Ready to Make the Jump?
Now’s the Time for a Heartfelt EncoreMother of Re-Invention Shares Tips for Finding Work
that Feeds the Soul
Now’s the Time for a Heartfelt EncoreMother of Re-Invention Shares Tips for Finding Work
that Feeds the Soul
They’re called second acts, encore careers or reinventing
yourself – they’re the completely new and different jobs people take in midlife
or later.
Today, making that jumpis more likely to be a matter of
following the heart than it was during the throes of the economic recession,
whenprofessionalscaught up in corporate layoffs discovered they were too old to
find jobs in a poor market and too young to retire. They started second careers
not to follow a vocation but to pay the bills.
“I’m glad to see the tide turning again – especially for all
the baby boomers who don’t want to retire but do want to do something
gratifying,” says Betty Hechtman (http://BettyHechtman.com), who was on the
eve of her 60th birthday when her first mystery series prompted a bidding war
between St. Martin’s Press and Berkley Books.
She has since published eight “cozy mysteries,” including
her newest, “Yarn to Go” – the first in her Berkley Prime Crime Yarn Mystery
series.
Hechtman has had a lot of practice reinventing herself. She
has volunteered as a farmworker on a kibbutz in Israel, waitressed and worked in
retail sales, and made connections as a telephone operator, among a host of
jobs.
“I’ve held jobs just for the paycheck and I’ve pursued my
passions, so I know how profoundly different it is to do one versus the other,”
she says. “No matter what age you are, if there’s work you feel called to, you
should most definitely give it a try -- you may well experience a joy unlike any
you’ve ever known.”
Hechtman offers these tips for people considering an
encore:
• Do your homework. There’s nothing more disappointing them jumping in to something new only to become disillusioned and frustrated because you didn’t take the time to prepare. If your dream is to open a particular business, research the market. Is there a demand for what you hope to sell? Should you give it a trial run as an online business before investing in shop space and other overhead? Start by checking the resources at Score.org, a nonprofit supported by more than 12,000 volunteers dedicated to helping small businesses off the ground. For other encore pursuits, you might take classes or spend a few hours a week working as a volunteer to learn the ropes.
• Join a group of like-minded people. This is particularly helpful for aspiring artists who want to paint, play music, write a book or indulge some other creative talent. You can brush up on your skills and make valuable contacts by becoming a part of a community theater, joining a writers circle, or finding a group of hobbyists. You may find your skills develop much more quickly with the support and guidance of collegial peers who are all helping one another achieve a dream.
• Consider working in one of the five most popular encore fields. Most people seek second their careers in health, education, government, environment and non-profits -- all fields expected to provide abundant job opportunities in the next couple of years, according to Encore.org, a non-profit that supports second careers “for the greater good.” If you need training to qualify, now is the time to get it, Hechtman says. “Invest now in the education, and you can soon have a job that feeds the heart, the mind – and the body!”
About Betty
Hechtman
Betty Hechtman is the author of “Yarn to Go,” the first book
in the Berkley Prime Crime Yarn Retreat mystery series, as well as the author of
the best-selling Berkley Prime Crime Crochet mystery series. The eighth
book, “For Better or Worsted,” comes out in November. She has also written
newspaper and magazine pieces, short stories and screenplays as well as a
children’s culinary mystery. She has a bachelor of fine arts degree and has been
active in handicrafts since she was a small child. Hechtman divides her time
between Los Angeles and Chicago.
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