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First Job Guide

Resume Butler has partnered with ResumeEdge.com the internet's leading portal of resume writing services to provide you with the most comprehensive Free First Job Guide on the internet. Our First Job Guide can help you on your very first job hunt. In this section learn how to plan a successful career.

Planning Your Career

Most members of the young, job-seeking set do not aspire to job titles containing the words "assistant," "junior," "associate," or "aide." However, few people - if any - immediately exchange their college graduation gowns for a seat at the head of the boardroom table, a window office, and the accompanying clout.

Instead, most recent graduates - especially those entering hierarchical fields such as investment banking or corporate law - will have to climb, crawl, clamor, and claw their way to leadership positions. For those with lofty ambitions, the challenge lies in plotting a viable pathway to the summit and then setting realistic short-term and long-term goals.

After you have clearly identified your long-term career goal, the next step is to study how the people currently in that position got there. Of course, many paths lead to the same position, and your personal and professional circumstances will ultimately push you to carve out a unique route to success. However, cultivating a sense for how others have accomplished what you aim to do will help you focus and avoid mistakes.

For example, if you want to be a CEO in the large-scale telecom industry, figure out the names of the executives at Verizon, MCI, AT&T, and Sprint who currently have the kinds of jobs you want. Conduct informational interviews and read biographies, newspaper articles, and magazine profiles about those individuals, paying close attention to how they arrived at their current posts. 

After you have gained a sense for how people generally arrive in the boardroom, start translating that information into goals you have for yourself. Break your prospective career path down into a series or stack of building blocks, and think about what short-term goals you associate with each block. Dissecting the process of career ascension will force you to create smaller, less overwhelming goals, while keeping your vision in mind. This way, you will always be able to measure your progress. 

As you define your building blocks, you may want to ask yourself:

Phyllis R. Stein, a Boston-area career coach, says that many of her clients find it helpful to keep journals as they figure out and achieve their short-term and long-term goals. A journal also provides a constant forum and record for revising goals, creating lists of objectives, and reasoning through surprise dilemmas or boons. 

Stein warns that while a larger vision and small goals are vital, it is important that you never feel confined by your pre-made aspirations. Your goals, your time frame, and your path to success might change. You might run into unexpected fortune or unforeseen roadblocks. You should never feel like you're in a box, inextricably tied to the goals you created 10 years ago. The process of progress is a fluid one, a duality of ambition and flexibility.

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