Who Owns Your Skills?
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Bob was laid off from a position as a top-performing Senior Project Manager at a leading high tech firm after 30 years with the same great company. A familiar story? Many people over the last few years have seen their jobs disappearing as business slowed or as companies were acquired or went out of business.

Many people were confronted with challenges they hadn’t faced before – “What is my goal now that there are so few jobs in my field?” “How do I develop a resume for the new job search environment and harness the power of the Internet to support the job search?” “What do I do to tap into the hidden job market?”

Your skills belong to you, not to your former employer

What did Bob do with his skills?

He shaped a new career that uses his skills and interests in a creative way. He proceeded to develop and implement a project with the same degree of professionalism he utilized as a Senior Project Manager for a Fortune 500 company. Bob and his wife bought an historic B&B that needed extensive renovation. He developed the property into a high-end lodging with every amenity, including data ports in every room
(what else would you expect from a high-tech professional?!). He used his skills on a daily basis and had the satisfaction that came with being his own boss.

Bob’s solution was to leverage his transferable skills in strategic and tactical planning, management, and on-time, on-budget project management. In transitioning to a radically different industry, Bob is not alone. Research shows that people have, on average, three distinct careers in a lifetime. Many people make less dramatic transitions by retaining the same role but in a different industry.

Whether you try to land a job within your current industry or transition to something different, you are the owner of your own skills. Another way to look at it is that you have a personal brand that is yours alone and that travels with you wherever you go. Making everything you do enhance your personal brand gives you a sense of autonomy and fundamental security that even the most benevolent employer cannot offer!