Global employment trends point to at least one fact: career mobility is now a necessary tool for all employees. The Great Resignation Wave, hastened by the pandemic, has made this so. Today, many employees no longer aspire to doggedly climb the vertical career ladder to secure a job. Instead, they prefer to branch out, pick up transferable skills, and work toward wide-ranging (but still related) experiences to build up their value.
As round-about as it may seem, successfully riding this wave is the way you can attain job stability in this disruptive era. According to global professional services firm Deloitte’s 2021 Global Mobility Trends Report, having the skills to be professionally mobile can ultimately lead to success (both for you and your company). In other words, what matters more than job-hopping is having the skills to succeed in the next job, and the next.
Regardless of which life season you are in, you can build your career mobility. You just have to be proactive and create opportunities. Consider the following milestones as a guide:
Think of your 20s as the decade when you discover what fulfills you. The cliché is true: to succeed at anything, you have to find your passion. This is why, at job interviews, employers usually ask, “What are you passionate about?” They want to know how to keep you motivated if you get the job.
There are several ways to find this out for yourself:
Understanding what it is that fuels you is not a one-day task. It may take weeks or even years, so be patient. Once you figure it out, begin shaping your career decisions around this passion.
As you become more familiar with your industry, reach out to experts from whom you can learn. Follow them on social media. Attend their webinars. If they teach courses online, perhaps you can take up some that are particularly interesting to you.
People who likely share your interests will be attending those same talks. They will be taking up the same courses you are interested in. Therein lies your opportunity to grow your professional circle. You will not be just gaining additional learning; you will also be meeting people who move in your network. Use this period in your life to make connections.
You could start by looking into the following organisations for like-minded individuals:
In this next decade, you must grow away from stagnation. Keep learning, be open to change, welcome constructive criticism, and constantly push yourself.
One way to be sure you continuously flourish is to upskill. Determine which skills you need to increase your value across industries. There are numerous programmes in Singapore that can help you with this task:
It may not seem so at the start, but leaving the familiar can ultimately help bring you stability to your job. When you step away from your office routine to work toward increasing your professional value, it makes you mentally and emotionally stronger. This will make you an asset to any company.
What better way to do this than to relocate overseas and expand your horizon? Singapore is home to many multinational companies that run global offices. For instance, there are HSBC, Shell, Accenture, Deloitte, and GlaxoSmithKline. If you work in one of these multinationals, you could explore a transfer to an international office. On the other hand, you could do it in reverse and apply to a company that has an office in a country where you would like to relocate.
Living and working in another country is like deep-sea diving. It sharpens all your senses. It is exactly how you can attain career mobility.
It may be disorienting to be in your 40s and realise that you want to be doing something else. However, being career mobile, you can hit the ground running (or walking briskly, at least). To do this, you need to focus on developing your personal brand.
Find inspiration in fashion designer Vera Wang’s story. Growing up in New York, her one dream was to become a professional figure skater and compete at the 1986 Olympics. She did not make the cut, however. So Wang reoriented. After college, she worked for Vogue magazine. And at 40, she opened her flagship bridal boutique in New York. She has not looked back since.
Wang succeeded because of several factors. She knew what she wanted to do, and what she wanted to be known for. Because of her work with Vogue, she was familiar with the industry she wanted to adopt. Wang knew who her audience was, and how to reach them.
These are all ways you can build up your personal brand. In this digital era, social media can help you establish your online identity. With enough passion and hard work, you can then own your mid-career pivot.
Apart from helping develop your career mobility—and, consequently, your job stability—mentoring gives you several other benefits.
In this Great Resignation Wave, job-hopping is no longer the career taboo it used to be. What is more important to employers is seeing motivated and skilled people who are constantly looking to improve themselves. The way to survive—and thrive—then, is to update your skills constantly while working toward what it is that moves you. In this era of disruption, the career ladder no longer necessarily leads straight up. It can branch out in other directions, leading to one consistent path: your fulfillment.
You can find even more career opportunities at JobStreet. For more expert advice on riding the Great Resignation Wave, visit JobStreet’s Career Resources Hub.