Capitalizing on Career Chaos: Bringing Creativity and Purpose to Your Work and LifeDavies-Black Publishing, 2005 - 162 lappuses Capitalizing on Career Chaos delivers the tools and strategies to become an authentic, trailblazing pioneer who can thrive in this age of unprecedented change. Helen Harkness draws on her work with more than 6,000 individuals and her nearly 30 years as a career management expert to present a timely process for regenerating, redirecting or crafting a new career-- from the inside out. With expert advice, real-life success stories and more than a dozen interactive tools, Capitalizing on Career Chaos begins at the beginning: looking inward to develop a clear sense of the values and traditions that define our authentic selves, and the important Meaning Magnets that serve as our focal points for change. Harkness's easy-to-implement, four-step process shows how to look outward to match core instincts and talents with external realities; look forward to create a vision of the future; and look beyond to a specific course of action that will move us from visualization to the realization of our goals. |
Saturs
Understanding Chaos for Career Planning | 1 |
ACTIVITIES | 13 |
2 | 19 |
Searching for the Authentic Self | 25 |
Experiencing the Dark Night of Change | 43 |
Redesigning Our Careers | 59 |
Finding Clues to Your Meaning Magnets | 64 |
Positive Accomplishments of Your Life | 66 |
Envisioning the Future | 97 |
Creative Attributes | 104 |
Creativity and Innovation Checklist | 108 |
Taking Action | 111 |
Summarizing Your Career Design Plan So Far | 112 |
SelfDefeating SelfTalk | 118 |
Identifying Your SelfDefeating Behaviors | 119 |
Resisting Change Questionnaire | 121 |
Your Success Criteria | 69 |
Looking Outward | 75 |
Asking the Grail Questions | 79 |
7 | 83 |
Looking Forward | 91 |
DecisionMaking Outline | 123 |
Acting on Your Goals | 126 |
Free AgentEntrepreneur Characteristics Indicator | 128 |
Looking Beyond | 133 |
Bieži izmantoti vārdi un frāzes
ability achieve action ACTIVITY adults analysis paralysis anxiety Assagioli authentic aware become begin behavior career change career design process Career Paradigm career success Carl Jung challenge Chaordic chaos theory chaotic clients complex adaptive systems complexity connections consciously courage create creative crisis culture dark night decision develop discover edge of chaos entrepreneur environment experience external false feel focus focused foresight future vision goals ideas identify individual insight instincts internal intuition James Masterson John Eldredge Jung lives major Masterson 1988 Meaning Magnets move negative old career opportunities organization ourselves patterns percent PETER DRUCKER Peter Senge problems professional punctuated equilibrium purpose reality realize requires risk self-defeating self-reference sense shift skills strengths success criteria Systems thinking talents things today's traditional Type CC personality uncertainty unconscious understand unique Vision Quest wild cards workplace York