Jewish World Review Oct. 24, 2008 / 25 Tishrei 5769

A Career Survival Kit: What to do when the economy is slowing

By Marty Nemko

Nemko

http://www.JewishWorldReview.com | The stock price of most major financial firms have plummeted and Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, Bear Stearns, Lehman, AIG, and Merrill Lynch have tanked altogether. As of this writing (10/23/08) The S&P 500 is down almost 30% from just one month ago.


The impacts, alas, extend from Wall Street to Main Street. How can you protect your career in increasingly shaky times?


Want to hold onto your current job?


If you're working for an organization you like, the rules for staying employed don't change in tough times; they just becomes more critical:



Looking for a job?


In a weak economy, nonprofits will suffer: people donate less when times are tough. Private companies will be ever more aggressive in cutting jobs: automating, part-timing, temping, and offshoring as many positions as possible. So, I believe the smartest choices are to:


Work for the government. If you're not a self-starter, I believe the smartest choice is government employment, especially in health care, energy, fiscal oversight, racial and immigration initiatives, the IRS, and in education (special education and community colleges should grow most.) Those are political untouchables--they'll always get funded and probably expanded under the Obama administration and liberal congress.


Start your own low-risk business. Examples: a small chain of food carts, parking-lot-based oil changing, and even my own career: career coaching.