Finding the right career partner

What makes a good career planning and transition coach?

First, it’s about how their background meets your needs.

Second, it’s about where you are. Do you need a therapist or a coach? Do you need someone to encourage you, generally, or do you need a detailed approach to a specific goal?

There’s no wrong answer. It’s all about where you are right now.

As an executive résumé writer and former retained executive search recruiter, I conduct career coaching less from a “what color is your parachute” perspective and more from “how can I realistically shape the next steps in my career?”

So the answer to “what makes a good career coach” is perhaps better asked this way: “What do I need at this moment in my career?”

Are you looking for an amorphous approach that bends to your will? Or a realistic, step-by-step process that flexes when necessary, but keeps you focused and out of a dream state?

My work as a career transition coach has evolved over the years. In fac, it was my private clients who kept mentioning that our work together was like career coaching but with a tangible outcome.

That approach is now central to how I see my work.

Even with a plan, however, introspection takes time. And yes, that even goes for people who are already successful in their own right. Nobody is crying my clients a river. They serve on high-profile boards. They manage multimillion-dollar global businesses. They’ve perhaps sold companies for millions (and in two cases, more than a billion).

They’ve been recognized for astonishing successes, but they still need a guide to help them aim toward what their futures might hold.

There are a lot of great career coaches in the world

I find that it’s nice to know what a professional does and doesn’t do. To that end, here is a rundown of my expertise.

 
Jared RedickNew Clients