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The 30 Best Careers for 2009

Re-posting from klintron.com:

* Audiologist
* Biomedical equipment technician
* Clergy
* Curriculum/training specialist
* Engineer
* Firefighter
* Fundraiser
* Genetic counselor
* Ghostwriter
* Government manager
* Hairstylist/Cosmetologist
* Health policy specialist
* Higher education administrator
* Landscape architect
* Librarian
* Locksmith/Security system technician
* Management consultant
* Mediator
* Occupational therapist
* Optometrist
* Pharmacist
* Physical therapist
* Physician assistant
* Politician/Elected official
* Registered nurse
* School psychologist
* Systems analyst
* Urban planner
* Usability/User experience specialist
* Veterinarian

Full Story: US News and Report

careerplanner.com’s career interest test is a waste of time and money

Careerplanner.com‘s “career interest test” is worthless. What you pay for: a short, superficial “assessment” of what you like and dislike that tells you which of 5 personality types you are. It’s about as deep an OK Cupid quiz. They charge extra for “fast processing” even though it’s just a typical computer generated result without any personalization or or human interaction. Avoid this scam.

Don’t try to dodge the recession with grad school

Most thorough and damning anti-grad school piece I’ve read yet:

It used to be that if you had a law degree it was a ticket to a high salary and a safe career. Today many people go to law school and cannot find a job. This is, in a large part, because law school selects for people who are good with details and pass tests and law firms select for people who are good at marketing themselves and can drum up business. Law firms are in a transition phase, and they have many unfair labor practices leftover from older generations, for example, hourly billing and making young lawyers pay dues for what is, today, a largely uncertain future. Which might explain why the American Bar Association reports that the majority of lawyers would recommend that people not to go into law.

Full Story: Brazen Careerist

Generational differences

The older I get the more “why this generation is so different from that generation” articles grate on me.

Case in point: this Harvard Business Review article on “Generation Y in Workforce.”

If you replace every mention of text messaging with e-mail and replace Josh’s ideas with the idea of building a web site in the first place, this article have run in the mid-90s as an article about Gen X in the work place. The sales exec at the end would be saying Josh didn’t do anything to disprove Gen X’s image as a bunch of slackers more interested in being “free agents” than dedicated salary men.

It could have come out in the 70s as an article on Boomers in the work force and been about how Josh thought they weren’t investing enough in television. The complaint could have been “they’re a bunch of hippies who want to start their own companies in garages and wear jeans every day.”

Every generation looks at the next generation and worries. This isn’t new. I shudder to think of what WWI vets thought of the kids of the 20s. Yikes.

Some people get new technology and business innovation, and some don’t. I think this is more of a cultural disconnect than generational one. Serious technophiles who blog and podcast, Twitter and Torrent seem just as likely to be tech or creative professionals in their 40s or 50s as they are to be teenagers or high schoolers. You know who the first people I knew were to get into Napster? High School teachers. Boomers. Because they had access to high speed internet at work and all of us students still had dial-up at home. Ten years later, I still know people my age and younger who don’t download music, don’t own computers, and/or don’t use text messaging.

I think younger people are more likely to be more tech savvy than our older counter parts, due to having more exposure to computers at school growing up, it doesn’t make us into radically different aliens (like Rushkoff argued in Children of Chaos). Gen Y, Gen X, and the Boomers also have, I think, very similar tastes in music, movies, cars, fashion, etc. What most people perceive as generational differences are usual accidents of culture – when some very traditional rural Christian parent’s kid turns out to be a goth. The parent doesn’t not get her kid because she’s old. She doesn’t get her kid because she’s a traditional rural Christian and her kid is a goth.

Better advice for Gen X and Boomer managers trying to learn how to manage Gen Yers in a corporate environment: think about what it was like to be their age.

Non-generational things to keep in mind, coming from a Gen Y guy who’s been out of college for about 5 years now and is maybe just maybe starting to figure out how this whole “work” thing works:

  • No one took “Office Politics 101” in college
  • No one (except maybe a few business majors) took “Corporate Policies and Procedures 101” either
  • Young workers spent the past 4+ years in college seriously exercising their brains, and now they’re doing menial office tasks that people without degrees can do just as well.
  • In other words: they don’t have a clue about how corporate culture works, and they’re bored out of their minds.

    Here are some things that may be unique to the current generation, not because of some deeply ingrained difference in paradigms but because the economy sucks:

  • Even in the relative hay days of 2005-2006, mass layoffs were common place.
  • Young people consider themselves to be walking targets during a layoff because they lack experience and seniority.
  • Tuition was more expensive relative to wages and inflation when Gen Y was in college than any time in history
  • Thanks to price inflation and stagnant wage growth, entry level jobs pay less now than they have since before the labor movement.
  • In other words, young workers don’t have any job security and don’t make much money. They make less money than their managers did when they were starting out, and have more student loan debt.

    So they’re bored, underpaid, don’t have a clue how the corporate environment works, and know they could be let go without notice at any minute.

    And managers wonder why “young people these days” don’t have any company loyalty?

    It seems like workers and companies are at a stale-mate right now: companies want committed, hard working employees and with good attitudes. Employees want their work to be valued and want some measure of stability Employers can’t offer this sort of stability to their employees (not as long as they have to make job cuts to satisfy their shareholders), so morale suffers. This isn’t some generational paradigm shift, it’s economics. This isn’t to say that the economy didn’t suck at other times – but I don’t think there was the sort of economic nihilism in the past. People have been saying “all jobs are temp jobs” for a long time, but ours is the first generation to be entering the work force with this mantra already a given.

    The creepy corporate paternalism from Enterprise sounds worse than the “get tough on ’em” attitude from General Tool & Supply. But neither one sounds optimal. As a “Gen Y” worker myself, here’s what I would tell managers:

  • Mentor employees and advise them on career paths within the company, giving them an idea on when and how they will be able to be more involved with key decisions, make more money, and do more interesting work. It sucks to feel like you’re at a dead-end, or just stumbling around in the dark.
  • Give honest feedback about their work. The generic “Great job! You’re the best” example from the Harvard case is actually a morale killer. If everything you do is received with the same fake praise the praise is meaningless. It leads to either laziness (“why bother doing a good job if even bad work is praised?”) or paranoia (maybe all my work is terrible and they’re just being polite”).
  • Don’t ask for input if you know in advance you’re not going to use it. Managers do this with the best intentions – to make people feel like they’re involved. But this phoniness is transparent and it makes employees feel like their input isn’t valued ever. If their input isn’t wanted or needed, don’t ask.
  • Don’t be dismissive of ideas (like Sarah in the story above). Take time to explain what’s wrong with an idea. If similar ideas have failed in the past, explain it. Show that you’re not dismissing an idea because you don’t value the employees input, but because there’s a legitimate reason not to use the idea.
  • Advice for young workers (what I’ve learned):

  • Company loyalty is rewarded more than competence or effectiveness. This may sound unfair, but think about this from the company/manager’s point of view: why bother training you, promoting you, etc. if they don’t think you’ll stick around? (I agree: companies should make you WANT to stick around – but if you don’t act like you do they aren’t going to bother promoting you)
  • If you’re not getting mentorship, you’ve got to seek someone out
  • Never go over your bosses head unless you’re reporting your boss for serious misconduct
  • You know you have great ideas and that you’re creative, competent, and have a lot to offer the company. They don’t know that. They hired you because they thought you were minimally competent to perform the duties at hand. If you want to do more, you’ll have to prove yourself. And that takes time.
  • No matter how great your idea for changing how things work is, it probably has problems and there’s always a chance it will fail miserably. People fear change because change IS dangerous. Trying to fix things can make things much worse.
  • Because of this, experienced managers are usually in charge of making these decisions. Trying to make a decision that’s “outside your pay grade” so to speak could make you look creative and ambitious, but it will probably just makes you look pushy, impatient, and/or arrogant.
  • Get involved in things outside of work to help satisfy your creative and intellectual instincts. It could be awhile before you get to do the sorts of things you want to do at work.
  • Don’t be a complainer/whiner.
  • Don’t talk about how much money you make, and don’t complain about not being paid enough.
  • So old timers: tell me why I’m wrong.

    More Americans Joining Military as Jobs Dwindle

    As the number of jobs across the nation dwindles, more Americans are joining the military, lured by a steady paycheck, benefits and training.

    The last fiscal year was a banner one for the military, with all active-duty and reserve forces meeting or exceeding their recruitment goals for the first time since 2004, the year that violence in Iraq intensified drastically, Pentagon officials said.

    And the trend seems to be accelerating. The Army exceeded its targets each month for October, November and December — the first quarter of the new fiscal year — bringing in 21,443 new soldiers on active duty and in the reserves. December figures were released last week.

    Full Story: New York Times

    (via Cryptogon)

    Business Week on the Personal MBA

    This article’s a couple years old but it was interesting to see coverage of the PMBA from the business press.

    At least one academic says the scrutiny of traditional B-school programs is warranted. Henry Mintzberg, a management professor at McGill University, says that much of what students learn at a top B-school could just as easily be gained through reading. “The MBA is flawed in the sense that it’s business education pretending to be management education,” says Mintzberg, author of Managers, Not MBAs (Berrett Koehler, 2004). “You’re gonna get a heck of a lot more management [education] from reading this stuff than in an MBA program.” The best way to learn management, he argues, is to manage and then examine and learn from the experience.

    Full Story: Business Week

    I’ve just started in the the Personal MBA myself, and will be participating in the community there as well as posting some thoughts here.

    See also:

    Can Ivy League education be provided for $20 a month?

    Is the MBA overrated?

    IT salary survey says: ‘You’ve never had it so bad’

    Compared to the current job market, IT professionals should recall the collapse of the dot-com bubble with a fondness for the good ol’ days.

    That’s according to the latest bi-annual IT salary survey from management consultant Janco Associates, which has painted a dreary picture for tech workers. The firm called current conditions “a perfect storm” of company closures, layoffs, cost cutting, outsourcing, and retirees returning to work. That massive surplus of IT talent is matched by what the firm reckons is the lowest hiring demand it has observed in the 15 plus years it’s conducted the salary survey.

    The study said that extensive layoffs, cost-cutting and hiring freezes have eliminated higher-priced positions, and in some cases lowered wages.

    Full Story: the Register

    (via Cryptogon)

    Best and Worst Occupations in the U.S.

    Best:

    1. Mathematician
    2. Actuary
    3. Statistician
    4. Biologist
    5. Software Engineer
    6. Computer Systems Analyst
    7. Historian
    8. Sociologist
    9. Industrial Designer
    10. Accountant
    11. Economist
    12. Philosopher
    13. Physicist
    14. Parole Officer
    15. Meteorologist
    16. Medical Laboratory Technician
    17. Paralegal Assistant
    18. Computer Programmer
    19. Motion Picture Editor
    20. Astronomer

    Worst:

    200. Lumberjack
    199. Dairy Farmer
    198. Taxi Driver
    197. Seaman
    196. EMT
    195. Garbage Collector
    194. Welder
    193. Roustabout
    192. Ironworker
    191. Construction Worker
    190. Mail Carrier
    189. Sheet Metal Worker
    188. Auto Mechanic
    187. Butcher
    186. Nuclear Decontamination Tech
    185. Nurse (LN)
    184.Painter
    183. Child Care Worker
    182. Firefighter
    181. Brick Layer

    Full Story: Wall Street Journal

    (via Guy Kawasaki)

    My 2009 survival strategies

    Meeting more people

    This one’s simple: meet more people in the real world. Attend more conferences, unconferences, and meetups. I know of no better way than “networking” (however crass that sounds) to find jobs, collaborators, business partners, romantic partners, customers, clients, etc. etc. In increasingly precarious times, having strong networks has never been more important.

    Indoor gardening

    I have no illusions about getting “off the grid” but I do want to substantially supplement my diet with homegrown food. Given that during WWII 40% of all vegtables eaten were grown at home, I think it’s reasonable to think that gardening will be a key part of our food security moving forward into the recession.

    My partner and I have access to outdoor gardening space at our apartment building, and live about 3 blocks from a community garden. But since we’re planning on moving (and obviously we missed planting season) we’re planning on starting with a small indoor hydroponic system, probably an EarthBox (or maybe a DIY EarthBox) with an LED grow light. Also, I just ordered the Espresso Oyster Mushroom Patch from Fungi Perfecti. I’ll be sharing my results and experiences with the process.

    Excercise & ergonomics

    Your health is probably the most sound investment you can make at this point. I’d done a decent job of keeping in shape in recent years until 2008, but I totally fell off this year. My partner and I have been doing vinyasa yoga at home lately, and I plan on keeping up with this. More walking and biking is also mandatory.

    I’m also dedicating myself to learning up on ergonomics. Bruce Sterling has a good rant on the subject here, but doesn’t fully drive home the health angle. Most of you reading this are probably destroying your eyes and back right now. Hell, I’m screwing myself up writing this. This must stop.

    Start using local currency

    I’ve been fascinated with local currency for some time, but have never actually used it. It’s about time I signed up for Cascadia Hour Exchange.

    Committing to solving global problems

    Perhaps the best way to protect oneself against the global problems we face is to solve the problems. Thus, I am committing myself to converting all my experience to the highest advantage of others. So from now on, everything I do will revolve around a couple simple questions: does this benefit humanity and if not, how can it?

    Alternative computer science curriculum

    The Design of Everyday Things, by Donald Norman

    The Visual Display of Quantitative Information (and its two sister books), by Edward Tufte

    Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance, by Robert Pirsig

    Concrete Mathematics, by Graham, Knuth and Patashnik

    Any book about the theory of architecture, maybe Learning from Las Vegas by Robert Venturi

    From everything2 entry on “Careers for Liberal Arts Majors”

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