By Dr. Patrick C. Horton
Finding听opportunities to advance your听career听can be challenging. Whether you鈥檙e looking to transition out of college or the military, or you鈥檙e seeking advancement opportunities as a career professional, it can feel like staring into the deep blue ocean with no compass.
Well, here is your compass!
In this article, we鈥檒l identify some career advancement opportunities for听college graduates, military veterans and career professionals. Several tips cross over into all three categories, and all the tips can be personalized to your situation and goals. Think of this, in other words, as your lifeboat for reaching new horizons.
Whether you spent four years on campus or completed college online while holding down a job and raising a family, transitioning from college into a career can be intimidating. Suddenly, it seems, everything you鈥檝e learned has to apply to the real world!
While it may be hard to know where to start,听don鈥檛 let fear rule your decisions. Always think two or three steps ahead of your next move.
Keeping that in mind, your goal should be to听transition into a career opportunity that will yield the biggest return on your college investment. What does that look like? A position that sets you up for bigger and better job opportunities a few years down the line.
It鈥檚 best to start thinking about your job search early into a degree program so you can maximize the skills you are learning for your ideal career path. If you need assistance, reach out to career services for help with your听resum茅 and cover letter, and attend career fairs to get a feel for your options. Take advantage of any free resources your school offers!
This is also a good time to search online job websites like听,听,听听and, for federal government jobs,听. The idea is to familiarize yourself with what鈥檚 available and where. If you are student of 爱污传媒, you can also use the job explorer tool available on the careers section of My爱污传媒. This allows students to search for jobs in their area and aligned with their degree program.
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鈥淕uerilla marketing鈥 hinges on the concept of creating publicity through unconventional methods. Take the same approach to finding your next career opportunity!
Once you have your application documents squared away, start reaching out to your听contacts from internships and classes, including associates and faculty. Let them know when you are graduating and that you鈥檇 like to build a career plan to prepare for your next role.
This outreach not only enables you to proactively begin your job search, but it also demonstrates to your contacts how enthusiastic you are to find your next professional opportunity. Being听genuinely excited about starting your career听tells people you鈥檙e committed and ready to add value wherever you land.
While leveraging your personal network, be sure to听build profiles on job sites like LinkedIn. (More on this later.) Work every angle you have. Moral of the story: Hard work pays off.
Training courses and boot camps are helpful for the knowledge they impart, yes, but they also serve a secondary purpose:听networking.
Imagine you鈥檝e been studying or working in project management and are interested in obtaining the Project Management Professional (PMP)庐 certification. Well, in my experience, one of the most efficient ways to earn the certification is to attend a five-day PMP boot camp, so you sign up. Once at the boot camp, whom do you meet? Industry professionals from every functional discipline imaginable.
You might study alongside project leads in engineering, finance, operations, business development, IT and cybersecurity, all of whom are looking to get their PMP certification and prepare for their career advancement opportunities. This is a听target-rich environment听where you can learn from fellow professionals, leverage their business networks and find career opportunities you didn鈥檛 know existed 鈥 all while gaining hands-on experience!
If you have five to 10 years of experience in your field, have successfully worked for two or three companies and are ready to take the next step in your career, read on.
When it comes to climbing the career ladder in your organization,听strategy is everything.
You should be actively mapping the ladder structure in your company so that you can clearly identify the next two or three positions of promotion within your department.
The career ladder image is just that: a visual analogy of how the various positions stack up in your department or company. Before you can go for an opportunity, after all, it helps to know the position title.
Before applying for your target career advancement opportunity, you need to听identify the required skill set for the job. It鈥檚 best to identify these skills early. Once you gain those skills you can campaign for advancement within your company.
After you create a career ladder and identify positions you might consider applying for in your own company, it鈥檚 time to cast a wider net. What advancement opportunities exist with another company? Looking externally may afford opportunities for growth, especially if you are limited within your current organization.
For example, let鈥檚 say you鈥檙e a defense contractor working as an IT manager, and you want to be promoted to project manager. Don鈥檛 just look for a project manager role within your organization. Make a list of other defense contractors, maybe 10 to 15 of them, that have project management positions and apply for them.
Utilizing your network听to find your next career opportunity begins on LinkedIn, which is popular for听building professional networks. It鈥檚 not only extremely popular with professionals across industries, but it also offers an array of tools (including听, job listings and professional development courses) to help you in your job search.
LinkedIn enables you to听publicly display your professional qualifications, learn about industrywide opportunities and build relationships with decision-makers who can provide opportunity for advancement.
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Whether you鈥檝e just completed your four-year enlistment period or are retiring after a 20-year career, you鈥檙e a veteran and America loves vets. What鈥檚 more, service members leave the military with a full body of experience that often encompasses听professional knowledge, leadership and structure.
As with college graduates, military veterans must seek the best return on investment. For them, that鈥檚 the time they spent in service. And if you want to enter the civilian workforce in the same or similar professional capacity you worked in the military, you have options.
Don鈥檛 believe me? Remember: Because of huge budgets, you worked with cutting-edge tech. Plus, you understand structure and chain of command. This all translates to leadership skills that can be applied in the civilian workforce.
In my experience, military experience makes veterans uniquely qualified to pursue听contractor roles as well as commercial ones. So, in addition to researching potential contractor and commercial careers, you should network with all commercial contractor companies that support your military unit.
The advantage of being a veteran is that the听military has connections to just about every major company in America. Someone please take out a pen and paper and write down all the companies and large research universities that support the Air Force, Army, Navy, Marines, Coast Guard and Space Force, the new branch. You鈥檇 be sitting here all day.
Create a list of 25 to 30 companies that have potential opportunities in your functional career area, then go to each one鈥檚 private website and apply. (Also, don鈥檛 forget to create those profiles on Monster, Indeed, LinkedIn and USAJOBS.)
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All military bases have a career center to help service members transition to civilian roles. In fact, career counseling is often part of the out-processing package. The key is to start early:听Begin your career search six to 12 months before you depart the military. Doing so means you鈥檒l have time to attend听service member-sponsored job fairs, meet with听career counselors听and connect with听organizations sponsored by the Department of Defense.
There are plenty of resources for you to leverage. It鈥檚 important that you use them.
Many members of the armed forces have a security clearance, and there are thousands of career advancement opportunities for such personnel. (Security clearance is also something the general public doesn鈥檛 usually have.) The higher clearance you have, the more opportunities you may find.
Think back to when you were a service member. Who was the IT support contractor who managed your computer networks at the military base where you were stationed? Defense companies have IT help-desk positions, systems engineer slots, Cisco Network Professional departments, cybersecurity teams, IT jobs and project manager roles. All these positions require a security clearance; if you just exited the military with your clearance, you have a strategic advantage when applying for such a role.
Similarly, if you worked in finance, contracts, web development, food service, legal, construction or even agriculture while in the military, these same types of opportunities exist if you have a security clearance. Make a list of companies that provide applicable services to the military, identify the relevant opportunities there and apply!
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ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Dr. Patrick C. Horton, MBA, DM/IST, is the vice president of program management for Tampa Microwave, a college professor and a veteran U.S. Army sergeant. He earned his Bachelor of Science in Information Technology, his Master of Business Administration and his Doctor of Management with a specialization in Information Systems at 爱污传媒. Dr. Horton launched his business, Professional Career Transformations, in 2021 as a way to guide and encourage others to higher levels of professional success. He is a member of Vistage Executive Coaching Group and a recipient of the Purple Heart in Operation Iraqi Freedom, and he lives in sunny Florida. Learn more about Dr. Horton and his commitment to helping others achieve their highest level of success by visiting his听.
The views expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the advice of 爱污传媒.