risk of a safe career
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The Hidden Risk Of a “Safe” Career

Does a “risk-free” career still exist in today’s world?

Headlines warning of the end of work due to automation and scaling down seem to indicate a radical adjustment concerning the job market. Such a change will not respect college students, current graduates, and other young employees.

For those of us in that age group, this sentiment can be annoying as well as discouraging. You were force-fed the standard path to a ‘successful; life, and you followed it each step of the way. You went to school, passed all your tests, and handled a load of college financial debt.

Now, after all of that, it appears nearly impossible to land a good-paying job – let alone lead a happy, stable life where you aren’t constantly worrying about whether or not you’ll make your next rent payment.

Things look dismal, and it’s reasonable that this state of events would get you down. But…

There is hope on the horizon.

Times are Changing.

There are solid steps that you can follow to prevent joblessness and distress in the future proactively. You have the devices needed to produce a much better life than you would have gotten following along the typical life scripts entailing some combination of a good level, a nice home, and a professional blue-collar job.

The truth is, these standard ‘life scripts’ are teeming with unseen dangers. At least when it comes to developing a working life that actually works.

Just check out the stats on grown-up weight problems and job satisfaction to give you an idea of how effective social blueprints have actually been. A look at job satisfaction statistics is especially revealing, with more than half of working adults dissatisfied with their work life.

The most likely outcome of working most jobs is poor health and lots of stress.

Times are changing, nonetheless, and with adjustment comes both opportunity and risk. Exactly how you get ahold of the opportunities and prevent the risks is what this article is all about.

I’m going to review exactly how there is and has actually always been a danger in seeking a ‘risk-free’ profession. This holds true now more than ever.

Second, I’m most likely to talk about how you can support your abilities to ensure that they are valuable and suitable regardless of the scenario.

Many parents imagine their youngster getting a high paying job as a legal representative, accountant, or investor. Once upon a time, this assumption was a fact: it would certainly have been unimaginable that anyone with an MBA stapled to their name would be jobless.

But the market has altered, and it’s not unusual to see a JD or MBA unemployed. These occupation paths are becoming much less certain by the year.


Entrepreneurship: More Secure Than a “Safe” Career

The trouble with typical jobs is that they are constant and steady in a really unpredictable atmosphere. While everything changes around them, these careers stay relatively the same, which provides workers little opportunity to improve their skills (or develop new ones) and stay ahead of the curve in an ever-evolving job market.

Conversely, going into entrepreneurship gives you the opportunity to obtain direct feedback from the marketplace, which is inevitably the riches and revenue resource. As time goes on, you can change your offering and upgrade your abilities. This allows you always to stay pertinent to the marketplace.

Traditional professions are filled with ‘quiet risk.’ which slowly and imperceptibly gets worse over time without you realizing it. It’s death by a thousand tiny paper cuts.

Contented by job safety and a predictable, however tiny annual raise, those operating in typical professions get no responses from the marketplace until it’s too late. By then, innovation has relocated to change your work, or it’s been outsourced for much less expensive. Your network is stagnant, your skill-set is obsolete, and already you likely have a lengthy listing of economic responsibilities that make your ability to pivot extremely difficult.

The perceived danger for the business owner that left their secure job to begin something on their very own is greater; the genuine danger of a secure job accumulates over time up until it strikes when you are least able to adjust and pivot.

A far better strategy would be to take on dangers earlier, build abilities that will always be useful in any job market, and branch out from typical life scripts asap.


How To Land Work No Matter What

First, let get an idea of what jobs are being replaced and why: telemarketing, for example, is a job where, in many cases, the worker has a literal script to follow. They call out to (or receive calls from) customers and help them with relatively straightforward tasks. The receptive nature of the process positions telemarketing at a high risk of being automated away to a computer program. This is the same for clerical work such as legal assistants, certain types of reporters, etc.

Many assembly line labor jobs, delivery jobs, and manufacturing jobs are already in the process of being slowly automated away, with people less and less involved in the processes with each passing year.


What Type Of Job Isn’t Likely To Be Automated?

Jobs that are multi-faceted and can’t be boxed into a standard script. There is a wide range of abilities that would certainly fit this description. Consider something that can not easily be broken down right into distinct steps.

Community service, healthcare work, computer systems analysts, data analysis, and mathematics are examples of broad career paths that are likely always to have some level of demand.

This type of work needs challenging or difficult skills to automate, so they have a really high possibility of staying in demand in the ever-changing marketplace.


How Do You Become Independent In The Current Job Market?

Firstly – Don’t Rush Yourself.

There might be a lot of pressure to jump into grad school and become a specialist, but don’t rush right into anything. Take time to try another thing. You may find that grad school isn’t essential for what you intend to achieve.

The price of doing any of these is too high to jump into them blindly. Take a year to think things through.

Produce a large body of work by doing side projects and side hustles.

As soon as you can, on the side of college or your work, start creating a portfolio of your work.

These jobs will help you accumulate some skills, expand your network, and generate some extra earnings for you. A couple of hours spent constructing a good portfolio can be far better than the hours invested in obtaining good grades at an institution.

It may even develop into a lucrative freelance business prior to you obtaining your grade.


Network, network, network.

Your network is your net worth.

Make certain you are investing a lot of time broadening your circle of social links to a variety of sectors.

Utilize this network to get advisers and fans that can direct you through the volatile market ahead. This offers you much more adaptability and choices in a world where change is hectic and inevitable.


Final Thoughts

Safe Careers are Out; Entrepreneurship is In.

Never has there been a time when you had so much incentive to carve your very own course, be a long-lasting student, and take dangers.

In the past, helping on your own when there were many stable jobs with a pension available that opting to be an ‘entrepreneur’ instead would have seemed like the bad choice. Now, the option makes a great deal more sense for those willing to seize the opportunity.

Take a look at our business launch guide as well as this resource for online startups or this free training on building a side-hustle online.

A “risk-free” occupation or entrepreneurial venture? Which will you pick?


Morgan Hewitt

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