To find a job you will love start with these questions

Would you like to find a job you will love, dear reader?

Most people, if they’re lucky enough to have a job, are in jobs for which they have little or no passion. Well, that’s true in my experience, anyway.

People do whatever they have to do to ensure they have a regular income. It’s a living, but it’s hardly a life, wouldn’t you agree?

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If you’d like to find a job you’ll love doing, then start by asking yourself some searching questions like these:

Questions to ask yourself:

  1. What activity gives you a genuine buzz?
  2. What activity would you regard as more fun than work?
  3. Do you have a genuine talent for some particular activity?
  4. What activity makes your eyes sparkle with enthusiasm?
  5. What would you do as a hobby if you couldn’t make a living at it?
  6. In which activity would you not have to be asked twice to participate?
  7. In what activity would you be so absorbed that you’d completely lose track of time?
  8. For what activity would you willingly rise early, knowing that this was on your day’s agenda? 

Why the answers are important:

The answers to these questions will help you to identify the activity for which you have passion and enthusiasm.

If you can identify a job that consists primarily of activities consistent with the answers to these questions, then the chances are that you’ll have found the job you’ll love to do.

And as the saying goes, find a job you love, and you’ll never work a day in your life.

Now, getting that job won’t be that easy, of course.

However, knowing what you really want is the first step on the road to success.

If you have a real talent for your work, then you’re likely to enjoy what you do. If you enjoy what you do, then you’re likely to do it well. Do it well, and people will notice. And once people begin to notice you for the work you do, then your career will start going places, potentially to places beyond your wildest dreams.

Finding a job for which you have a passion really can lead you to success.

So, start reflecting on these questions, and then ask yourself, is what I’m doing now consistent with the answers? A negative conclusion would imply that it’s time to make some changes.

Phil Sutton

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