Category Archives: best career

School Principal – Most Hated Profession?


The website About.com has a post to ask the question “why is school principal one of the most hated professions”? Is the school principal really hated? As the about.com article suggests, the school principal is like the CEO of the school. If a school principal did their job in a very respectable manner (highly effective communicator, consistently making good decisions, setting clear strategies and goals, supporting all stakeholders effectively) would they really be hated? Experience and research  in the work world suggests that someone in a job that can be “disliked for what it is” can actually change the perception, and in fact, not be hated. It is based on the person’s talents and how well they match to the job’s requirements.Teacher to School Principal - Should I or Should I Not?

The position of School Principal is ususally obtained through the teaching path. So which teachers make good Principals? Is it possible that there are some teachers that are not cut out to be teachers but could be great school principals? The two jobs are so different that it is very likely that a mediocre teacher can make a great school principal. However, there are certain personal leadership qualities that a teacher must have that will serve a person in the principal’s role. Without those, the person would fail in the principal’s role.

If you are a teacher or Principal of a school and want to assess your personal talent skills (no cost) please complete the information request form on our home page.  You may also e-mail directly to Carl Nielson, Chief Discovery Officer, Success Discoveries. For the subject line, please reference: Personal Talent Skills for School Principal, skill assessment request.

Frontline Exposes Fraudulent Student Enrollment Practices


Frontline College Inc. Exposes Fraudulent PracticesThe award-winning PBS series Frontline has produced a program called College, Inc. that exposes the promises made and recruiting tactics used by for-profit schools to enroll students. If you, or your son/daughter, are being pressured by for-profit schools we recommend you watch the video. The program exposes extensive fraud associated with “career counseling”. There are employees with job titles that imply career counseling is what they do. These are sales people that have one objective – to sign up as many students as possible.

The issue has become so large that the U. S. Department of Education has become involved. Federal aid to for-profit colleges has become an issue as it has jumped to $26.5 billion in 2009 from $4.6 billion in 2000, according to the Education Department, prompting concern that these students are taking on too much debt (see Bloomberg Businessweek “Obama Plans New Rules as For-Profit Colleges Mobilize“). If the earning potential of graduates were high enough to pay back the loans within a reasonable time period, the issue wouldn’t be nearly as significant. However, these for-profit programs are not delivering on promises they make to students. They will say anything to enroll a student.

If you are looking for true career coaching for students, look at http://www.careercoachingforstudents.net. Are you past the high school and college years? Check out free resources at Success Discoveries. Professional career coaching services offered. See what a real career coach looks like.

What Will You Be Doing 7 Years From Now?


This is a special article written by Augie Mendoza and re-posted from Bob Proctor’s Insight of the Day. This story connects to graduating high school students of today. As you will read, Augie graduated from high school in 1972. Read the story to get some insight into how career planning was addressed “back in the day”.


by Augie Mendoz,
I graduated from Brazosport High School in Freeport, Texas in May 1972. Not dressed in white (honors), but I graduated.

That summer like the previous summer, I worked as a longshoreman loading corn, flour and corn sacks weighing 50 to 140 lbs. and 900 lbs. caustic soda drums on freight ships bound to other countries at nearby Brazos Harbor and Dow Chemical A2 Dock.

This was one of the better paying jobs in the area. It was grueling, hard, heavy work, but I loved it at the time. My father had been doing this job most of his life since it paid well.

Fall came around and I had already decided that I did not want to make my living as a longshoreman. Work was inconsistent and when it was there it only went to the ones with the most seniority, unless there was too much. There was very little opportunity for a better job when you got older.

I had always heard that a college education would get you a better job and decided to find out. So I went to nearby Brazosport College and set up an appointment with a counselor.

I got to his office at the appointed time and he asked me what work or profession interested me the most. I had taken Auto Mechanics I & II during my junior and senior years in high school and asked him if Brazosport College had an auto mechanics program.

He said “no.” I asked him if they had anything similar to it. He said that the Machine Tools Technology program was very similar and described the program to me.

I was very interested and asked him how long it would take if I went full time. He said “4 years.” I said I couldn’t go full time since I am working (whenever work was available).

I asked how long would it take if I go part time? He said “7 years.” I was shocked. I said, “Man, I’ll be old then, I’ll be 25 years old. I don’t thing so.”

He asked me, “what did you say you did for a living right now?”

I told him again that I worked as a longshoreman throwing bags and manhandling drums. Then he bent over his desk and looked me square in the eye and asked me the most significant words I will never forget in my life:

“IF YOU DON’T TAKE ANY CLASSES. WHAT WILL YOU BE DOING 7 YEARS FROM NOW?”

These words hit me like a ton of bricks! I sheepishly told him that I would be doing the same thing. I signed up for the classes right then and there.

These prophetic words have inspired many of my relatives and friends. The sun will rise and fall 365 days a year. What you choose to do in between will determine many things in your life.

This story alone has inspired relatives and friends to realize an age-old truth: Time will go on regardless and it waits on nobody.

Years later, I told a co-worker this story. He got inspired enough that he went on and got 3 different degrees in computers in less than 7 years! He said afterwards, “7 years ago I would’ve been saying to myself, ‘If only I had the opportunity.'”

TIME WILL PASS REGARDLESS!
Augie Mendoza


My impression is that there are millions of Augies graduating this year – in 2010. Yes, some kind of career planning efforts are going on in high school. Yes, career interest assessments are being offered. Yes, the Internet has opened an entire world of opportunity to all students. Do college admissions counselors care today, yes, very much. Based on job satisfaction surveys, people are very effectively getting college degrees and going into “jobs” but too few are finding their passion. Finding your passion and immersing in that passion is like getting a 50 point boost in your IQ. Are you engaged in your own career planning?

So how is today’s career planning different than it was “back in the day”?
Let’s put it this way. If you are wanting to learn how to cook would you go to your local certified mechanic or would you look for a culinary class. Receiving career counseling from teachers and counselors in high school is certainly a good start. Receiving educational advice from a college placement office is also good to do. But if you want to seriously explore careers and create the plan that positions you for success, wouldn’t it be best to utilize a career coach who has extensive knowledge and experience “outside the academic world”? Career Coaching for Students™ is delivered by professional career coaches that have a passion for helping students and the right expertise to help you to create a strategic career path that leverages your passions. The program’s internet resources save considerable time finding the information that is most useful for you. To see what a career coach looks like, check out the Career Coaching for Students™ Career Coaches Profiles.

Career Tests for Students: Beware


If a career test is really good at identifying what career a person should consider, wouldn’t that career test be a valuable tool for employers to use in the selection process?

Ask your high school career guidance counselor that is overseeing student career testing to explain which “employers” are using the assessment for hiring purposes. You might be surprised, and disappointed, to find that “no” employer is using the assessments the career guidance counselor is using.

There is a reason for this. Some career tests tell you that you are one thing when you are actually something else. Worse, they can match you with jobs, training programs, or College majors that don’t fit with your talents. For example, one “Holland-based” test (reports results using Holland Codes) might report that your highest score is for the Artistic personality type when actually it is Enterprising — a very different personality! This is exactly what happens to people taking a publicly available career test. Know the Truth

How do we know this? It is what their own research shows. The problem with many of the Holland-based and MBTI tests is that they do not measure what they are supposed to measure. Experts would say the test lacks test validity. Also, the way an assessment is used can create confusion and poor advice. To focus an individual in careers that provide only partial consideration for the student’s talent profile is about as helpful as using the horoscope to select careers.

Unfortunately, the Internet is loaded with career assessments or career tests that don’t measure up. They go by a variety of names, like: sorter, finder, quiz, and survey. They are also a part of web-based career guidance systems sold to schools and other organizations. And to make things harder for you, you’ll find some of the “oldest” and most popular career tests to be guilty of poor validity and poor reliability. The “newest” most likely do not have large population samples to support a validity study (validation studies using a population sample of 100 is not acceptable, look for validation data that uses thousands in their population sample).

Valid career measures are the result of years of scientific study and maintained on a regular basis. The results of these studies are reported in scientific journals and/or in professional training manuals and validation study white papers for the test. This takes time and money. Consequently, anything for free is most likely not something that has gone through rigorous validation studies to ensure it is current, and, most likely has not been painstakingly constructed to ensure reliability. One hint at the quality of the assessment is the amount of time required to complete the assessment. Many poorly constructed assessments can take an hour or more to complete. Test fatigue becomes a significant factor, especially with teenagers, when an assessment takes too long to finish. The Career Coaching for Students™ assessments take approximately 10 minutes each to complete – well within the amount of time before test fatigue becomes an issue.

Two examples that reveal questionable validity are described in articles we found in our research (see links at bottom of article). There are many studies that are uncovering the shortcomings of various career-oriented assessments. To make the issue more confusing, there are many professional counselors and career coaches that have invested years into using a specific assessment, may even be certified, and do not have the desire to change direction. This doesn’t make the career assessments they use more valid or more reliable.

We think that when it comes to career tests, “where” it is being used is a real measure. Why?
If companies (employers) are using the assessment(s) for hiring purposes, it is most likely a valid and reliable assessment. That’s because the government has rules and requirements regarding how to use assessments when hiring.

To be credible for hiring purposes (analyzing job fit), an assessment must be reliably valid and predictive without biases. If you are interested in looking beyond the hype, conduct a simple Internet search on the assessment name and company that produces the assessment. See if the assessment is being used in businesses to hire people. If you see business consultants who specialize in helping companies assess applicants referencing the assessment, you can be somewhat more confident the assessment is valid and reliable.

For example, Career Coaching for Students™uses two assessments for the student. One is a DISC behavioral assessment. The other is a Personal Interests, Attitudes and Values tm assessment (similar to Holland Codes and Strong Inventory). The DISC assessment combined with the Personal Interests, Attitudes and Values (PIAV) assessment provide a two dimensional picture of a person’s talents.

The Nielson Group, parent to Success Discoveries LLC, has been helping companies use the DISC and PIAV to accurately evaluate applicant talent-job fit for the past 10+ years. The maker of the assessments is TTI Performance Systems Ltd. (TTI). If you were to search “DISC assessment” you would find enough references to see how the assessment is being used (academics only or within businesses to hire people). But even with that, you’ll also find multiple DISC providers (competitors to TTI) that have their own DISC-based assessment and the quality (validity and reliability) of that assessment will be different – just as there are many assessments based on the Holland Codes.

TTI’s DISC and PIAV assessments are leaders for measuring behavioral style and motivators accurately. What can you do to verify a career assessment?

  • Ask the career guidance counselor if the assessment is used by companies to match people to jobs
  • If your school subscribes to an Internet-based educational or career guidance system, ask the principal or school counselor if the career measure meets professional standards for test validity. Many do not!


Unfortunately, some educators and counselors do not understand the importance of assessment validity and reliability even though their ethical standards require it. Be wary of endorsements by colleges, trade schools or universities or public links from their web pages. These organizations’ primary purpose is for marketing – to show you why you need to attend their program. The general rule is that if it is free it isn’t likely to be useful. Keep in mind that no test can tell you what to do. They can help you:

  • Learn about yourself
  • Identify high potential careers to consider
  • Make more informed decisions


The use of invalid career tests on the Internet is a serious problem. Several articles have recently appeared in publications of the National Career Development Association, American Counseling Association, and the American School Counselors Association.

References
Measuring the MBTI and Coming Up Short by David J. Pittenger

Myers-Briggs Type Indicator (MBTI: Some Psychometric Limitations

TTI Performance Systems Validation Study for DISC

TTI Performance Systems Validation Study for PIAV

Lewis, P, & Rivkin, D. (1999). O*Net Interest Profiler. Raleigh, NC: National Center for O*NET Development.

Rounds, J., Smith, T., Hubert, L., Lewis, P., & Rivkin, D. (1999). O*Net Interest Profiler: Reliability, validity, and self-scoring. Raleigh, NC: National Center for O*NET Development.

Rounds, R., Mazzeo, S. E., Smith, T. J., & Hubert, L. (1999) . O*Net Interest Profiler: Reliability, validity, and comparability. Raleigh, NC: National Center for O*NET Development.

U.S. Department of Labor. (2000). O*Net Interest Profiler, User’s Guide. Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office.

Ethical Expression as a Component of Career Selection


Is ethical expression relevant when it comes to our job or career? Can this concept be the foundational explanation to why some people are very successful and happy and why many are not? Ethical Expression is a term that we see referenced in Christian writings and Buddhism. Let’s just say it goes way back.

By Dwight Goddard, A Buddhist Bible (1966), pp. 646-53.
“Having emerged from Hinduism, Buddhism shares certain Hindu assumptions. Central to Hindu (and therefore Buddhist) ethical expression is Karma. The law of Karma (the moral law of cause and act) will determine one’s status.”

This article is trying to make the case for applying “ethical expression” as a critical part to career exploration and choice in a way that ensures future success and satisfaction.

Premise: When a person can ethically express their talent to do a job and support a career that person will experience a high level of job satisfaction and success relative to those who are not able to ethically express their talents in their career.

First, let’s break this idea of ethical expression down to the independent elements. We’ll then construct “ethical expression” as a component of how to choose one’s career. This article is not going to discuss the religious or philosophical uses of ethical expression other than where text from those knowledge areas support and are relevant to career choice.

Of the two independent terms, “expression”, according to Answers.com, simply means the “act of expressing, conveying, or representing in words, art, music, or movement; a manifestation”. It is “the way one expresses oneself, especially in speaking, depicting or performing”. When we are at work are we performing? In most organizations, aren’t we given a performance review on a regularly scheduled basis (annually) and in those situations when we aren’t performing to a desired level?

But the critical element in the definition is “the manner in which one expresses oneself”. By that very definition, is it an easy stretch to say we also need to deal with “the manner in which a job expresses itself”? Is there a correlation between the way we express ourselves and the way a job requires a person to express him or her self while performing the job? Can the level of alignment between the two correlate with job satisfaction and success?

There is adequate evidence to suggest a job has behavioral requirements – some jobs need very specific behavioral requirements while others may demand more general or fewer specific behaviors. For people, how you express yourself is defined by your behavioral style – it is “how” you do what you do which is very observable. Even though behavioral style exists in people and every job has behavioral requirements, we know that trying to fit a person to a job or career based just on behavioral style alone is not a best strategy.

Behavioral style is just one part of a person’s total talent makeup. Other components where we see a strong (useful) relationship for identifying one’s talent is in their motivators and soft skills. Your motivators are established early in human development. To eliminate debating the issue, it is pretty safe to claim that a person’s personal values (what we refer to as motivators) are established by the age of 15. Many young people have not had the time or experience to set up soft skills (very learnable but not directly addressed in schools).

In contrast, by the age of 16, a person’s behavioral style and motivators have stabilized and are established to a point of easily being used to explore and test possible careers. Does one’s behavioral style and motivators change? Yes, but the rate of change in behavioral style and what motivates a person is measured across decades for most people. That explains why research shows most people have two or three careers in their lifetime. And you can usually see a strong connection or path that enabled the person to progress from one career to the next. In other words, without the first career as a stepping stone, the second career would not be possible.

So when we think of “expression” in one’s career, it requires looking at the person’s total talent makeup which includes behavioral style, motivators and soft skills. In the case of a young person (and in many adults), soft skills may not be developed fully.

We have evidence that a good behavioral and motivators fit without the required soft skills for a particular career will result in modest success. Add the development of relevant soft skills and we see a high degree of success. We also see strong evidence that without the match of a person’s behaviors and motivators to the behavioral demands and reward/cultures in a career choice that it doesn’t matter how well-developed a person’s personal soft skills. The odds of success in that scenario are very small. 

Components of talent are being measured by many assessment instruments today. Most of these are derivatives of behavioral style which covers many “personality assessments” constructed within the past 100 years or so. The historical roots of assessing talent are clearly connected to personality assessments and the study of personality which goes back to the days of Hippocrates and other ancient philosophers. Today, we have the ability to identify the relevant components of a person’s talent and offer guidance or coaching around career options.

So is there a case for associating “expression” with “individual talent”? Is how we express ourselves connected to our talent? If so, is there a connection between a person’s talent and their potential for success in a particular career? Can we say there is a connection between how we express ourselves and the quality of different career options?

So what about the word “ethical”?
The meaning of “being ethical” starts with the definition of “ethic”. A definition as provided by Answers.com looks like this:

1. ethic n.
  a. A set of principles of right conduct.
  b. A theory or a system of moral values.
2. ethics (used with a sing. verb) The study of the general nature of morals and of the specific moral choices to be made by a person; moral philosophy.
3. ethics (used with a sing. or pl. verb) The rules or standards governing the conduct of a person or the members of a profession: medical ethics. [Middle English ethik, from Old French ethique (from Late Latin ēthica , from Greek ēthika, ethics) and from Latin ēthicē (from Greek ēthikē), both from Greek ēthikos, ethical, from ēthos, character.]

Let’s create an assumption for this article that “being ethical” is the act of carefully studying the moral choices to be made and acting within a set of principles that result in “right conduct”.

What is a moral? A pure definition provided by answers.com suggest the following description of the noun:
Moral n.
1. The lesson or principle contained in a fable, story or event.
2. A concisely expressed precept or general truth; a maxim.
3. Rules or habits of conduct

Can we say there are lessons or stories about productivity, job satisfaction and costs of turnover in our current work environments to show a human-work relationship moral? Are there some general truths that have been discovered through the work of organizational psychologists to suggest a connection between a person’s talent, as defined by behavioral style, personal motivators and personal soft skills, and their potential for success and satisfaction in a particular career or job?

Do we have enough evidence to suggest rules or habits of conduct within the class of “socially acceptable and normal” are very broad and that no one person carries all rules and habits of conduct equally? 

If the answer to all three is yes then we have established a human-work moral. To apply an ethical standard to the concept of a human-work moral means there is a moral quality to the course of action in selecting a career. From a practical sense, does the burden of this ethical standard lay on society’s back or on each of us as individuals? Evidence or hints of the answer may be found in our school systems. There is a modest attempt to offer some support around exploring and selecting a career. We can easily agree it is not the primary purpose of schools today.

So if not the schools, burden must fall to the person or family (Mom and Dad in the case of a teenager). Given the size of the implications around career choice (happiness and success in life) there is a very heavy burden placed on the person (and their parents) and that burden falls at a time when the individual and parents have very little on which to base their decision and actions.

Can we say that “ethical” relative to career selection requires using the best available body of knowledge coming from the work of organizational psychologists (those in the work environment) and the knowledge (wisdom) of parents, career coaches, school counselors and others who have experienced career success and career missteps. Does this make for a smart strategy for coaching teenagers? On the other hand, are current practices such as the use of a unilateral behavioral assessment for career counseling or a parent’s unilateral personal dreams for their son or daughter considered acceptable ethical strategies? How do we ethically support our teenagers as they consider career choices? Is there a way to increase the odds for our teenagers being able to ethically express their talents in a way that results in high job satisfaction and success?

The answer is to empower the teenager by providing them with state-of-the-art insights into their talent using a multi-dimensional battery of assessments that are valid and reliable at measuring what they are suppose to measure. Researchers are finding strong evidence that the more self-aware a person, the stronger the correlation to success. With self knowledge as their weapon, the teenager is able to identify careers that have high potential for success and satisfaction. They are then much more likely and motivated to engage in the research necessary and meet with successful adults already in those careers to learn more. The more the teenager knows about a particular career prior to a significant investment of time and money, the more likely the time and money will be worth it.

So to put this in context, being ethical when it comes to choosing one’s career requires carefully studying the “moral” choices and acting (pursuing and executing) on that knowledge. A moral choice in this context is one that considers your natural talents – how you express yourself.

Can we say that a person who is ethically expressing their talent in a career will be successful and happy in the job they are doing? Based on the evidence in my work with a range of businesses from small, family owned businesses to very large corporations, the answer is an overwhelming yes.

Carl Nielson is a management consultant specializing in talent and organizational development and hiring. He is also the developer of a program for teenagers called Career Coaching for Students™ that is used by career coaches throughout the United States. A personal home edition is available at the website. Carl also delivers the Career Coaching for Students™ workshop and 12-hour webinar for students and their parents. For more information visit the website at http://www.careercoachingforstudents.net.