5 Questions You Have to Ask Before Taking a New Job

In the past couple of weeks, several friends of mine have asked me whether or not they should seek out a new job. Several new positions opened up during some organizational change, causing many more than usual to consider a change of pace.

But my friends are not alone. According to CareerBuilder statistics from 2015, three out of every four workers consider themselves open to new job opportunities if they aren't already actively seeking employment.

How do you know when you should jump to a new career, though? What questions can you ask to make sure that you are headed down the right path?

What Do You Want Out of a New Job and Your Career?

Before jumping ship, you need to evaluate what makes you tick and what drives you. I've linked before to the Dan Pink talk on drive and people's being motivated by autonomy, mastery, and purpose. If you haven't seen it yet, take some time and watch it. Figure out what factor is most important to you. Does that factor drive your desire to change jobs right now?

You might not be thinking in that big of a picture, though. People seek new jobs for several other reasons, some of which are better than others.

Money

You need more money. Obviously a new job could provide you with more money. Unless you are grossly underpaid, though, in your current position, more money likely means more responsibilities. Whether span of control or new management duties or just additional work expectations, seeking new career choices simply for money needs to be balanced with what it may cost in your quality of life.

While you might find it difficult to get paid more to perform your current job, you might have a discussion with your supervisor about some additional tasks you might take on to get a raise instead of abandoning ship.

Boredom

Tired of the day-in-day-out monotony of your current role? The "every day is the same" syndrome shows up in this Houston Chronicle list of reasons people leave. The downside of using this as your motivation? You have to seek out a job where you won't fall into the same rut.

A few jobs, such as consulting, can offer new challenges on a frequent basis. I would caution this as being a sole motivator for an exit, though, because you may find yourself slipping into the same bored and tired routine at a new position a few years down the line.

Your Boss

Can't stand your boss? Working for someone you dislike can make even pleasant jobs into misery. Before you flee, though, make sure you know what you are getting into. You don't want to trade a bad boss for another bad boss, or the nightmare scenario of an even worse boss. 

Try to talk to employees of the new boss and see if you can feel out the management style, interaction, and demeanor of the potential new boss before you make the leap. You will find their feedback helpful even if you already know the person as you might not have ever worked as a subordinate to him or her before.

Where Are You After This New Job?

You might even need to ask yourself this question before the first one. If you are looking to make a change to your job, you need to make sure that it is guiding you in the right direction for your career.

I tend to ask people, "What job do you want after this next job?" or "What do you consider your dream job?" first (or maybe even "What do you want to be when you grow up?"). Thinking about where you want to be down the line puts the entirety of your career in perspective (of course we all know my dream job).

Then ask yourself, will this job get you closer or further away from the goals you have long-term?

Let's say, for example, that you dream about becoming a COO, but you have spent the last several years in outside sales. If you are looking at a position in marketing or a different sales position, do those jobs really move you any closer to your dream of running operations? Seek out jobs with operations objectives that can build skills you will need in the job you want down the line.

If you don't know where you have skills gaps, do some research. Jump out on LinkedIn, CareerBuilder, The Ladders, and a few other job boards. Search for the job that you want long-term. Make a list of all of the required skills and then do an honest assessment of yourself. Would you hire you for this position today? If not, what could you change about yourself that would change your mind?

Which Direction Are You Running?

When you can, you should control your career. Everyone at some point may go through a layoff or unexpectedly find themselves under the gun to find a new job, and that requires different approaches. But when you are looking to improve your situation proactively, you should ask yourself whether you are running away from something or towards something.

Obviously to be in control, you need to be running towards a goal. I've even written a whole post about this. But how do  you know?

Are bad benefits, horrible hours, or a rude boss driving you crazy? All of these factors will cause you to run away from your current role. You have a fire burning all around you, and you need to flee.

You might find problems in this approach, though, as your flight may lead you "anywhere but here." That may land you in an even worse spot than where you currently sit.

Instead, try to identify something to run towards. Maybe you need a new skill. Maybe you want to change industries. Maybe you want some management experience. Whatever you seek, make sure you are pursuing it.

Even if you are fleeing a fire, there's no need to panic. Stop and take a few minutes to look around before you run. You may find a safe place to run to that puts you in the same direction that you want to go longer-term.

How Much Time Do You Have?

You don't have to possess magical powers and foresee your own demise to know that you won't likely work forever. Your career has a beginning, a middle, and an end.

Even though Gallup has found that 37% of Americans expect to retire after age 65, most don't intend to work forever. You should assess where you are along your career journey and how many more changes you have ahead of you. Do you have twenty years to fulfill your career goals? Five? Thirty-five? 

As you advance in your career, the lack of time remaining should be yet another fire chasing you away from the status quo. Make sure that you have enough time to make the pivots you want to get to the career you desire, but avoid sitting in the wrong job for too long, lest you never hit your goals.

How Often Will You Have this Opportunity?

Perhaps you find yourself stuck with another question I hear frequently, "Is now the right time for me to switch?" I tend to think that question comes about as our fear of change tries to rationalize why we should remain exactly where we are, in the good old comfort of the status quo.

Instead, you should be asking, "Will this opportunity come again, and when?" I have talked to several people about whether they should apply for management positions in companies where those positions are only available every few years.

The answer, of course, is "YES." If you want an different position and it comes available, go for it. Availability of opportunity means now is the time for change. (Click here to tweet that).

Availability of opportunity means now is the time for change.

Conclusion

You are not alone if you are looking for new opportunities. To weed the good ones from the bad, though, you first need to take a look at your own motivations and understand why you want a new job and what you are trying to gain from it in the long run.

Every job change presents an opportunity for you to grow, learn, and expand. Make the most of each and every one that you can.

Vote With Your Feet

So Presidents' Day yesterday celebrated all of those whom we have elected here in the United States to lead our nation. It also was the date of the Grammy awards and countless mattress sales across the country. Why mattresses?

Anyway, when thinking about topics to write about this week, I remembered a phrase from an old boss of mine: "You vote with your feet." I have a quote up in my office with a similar message from Gandhi: "Action expresses priorities."

What Would You Like to Do?

You know what you want to accomplish. You have that list of activities and achievements locked away somewhere in your brain. You might call it a bucket list or maybe your goals or resolutions.

Regardless of what you call it, you have things you would like to do and accomplish. And, if you are being honest with yourself, you have not made as much progress towards them as you would like.

What Are You Doing Instead?

So if you have not been checking items off the goal list like crazy, what have you been spending your time on? Maybe you have finally caught up on all that important binge-television. Maybe you finally beat that video game you have been battling. Perhaps you didn't even check those accomplishments off your list.

Whatever you are spending your time on, take a moment to realize that you have made a conscious decision to place that activity highest on your priority list. "But last week's Blacklist can't be my highest priority!" you might protest. Still, you chose to spend time watching it instead of doing something off your goal list.

So How Will You Vote?

No, I'm not asking you to reveal your political leanings in the November elections. Instead, I'm just asking you how you are spending your time today.

Take a moment and be conscious about how you want to spend your time and then spend it that way.

Take action towards your priorities.

Vote with your feet.

Super Bowl Takeaways

So the Super Bowl ended in a way that no one predicted before the game, with a Denver victory. The betting line on the game favored Carolina by 5.5 points, and yet they lost by more than that. You could make it a sob story about the 17-2 Carolina team who had their hearts ripped out, or you could make it a survival story about the Denver Broncos, a poetic 200th win for Peyton Manning, or whatever positive spin from a different perspective. Here are a few things you can take away from the game and apply in your world, whatever it may be.

Forget the Odds

Denver had literal odds stacked against them in Vegas. But when they took the field, all of that outside noise became irrelevant to their performance on the field. You will hear lots of noise, but the only thing that matters in the end  is your performance. So how are you going to work?

Appreciate Perspective

For Denver fans, last night created a reason to celebrate. For Carolina fans, they suffer with working their way through a defeat. For many others, Sunday just had great snacks and a few good commercials. Make sure when you are interacting with others that you appreciate the perspective that they are working with. It can shape completely different viewpoints on the same statements or discussions. Think about how "great game last night" might resonate with different audiences.

Get Help

To play to those that cared more about commercials and the halftime show, here's one for you. I thought (and there was discussion here that) Coldplay was a weird choice for the halftime show. However, they roped in Beyonce, who has performed at the Superbowl before, and they grabbed Bruno Mars to add some pop starpower to the performance. So think about where you are trying to do all the work yourself, when it would be better performed with a few close friends that could and would help you out.

Create Your Story

Peyton Manning may have written some of the final chapters of his story last night. If you had the opportunity to craft your legacy, your destiny, what would it be? But better yet, what are you doing right now to work on it?

What else did you get out of watching the game that's bigger than a single sporting event?

Groundhog Day (or How Infinity Defines Your Priorities Today)

Decided to throw an extra post in here this week for Groundhog Day, one of my favorite "holidays" of sorts. I am unclear whether or not my delight with the February 2 stems from some rodent-mysticism-fascination from my childhood or simply developed as an eccentricity following the amazing Bill Murray movie (which my wife dislikes, though I forgive her).

If you are interested in the magical woodchuck lore, then I recommend you immediately go visit Punxsutawney Phil's site this morning to see what he predicted from his home at Gobbler's Knob. I tend to read Phil's proclamation to my kids during breakfast.

This post will focus more on the concepts in Groundhog Day, the 1993 Bill Murray classic, though. If you have never seen it, go watch it. I'll still be here a couple of hours from now when you are done. No, seriously, go watch it. Some channel will be playing it today. OK, if you are still reading, then I assume you have seen it by now, so beware the spoilers.

So basically, Murray plays a weather man coincidentally named Phil, who is dispatched to cover the Groundhog Day festival in Punxsutawney. He hates the assignment, which grows worse when his crew gets stuck there due to weather. It is quite possibly the worst day of Phil's life until he wakes up and has to relive it again, and again, and again.

What Would You Do With Infinite Resources?

Phil doesn't have infinite resources across the board, but he does have two things that we don't. First, he has infinite time. He uses that time to study French poetry, learn to play the piano, and overall try to convince Rita to fall in love with him. He also has the daily "reset button," which enables him to try the same things over and over again, and use the same money and same resources over and over again.

What would you do with infinite time? What would you focus on? What would you study? What would you spend your money on each day? It's an interesting question, knowing that many of the obligations fall away as well if you never make it to tomorrow. Murray indulges in many "in the moment" actions as well (think kidnapping the groundhog) without fear of the future.

What decisions would you want to push the reset button on? If you could take something back from today and completely redo it again, what would it be?

So How Are You Spending the Finite?

Dreaming about how we would spend infinity serves one great purpose: to help prioritize what we should be doing with the finite time we do have. Perhaps you dream of learning concert piano, but you have never touched one. Perhaps you dream of becoming a master of French poetry. but you don't even have a French-to-English dictionary. Perhaps you dream of finding love, but you refuse to even talk to people.

Whatever your dreams, your goals, they start with action. If you fantasize about doing something every day, you have to start looking for ways to make progress on that goal. The one failure of the movie Groundhog Day is that it isn't longer, which would be extremely boring, but essential to show the thousands of days where Phil took his "first lesson" in piano before becoming an amazing performer. The movie shows the end product of the hard work, skipping most of the days in between. It's great for feeding the fantasy, but when we are dealt a finite amount of time instead of infinite, the work to achieve mastery becomes incredibly important.

So What Now?

It's up to you.

If you know how you would spend an eternity but can't carve out five minutes towards that dream in your finite world, what are you doing? Every dream is impossible if you never start (Click here if you want to tweet that).

The finite nature of time should make every second you are awake that much more important. How are you spending yours? Chasing dreams or putting them off? Time to make those seconds count.


Making the Most of Business Travel

Once upon a time, or so I hear, people considered business travel a perk of certain jobs. Most people I know now, though, consider it a chore or just a necessity. Maybe the global nature of business has increased the frequency of travel for some.

Certainly industry changes towards service and consulting in areas has created a need. Combining an increased frequency with increased cost-cutting on the parts of airlines and others has put a damper on the experience. Still, if you approach it with the right attitude, travel can be not just a necessary part of business but an enjoyable one.

Savor an Experience

Some business travel may take you to more prestigious locations than others, but that doesn't mean that you can't look for opportunities to find out the most interesting thing about the city you are visiting and try to experience it. Is there a food there that you can't get at home? Do you have time to run out and see one thing while you are there? What should it be? For me, I can almost always find a craft beer somewhere that I can't experience at home. And every now and then, I find one or two other gems as well.

Max Out Your Points

Do you have frequent flyer miles or hotel points you've been looking to rack up? Now's your chance. The one benefit of forced travel for business that still hangs around is the fact that rewards programs still exist to hook you up with free or discounted travel in the future for vacations or other personal use. Make the most of these both by joining programs for any airline or hotel chain you use, and also by focusing your travel whenever possible to utilize your preferred chains or airlines. I know several people who use all kinds of different offers to get bonus points and travel for free, but even if you don't carefully manipulate credit card offers on a monthly basis, you can still take efforts with business travel to make sure you are getting credit.

Take Advantage of the Breaks

Sometimes, you travel to a meeting that takes the entirety of the time you are away. We've all been there, where the nine hour meeting gets followed by happy hour or dinner that lasts another three, and then all you want to do is go back to your room and crash. But if you do get a break, you can use that to your benefit. Whether you spend the time just catching up on all of the emails that you have missed during the day or actually getting ahead, you can leverage several quiet hours in a hotel room to be more productive. Don't waste them sitting in front of the television.

Build the Network

Travel to a new place offers one opportunity you will never get staying at home: the opportunity to meet new people. Whether your paths cross with others on the plane, in the hotel bar, or at the meeting itself, travel gives you the opportunity to speak face to face with people that you may have never met before. Try to understand them and their needs. Sometimes, you will find nothing out of it. Sometimes, you will get to hear an interesting story. And sometimes, you will make a connection that increases the value of your personal network tremendously. Don't miss out.

Let's face it. Travel is a necessity for many of us in today's interconnected business environments, but it does not have to be a burden. You can take advantage of some bright spots and find ways to leverage your trips to your benefit. Are you a road warrior? What tips do you have that can make the mundane business trip valuable? I'd love to hear (before my next trip). Let me know.