Dissatisfied With Your Career? Do This, Not That

Mladen Zivkovic / Getty Images/iStockphoto

When Johnny Paycheck released ā€œTake This Job and Shove Itā€ in 1977, it rose to the top of the country music charts. Thatā€™s because just about everyone in America could relate to a song about being fed up with working too hard for too long with too little reward.

Cut Costs: 35 Surprising Cities With Low Costs of Living
Earn More: 11 Best Lucrative Side Hustle Ideas

If youā€™re in a career rut that you canā€™t seem to escape, rest assured that you are not alone. But before you head into work tomorrow and recite the songā€™s title to your boss, decide first if you need a new career or just a new direction in the job that you already have ā€” and have a plan for when you figure it out.

Do Decide First If Your Current Job Is Fixable

If youā€™re fed up with your job, resist the urge to throw up your hands and chalk up the entire thing as a loss. Instead, try to pinpoint the exact source of friction. If a few changes could make your current job salvageable, staying put might be the easier option.

ā€œIf youā€™re not sure whether a career switch is the right move, my advice is to write a list of your current sources of work-related dissatisfaction,ā€ said Matt Erhard, managing partner of Summit Search Group. ā€œOnce these are written out, sort them into two groups: things that are within your ability to change in your workplace, and things that wonā€™t change unless you switch jobs. Assessing things this way can help you decide if a new job ā€” or even a new career ā€” is the answer.ā€

Check Out: 20 Jobs Where You Can Make $60,000 Out of College

Erhard wants people to remember that communication is key, and an honest conversation with a manager can go a long way.

ā€œThis can especially help if youā€™re feeling stagnated or bored in your current position,ā€ Erhard said. ā€œLearning a new skill or changing up your responsibilities could be the answer to your problems, and there may be opportunities available you wonā€™t know about until you ask.ā€

Donā€™t Obsess Over Skills You May or May Not Have or Need

A career coach for more than a decade, Rebecca Allen is the founder of Illuminate Personal Growth, and if youā€™re stuck in career quicksand, sheā€™s willing to bet that youā€™ve had at least one of these three thoughts:

  • ā€œI donā€™t have any options.ā€

  • ā€œMy skills arenā€™t transferable.ā€

  • ā€œI donā€™t have enough experience or expertise to make a change.ā€

ā€œIn this situation, most people focus too intently on their skills and how those skills could be applied to another role,ā€ Allen said. ā€œThe problem with this is it keeps their thinking too narrow.ā€

Advice: 10 Small Changes To Stay on Track With Your Career Goals