How To Recalibrate Your Career

Episode 431 | Author: Emilie Aries

How exactly do you align your job with your values?

Three steps to start creating a job–value alignment that resonates!

This year has been the opposite
of chill

After three years of high-octane uncertainty, many of us poked our heads out from under our weighted blankets at the end of 2022, eager for the light that seemed promised (and was certainly deserved). But then, 2023 rolled up, bringing with it a fresh helping of scary economic hurdles and horrifying human rights crises. The urge to crawl back in is understandable.

The career conversation made its usual shifts amongst all this upheaval, welcoming in movements like “quiet quitting” and concepts like “lazy girl jobs”—essentially, push-back against the idea that work should be what defines and rules us. More and more of us have stopped accepting dissatisfaction and burnout as the way of things and started re-evaluating how we relate to work and how that relationship affects what’s most important to us.

Re-evaluation often leads to realignment, yet the common but vague prescription to “identify your values” can feel just about as overwhelming as the dissatisfaction that set you on this path in the first place. Recently I’ve tried three more tangible steps that proved to be very clarifying, and I’m going to share them with you here (and there’s a downloadable handout, too)!

Step one: write out your role

Before you start scribbling down your values, tackle this list instead. Flip open your favorite notebook or a fresh Google Doc and write down everything you do in your job. List out your regular tasks and responsibilities, as well as any projects you took on this year.

Highlight the items on this list that really energize you. Which tasks really make you feel like you’re at your best and of the most use to your organization?

Then, underline the items in this list that drain you. Which responsibilities leave you feeling disengaged or uninspired.

Then, analyze these results. Does sparse highlighting underscore a lot of disconnect between your career and what fills up your cup? Or, maybe this exercise shows you that you really enjoy most of what you do, and the cause of the overwhelm you’re feeling lurks somewhere else.

Step two: look through the lens of burnout

Now, let’s look at what may be lacking. Take some time to look at your life—both the work and personal parts of it—in the context of the four root causes of burnout.

A lack of rest

This one will resonate with most of us! For you, it might be too little sleep, too long sitting stagnant at your desk, or too few vacations. Identify the restful features that are MIA in your world these days.

A lack of community

Instagram DMs aside, can you identify a scarcity of meaningful connections? Do you feel isolated or alone, as though there’s no one you can turn to? Or do the people you have to turn to make you feel even more alone?

A lack of purpose

If some of your overwhelm stems from wondering how your current day-to-day fulfills your purpose, audit your life for the opportunities you have to support your most important causes. Sometimes, adding a new project takes time and energy but repays ten-fold in fulfillment.

A lack of agency

From micromanaging bosses at work to the smaller micromanaging bosses at home (aka, kiddos), feeling as though we don’t have full control over our lives is a formidable weight. Identify the areas where you don’t have the sway you wish you did.

Step three: assess and evaluate

Hopefully, these two steps give you a clearer idea of where your looming burnout is stemming from. Now, you can start applying your values to this more tangible data. Consider the gaps between who you aspire to be (outlined by your values) and who you are day to day (highlighted—literally—by your task list and your burnout analysis).

Whether the gap exists at work or at home, you have room to advocate for change. This doesn’t necessarily mean giving your two weeks’ notice and starting the job search. Sometimes, it’s starting negotiations for a role revision, or signing on to volunteer with an organization closely aligned with your purpose.

The trick is to be impatient enough to advocate for the changes you need, but patient enough to give the next steps, the toe-dipping of the new things, time to come to fruition.

My downloadable handout walks you through these steps in detail, so you can set your own pace on the first leg of this exploration.

It’s a lot of introspective work, but I know from my own recalibration that it is worth the energy. Getting clear on what is and is not serving you can smooth the way for radical acceptance of this transition and give you the space to begin fulfilling those essential but enigmatic values.

Related Links from today’s episode:

Downloadable Handout: 3 Steps for Recalibrating Your Career

How to Set Clear Expectations as a Leader, Episode 265

The Top Struggles of High Achievers, Episode 421

My book, Bossed Up: A Grown Woman’s Guide to Getting Your Sh*T Together

Gallup Leadership Assessment

Bossed Up’s Take Action page to bring about systemic change

Brené Brown’s exercise on living into your values

Level Up: a Leadership Accelerator for Women on the Rise

Book Emilie for a keynote or workshop

Bossed Up job search resources

Bossed Up Courage Community

Bossed Up LinkedIn Group

LEVEL UP FROM RECALIBRATION TO ACCELERATION:

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