Career Salary
Most of us like to think that we make our
career choices based on what we really love to do. After all,
isn't that the dream? Everyone, at least at some point, wants
to spend their life doing what they love and getting paid for
it. In reality, however, career salary has a lot more to do
with it than most of us would admit. Career salaries, after
all, are important to your happiness. You can be doing
something you love but, if you don't have the money to enjoy
yourself in your spare time, it doesn't really matter, does it?
Most people, whether they like it or not, end up coming around
to the same perspective on career choices. In your spare time,
you can do what you love. With your career, you have to do what
makes you money.
Of course, you can't look at career salary in isolation. You
have to look at it in a wider context of career options. For
example, there are some careers that can make you a lot of
money but provide very little security. Sure, investors may
make a lot of money, but they can also lose a huge amount of
money. Unless you are reasonably sure that you have what it
takes, you shouldn't let the career salary sway you. The same
goes for professional sports players. You may laugh, but every
year thousands of teens fall into a life of minimum wage
slavery because they are so confident in their sports abilities
that they are willing to give up on education. It is simply not
worth it! Career salary isn't the only important consideration.
Always have a backup plan.
That being said, career job salary – when balanced with job
security, chance of success, and other factors – can be one of
the prime motivating factors in choosing your job. As a career
counselor, I always tell driven, upwardly mobile people to
establish lists of the top average career salaries. After that,
they should do some more research. They should look at those
lists and determine what job they can do and what jobs they
couldn't stand, look at job security, try to determine which
ones are on the way up and which ones are on the way down, and
see how many people are going in to each field. After all, once
the field becomes overcrowded, the career salary goes down.
That is what happened to computer science, and it could happen
to any other booming field in the future.
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