Evaluate your career to find opportunities to improve your income. Performing a career self-evaluation allows you to explore opportunities to enhance your income. However, importantly, it may also help you to find a career that better utilizes your interests and skills, provides more fulfillment and enrichment. A new career just might bring you
Continue reading Trek III: Improve Your Career
Your earning potential should be directly correlated to your value to the company you work for. If you have a job a good exercise to evaluate your worth to your employer is to sell yourself. This exercise gives you a chance to explain to yourself your value to the organization.
In this exercise you explain why
Continue reading Trek IV Special Situations: Add Value to Your Job
The activity: Grow your career by adding value.
The trek: Improve cash flow.
The terrain: Prosperity Quadrant I (negative cash flow; negative net worth).
Difficulty rating: Easy
Your earning potential should be directly correlated to your value to the company you work for. If you have a job a good exercise to evaluate your worth to your employer is
Continue reading Cash Flow: Live Within Your Means: Career Growth
Evaluate your career to find opportunities to improve your income. Performing a career self-evaluation allows you to explore opportunities to enhance your income. However, importantly, it may also help you to find a career that better utilizes your interests and skills, provides more fulfillment and enrichment. A new career just might bring you greater happiness.
Your
Continue reading Trek II: Improve Your Career
Supply and Demand
To an employer you are a resource. And, as with any resource, supply and demand dictate price. Where demand is higher or supply is lower the price, or in this case salary or wage, is higher.
There are multiple factors to consider when doing your career decision-making. Vying for the top of the
Continue reading Trek III: Evaluate Career Trends
Supply and Demand
Career trends have an important effect on your future earning potential. As with any resource, supply and demand determine the cost of labor. Where demand is higher or supply is lower the price, or in this case salary or wage, is higher.
There are multiple factors to consider when doing your career decision-making.
Continue reading Trek II: Evaluate Career Trends