there is an expensive cost associated with the alternative. “The same 3-day career workshop that we teach every week in our Professional Career Workshop program costs as much as $7000 per person in corporate settings,” explains resource center missionary Carolyn Horrocks.

On the other hand, BYU Alumni Career Services is completely free…

Accessing the wealth of resources at your fingertips can make all the difference.