Top 7 Reasons
Your Career Has Dried Up & 7
Solutions
Is your career all dried up? Do you feel as if you are
wandering in a professional desert? If this describes you
and your career, then this article was written for you. You
are a desert traveler. There are seven reasons your career
has dried up, and there are seven solutions.
Reason #1, there is one specific area, which stands out
more than others, in which you have allowed your career to
get off track. You must identify this area where your
career is all dried up. I know, for some of you, it feels
as if your entire career is going nowhere, but there is a
root cause. Try to take a 10,000-foot overview of your
career and find the one area that is in the most need of
repair and start there. If you are having trouble
identifying this area ask others whom you know and trust.
Believe me, they have noticed that you are wandering in a
desert and they will have opinions as to why.
Reason #2, in addition to the specific area that has you
feeling dried up; there is a specific difficulty. You need
to identify and resolve your specific difficulty. There are
four difficulties and four solutions that are common to
people who are wandering in a professional desert. Those
difficulties are doubt, disinterest, discouragement and
dissatisfaction.
Reason #3 is doubt. Doubt is insidious and can grow quicker
than you think. It takes on two forms, one being self-doubt
and the other is external doubt. Self-doubt may begin with
a slight hesitation when you start a task you have
previously completed without a problem, but then you hear a
little voice that whispers “what if.” What if you mess this
up? What if your skills aren’t as sharp as they were in the
past, before you began to doubt yourself? What if your
strategy worked before, but now it is outdated? Once you
start listening to the voice that is saying “what if”, you
have entered the desert and are on your way to being all
dried up.
External doubt is self-doubt projected onto your
circumstances. Maybe your little voice is saying that your
career is all dried up because your boss doesn’t recognize
your potential. Maybe you think your boss recognizes your
potential, but your boss hasn’t made the connection as to
how your potential will benefit the company. Or, maybe you
have convinced yourself that your career has stalled
because your particular market or profession is slow.
Circumstances and challenges exist for the sole purpose of
being overcome. You can choose to blame your current
circumstance on external factors or you can choose to
overcome whatever you face.
If doubt is your difficulty, then your solution is belief.
Sounds simple enough and the solution is simple. You need
to choose to believe in yourself more than you believe in
your doubt. You’ve been successful before, and you can be
successful again. You still have the skills you had when
you started your career, choose to believe in your ability.
If you doubt your current strategy, work with a career
coach to develop a new strategy. You can be the voice that
tells yourself “I can.” When you tell yourself that you can
do something, you are washing away your self-doubt and
quenching your thirst with a drink of cool water from a
fresh stream.
If you have succeeded in externalizing your doubt, i.e.
blaming it on others, then you need to step up and take
control. If someone isn’t recognizing your potential, you
need to point it out to him or her. If someone isn’t
recognizing your benefit to the company, you need to point
it out to that person. If your market is slow, then you
need to be innovative and find ways to overcome this
challenge. You can take the power and you can overcome your
doubt.
Reason #4 is disinterest. If your difficulty is disinterest
then the root cause probably lies in one of two areas.
Either your motivation to succeed is based on selfish
pursuits or you are simply bored. Selfish pursuits are
great motivators to start a career. After all, having a
designer wardrobe, or simply having plenty of cash to
support your life style are great motivators and keep
everyone interested in moving forward, at first. However,
interests that only benefit you and are superficial only
last for a short time. After awhile everyone needs a
greater purpose in life. If you are finding that doing your
job is not as fulfilling as it once was, then maybe you are
doing your job for the wrong reasons.
It’s pretty easy to determine if you are bored. If you just
aren’t that excited about your career and you can find more
reasons for staying home than going to work, chances are
you are bored. Maybe you aren’t challenged, maybe you have
mastered your job or maybe you have simply been doing the
same thing for way too long. If any of these sound familiar
then it is safe to say you are in the desert and you are
bored.
Did you discover that you are more disinterested in your
career than doubtful? If this is your reason for your
career being all dried up, then you need to reconnect and
commit yourself to a higher cause. It is when we are
committed to something greater than just ourselves that we
get re-energized. You need to know that you are really
making a difference. If the company you are at is not
making the world a better place then you can commit to
making the lives of those people you come into contact with
a better place. Make a difference! Or, finally find a cause
that you can rally around. Not into making your co-workers
lives better? Then find a cause you believe in and start
contributing either monetarily or with your time. The
energy you will generate from participating in a greater
cause outside of yourself will carry you out of your desert
and bring new life to your career.
Reason #5 is discouragement. Discouragement is a real
difficulty for many desert travelers. The two main symptoms
of discouragement are envy of others and, a focus on how
things were in the past. Discouragement begins when you are
feeling a little bit down, but it really has its’ roots in
envy and lack of focus.
If you have found yourself looking negatively at your peers
or others who have already been promoted, moved forward, or
have surpassed you in some way then you are envious. You
may be finding one thousand and one reasons why they are
better or one thousand reasons why they had an advantage,
but if you are convincing yourself that others have
something you don’t, then you are envious.
Maybe your discouragement is rooted in external factors.
Are you convinced that the leads used to be better, there
were more opportunities in the past, or the competition
knows something that you don’t? If you have convinced
yourself of any of these, then you are discouraged and on
your way to being all dried up in the desert.
Is discouragement the cause of your feeling all dried up in
your desert? If you found that you are discouraged because
you are being envious or are lacking focus you can be
cured. Go back to basics.
What is it you were doing before you began wandering in the
desert? Make a list of the basic skills you leveraged to
get your career started, then go back and start applying
them all over again. Next, make a list of what it takes to
move beyond where you are in your career. One by one start
applying those skills until you have moved from simply
wandering around to a point where you can see your promised
land straight ahead.
Reason #6 is dissatisfaction. Finally, dissatisfaction is
often at the root of a career that is off track in the
desert. Dissatisfaction is all about impatience and a
feeling of just not being happy with your circumstances. If
you find yourself spending less time doing your best and
more time finding short cuts then you are dissatisfied. If
you find yourself doing enough to get by and are being
passed by, then you are dissatisfied. Dissatisfaction
simply takes away our motivation to try harder and do
better.
If dissatisfaction is the culprit that made you loose your
way you can get back on track. First, acknowledge that you
aren’t pleased with where you are right now. Know that it
could take a while to get to your goal, but you can begin
the journey right away. Switch your focus from feeling
dissatisfied to instead focusing on “this is what I can do
to be satisfied.” Make a plan and stick with it until you
get to where you are going. Focus on what works and make it
happen.
Reason #7 is your reality. Now that you know your desert
and have identified your specific difficulty, along with
its’ solution, you can determine your reality. Make a
decision to reject the reality of your past and substitute
it with a new reality starting today. Your desert will get
bigger and wider if you focus on the lack of the past, but
if you choose to focus on new possibilities, and an
abundant future, you will begin to feel like a freshly
watered garden whose waters never fail.
Remember, deserts are necessary, because without them we
become complacent. When we are complacent we do not grow.
Make the decision to bloom in your desert, instead of being
all dried up.
If you would like more information about developing your
own self-awareness in the work place and finding new ways
to make different choices, then contact one of our
SmartWork Career coaches @
805.376-1906 or e-mail Suzanne@smartworkcareercoaching.com.
Our coaches will help you to become more self-aware,
develop clarity, and create an action plan to get from
where you are to where you want to be in your career and in
your life. You may also visit our web site at
http://www.smartworkcareercoaching.com.