back to vault.com

Vault Blog

Sign Up for Vault e-news

Vault's weekly Career Update for tips and tools to help you find and manage your ideal career.

New Year’s Resolutions: How to Make the Most of 2013

by Piyali Syam
Published: Thursday, December 27, 2012

Now that you’ve survived Doomsday 2012 and the holidays are winding down to a close, it’s time to come to terms with the impending four digits on the horizon: 2013. The end of one year and the start of another is the perfect time to reassess where you currently are in life—and where you want to go. As a larger unit of time, a year is the perfect backdrop against which to gain a holistic perspective of your goals, dreams and happiness. Your career, as a significant part of your life, deserves due attention in this process. Here are some things to think about.

Long-Term and Short-Term Goals

Are your dreams still in your head or are you slowly inching closer towards them? A year is a long time, but it can be broken up into chunks of months, weeks and days. What steps can you take in the next year that will propel you closer to your eventual career goals? Break them up into smaller steps which you can achieve on a daily, monthly or weekly basis. Devoting yourself to smaller, more manageable goals that are easier and less intimidating to achieve will add up by the end of the year. If you’ve realized that school is in your future, start planning now. Make a calendar to mark both external deadlines, like application due dates, and personal deadlines, such as the dates by which you want to collect all your references and complete drafts and final versions of personal statements. If you’re considering a career switch, make a goal of scouring job sites every day and sending off a certain number of applications each week in your desired field. If you want to move up in your current company, think about ways you can improve your performance at work. Maybe there’s a new project you’d like to spearhead, but in order to get there, you’ll have to spend more time planning meetings and organizing documents.  

Learn from the Past

What mistakes have you made in the past year? Sent off a resume or cover letter only to spot a typo two seconds later? Not spent enough time preparing for an interview and been caught off-guard by a difficult question? Incorporate these into your new year’s resolutions. You can learn from your past mistakes and make a conscious effort to not repeat them again this year. So proofread that resume like your livelihood depends on it (which it certainly can) and prepare for that interview so thoroughly that your interviewers will think they know less about their company than you do.

Reminisce

Objectively consider the past year in its entirety. When were you happiest? Did you enjoy writing press releases but hate sales meetings? Looking back at the work you liked or didn’t like over the span of a year can give you some insight into what you want in a career and the types of tasks that utilize your natural skills. Also, take a good look at how this past year of work affected you. Did you feel the year was well-spent or wasted? Did you feel satisfied and in the right place, or were you restless with somewhere else you were longing to be? If you’re in the right place, congratulations! If not, take the time to do some soul-searching and try to figure out what that place you’d rather be is—and how you want to get there. 

What’s Important  

The holidays are a great time to reconnect with not only the people, but also the things in your life that are important to you. What do you relish doing in your time off? Can that translate over into your work? For example, if the highlight of your holiday season is making cards and crafts for loved ones, you may crave more creative outlets at work. If you choose to spend the extra time volunteering at the local soup kitchen, you may want to get involved with company charity or service events. Another thing to ask yourself: why do I love my time off (besides the obvious)? Do you feel it’s a well-earned break from the hard work and energy you pour into your job? Or do you feel it’s a god-given savior from the hell of the workweek? Thinking along the lines of the former is a good sign; if you’re more in line with the latter you might want to reconsider your current job.

Work—And Everything Else

Though your career is an important part of your life, it’s still just that—only part of your life. And as part of your life, it should ideally be in balance with and complement other aspects of your life. How did your job fit in with your overall life in the past year? Was it in conflict with other important things, like family, friends and personal pursuits and goals? Did it overpower them in terms of time and energy? Or did you find that your career was in alignment with your life as a whole, a piece that fit neatly into a satisfying puzzle?

Taking the time and effort to evaluate the past year can have a big pay off in the next; looking back at 2012 will help you move forward in 2013. Good luck and happy new year!

http://blogs.vault.com/blog/workplace-issues/new-years-resolutions-how-to-make-the-most-of-2013/

Vault welcomes your views. Please stay on topic and be respectful of other readers. Review our User Guidelines.

blog comments powered by Disqus
X

Comments Policy

Vault.com encourages you to express your opinions and engage in discussions with one another by leaving comments on our site. While we promote an open forum, please follow these guidelines to ensure an enjoyable and welcoming environment for all our readers. Vault.com does not review or moderate all comments but we reserve the right to remove or edit content once posted.

Respect one another. Debates are great, but attacks are not. Please refrain from posting offensive, obscene, threatening or abusive comments. If you personally attack other readers or writers, your comment(s) and responses to those comments may be removed from the discussion. Attacks create a hostile environment that discourages discussion. You are fully responsible for libelous or defamatory comments.

Hate-speech will not be tolerated. Comments containing racism, homophobia, sexism, or any other form of hate-speech have no place on our site.

Keep your language in check. Vulgar posts may offend other readers. Our filters are fairly tolerant, allowing for quite a bit of colorful/questionable language, but too many obscenities may prevent a comment from posting. In addition, in some cases, if a post is still too vulgar, a moderator may later remove or edit it.

Please note that comments may be edited by the moderator for any reason, including but not limited to language.

Stay on topic. Comments should be related to the topic discussed in the associated article or blog post. In order to keep the conversation relevant, off-topic comments may be edited or removed.

Don't impersonate someone else. You may not use a false e-mail address, impersonate any person or entity, or otherwise mislead as to the origin of your comments. If we believe you've impersonated someone else, we reserve the right to remove the comment.

Spam and commercial content will be removed. We do not welcome comments containing copy used for commercial purposes or for soliciting funds. If we see them, we reserve the right to remove them.

Readers may "report" concerns about other reader comments. Please use the "Report Abuse" link to flag inappropriate content. If a reader reports a concern, moderators will try to review that concern as soon as possible. This may take a few days although we hope to review comments more quickly. We do not remove every comment that has been reported and we cannot respond individually to every report.

Stop and think before you comment. We won't remove comments because a reader or writer regrets a post. Please remember that these comments are searchable and a comment history has a long life on the web.

Don't include personal information in your comments. We strongly discourage readers from posting personal information about themselves (ex. address, telephone number, workplace) and reserve the right to remove any comments we find with personal information about other people or that violates a third party's right to privacy.

Complaints about removed comments. We reserve the right to remove comments left to protest a removed comment. Please contact us if you have any complaints about deleted comments.

Repeated abuse of our guidelines may lead to commenting privileges being suspended. If you think you've been banned by mistake, let us know.

For further questions and comments regarding commenting on Vault.com, please contact us.

connect with us