No career idea? Try 'happenstance'
No career plan…could happenstance work for you?
If you are struggling to identify a career aim, can you still be successful in the graduate job market? As an undergraduate you have probably been asked throughout your degree by careers consultants, academics, other students and your family, ‘what are you going to do with your degree, what is your career ambition?’ If you have never considered this question or do not even know where to begin, you may be feeling under pressure to make a decision. Particularly if you are a finalist.
If you are feeling frustrated and perhaps anxious that everyone else on your course appears to have a plan, there are other approaches to making your career decision to consider.
The light bulb moment
A moment of sudden realisation, enlightenment or inspiration…a career ambition and subsequent plan may be instigated by a meeting with a charismatic, engaging personality (but enough about Warwick University’s Careers team). Or influenced by a significant event. How many teachers were motivated and inspired by their own teachers, how many artists and musicians committed to their career after a visit to a gallery or by attending a gig? These encounters are of course highly unpredictable and for many of us may never happen – this may not be a plan as such, but fate can intervene and influence your career choice.
The pragmatist
Reduce the anxiety of finding the ideal job immediately after graduation. You are putting yourself under pressure if your mind set is that you have to find that dream job straight away and that this first job defines the rest of your career. A more realistic perspective perhaps is that this is the first step in your career. You will learn about yourself and may gain the insight that will help you understand what your ideal job really looks and feels like – that dream job could be the second or third step in your career.
Take a longer-term view
Your personal circumstances, ambition and expectations may dictate otherwise but you do not have to find a graduate job straight away. If you didn’t have the opportunity to gain work experience during your degree you could consider a graduate internship (often referred to as an ‘off-cycle internship’) to find out what the world of work at graduate level is really like. Your eligibility for graduate schemes doesn’t end after the first year of your graduation. A period of temporary work, volunteering or a part time job, for example, will develop skills to enhance your CV and provide opportunities to answer interview questions convincingly
Increase your opportunity awareness
If you are struggling for inspiration, you could make a start by actively looking for vacancies. In the science faculty at Warwick we often recommend Gradcracker to help students become more aware of the graduate employers who typically recruit undergraduates from science subject disciplines. A job description and person specification may resonate with you and provide a starting point in your job search. As you consider the skills and attributes employers require, you are beginning to reflect on your personal criteria for job satisfaction and gaining the insight that will help to inform your career choices
Be proactive
If you are someone with drive, perseverance and ambition you can potentially create your career opportunities. You may have taken the initiative, for example, to contact a company by making a speculative application at a time when the business is expanding or needs additional support on a project. There is a hidden job market and a proactive approach will help uncover jobs that may never be advertised. This approach is particularly important when looking for work in hard to reach sectors such as international development, publishing and the fashion industry, for example.
‘Planned happenstance’
It has struck me how many times I have met University of Warwick alumni who professed to never having had a career plan. Several Warwick physicists and mathematicians have achieved success in industries that could never have been predicted when they started their degree, working at the Royal Opera House, the British Film Institute and the Jockey Club, for example. A variety of factors may have played a part in this success, but I think the key one has been their ability to take advantage of opportunities that have unexpectedly arisen. Attend conferences, go to employer events, follow-up meetings with employers and/or alumni and build your networks.
Happenstance could work for you and it is not just a question of luck, fate or being in the right place at the right time – rather it is about embracing opportunities that your proactive approach has created. You might not know where that chance meeting or conversation will lead, but follow your curiosity. It could just be the first step towards your ideal career.