18 Feb 2008 04:00:03 | Scott Brown
To ensure success in any endeavor that you undertake, it is always best to identify a motivating factor or force to drive you to complete said task. If you have a project to finish at home, your motivator is generally a spouse or loved one. If you have a task to complete at work, your motivator is usually your boss.
So, when you start thinking that it might be time to look for another job, you need to find your motivator to help you complete that task. If you use a lame motivator, you will most likely not invest enough time or energy to find a great job.
Reasons and Benefits
To start, you need to list out the factors that are swaying you towards getting a new job:
1. More Money
2. Too many hours
3. Not enough responsibility
4. No chance for advancement
5. Poor location
Then, you should match benefits to your reasons for changing your job.
1. Able to do more with family and afford things that we want and need.
2. Able to spend more time with family or more time doing things for
myself
3. Able to enhance my resume and work experience with added
4. responsibilities in the hopes of getting higher level positions
5. Able to advance to higher level positions
6. Able to spend more quality time outside of work, not just driving to and from work.
Impacts
Now, take a look at what aspects of your life will be impacted by changing jobs.
1. Lose friends at old job
2. Learn new skills or take more classes to get the new job
3. Get acquainted with new coworkers
Motivators in your daily life
Finally, take a look at what works best for motivating you to get your daily tasks completed.
1. Deadlines
2. Planning things out to stay busy all the time
3. Spouse
4. Boss
Once you have compiled this information, look at it and see if there is a common thread. Using the examples above, the two common threads I see are family and career. If this were you, you should pick whichever thread motivates you more and use that to spur your actions.
Personally, the family thread work
About Author :
Scott Brown is the author of the Job Search Handbook (http://www.JobSearchHandbook.com). As editor of the HireSites.com weekly newsletter on job searching, Scott has written many articles on the subject. He wrote the Job Search Handbook to provide job seekers with a complete yet easy to use guide to finding a job effectively.