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Managing Your Own Career

Gone are the days when you can join an organization and look forward to the next 20-30 years of steady growth, promotions, and happiness.

The career world just isn’t that way anymore.

Like it or not, you’re a “skill-builder” now – and that skill-building consists of two basic elements:

The “Critical Skills” are explained in detail in other parts of this blog. They consist of eight key skills:

The Technical or Functional Skills are those skills that are entirely dependent on the nature of your career. For example, if you are a physician, then the technical and functional skills are those you learned while earning your MD degree and put into practice through your residence or further work toward a sub-specialty.  In a sense, they are the “Core Competencies” pertinent to a particular job in a particular organization.

If you are pursuing a corporate career or a career in a service industry such as accounting or law, then your technical or functional skill will be those that deal directly with the nature of your work and of the core competencies of your company – those competencies that make your company unique.

The Technical or Functional Skills are those skills which you have to keep up to date as new technologies, new businesses, or ways of doing business – or doing surgeries – evolve over time.

This blog will not dwell on the Technical or Functional Skills other than to point out that they are a direct outcome of the “Critical Skill” of Continued Education.

The “Critical Skills” you must have cut across all industries and functional areas. And, in general, they are TIMELESS.

Therefore, my advice for an effective career management strategy is as follows:

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