Selasa, 28 Mei 2013

When Round Pegs Don't Fit in Square Holes: Expat Career Changes

There are many people who have inspired me along my expat journey. As my family life enters a new phase the last few weeks have been a perfect time to reflect. Part of that reflection resulted in an article that I submitted as an entry for Expats Blog's latest writing contest on the topic of working abroad.

Building a career overseas can mean becoming an astute
hurdler
Photo Credit: Lars van Mulligen
I moved to the Netherlands for love so I didn't have a job lined up when I packed up my gear and headed across the North Sea one grey, cloudy September day. I tried to get myself back into the world of work as quickly as I could. I needed to because we needed an extra income. We needed a place of our own to live in. Within a few weeks of landing on Dutch soil I was signed up with recruitment agencies, applying for vacancies as they came up and making telephone calls that I thought could help me. I took it one day at a time and jumped each hurdle as it arose.

Within a month or two I had a job in my field (Human Resources) though it was temporary cover for maternity leave and a step down from what I had been doing. But I had a hold on the career ladder once more. I was made permanent. The first two years or so were enjoyable. It was new. It was challenging finding my way around a new company. It kept the mortgage payments in check. When the project I was working on finished, I was palmed out to another department. And it was then that I realised, again, that I was a round peg and yet another employer was trying to squeeze me into a square hole.

I knew things had to change. I began writing. Just for my own pleasure. My own eyes. And then I started feeding that creativity into my day job. The more I delved into writing, and in particular expat writing, the more I bumped in to the name "Jo Parfitt". A Definite Articles course later and I was fully committed to getting out of an office cubicle. I was determined to leave behind endless demotivating company reorganisations and be free of meetings about quarterly profits. I wanted to take a career turn. Others had done it, so so could I. (In fact Expat Women published one of my first articles which was on the topic of making a career change abroad).

Jo Parfitt was an incredible inspiration and motivation in the early days of my writing career (and incidentally still is). She convinced me that I could write, and furthermore, could make a career out of it. Plus she was a 'real life example' that it really was all possible. She was certainly shouting encouragement from the sidelines from day one. And with that kind of support the step out of the rat race was made a whole lot easier.

I then stumbled into a Life Coaching group run by Karen Armstrong which was also a huge source of inspiration. I honestly don't remember anymore how I came to be a part of the group, or where I met Karen (aside from it being virtually) but it too played a huge role in my writing career. The group essentially came together to look at our individual reason for being, our mission in life, and our life goals in order to satisfy our reason for being. From haphazardly trying to manage a new career idea alongside being new to motherhood I emerged from the course with a clear vision and specific goals about what I wanted to do and where I wanted to go, not just with writing but in different areas of life. I still annually review this vision and these goals and create a new vision board to match my dreams. The group of women I took that path with were in themselves inspirational and the energy was contagious. Two of those women are the driving force behind Global Niche; Tara Agacayak and Anastasia Ashman. If you're looking to work beyond borders, to change a career, to transition, then those are the women to turn to for motivation.

So, back to my latest article. Expat life can be complicated. It presents challenges. Careers can be made or broken overseas. But expat life can also offer the opportunity to start over, to take time and reflect, to try and work out where your passion lies. And if you have the right support cheering you on from the sidelines? Well. then anything is possible.

Head on over to the Expats Blog writing contest page to read my article "Letting Go of the Career Ladder". If you enjoy what you read, please like using the Facebook button on the Expats Blog page, or leave a comment there to let me know you stopped by and share your thoughts on the topic.

Sabtu, 25 Mei 2013

Come On You Horns!!

There are not many moments over the last (almost) 13 years where I can honestly say I know exactly where I'd be right now had I not moved to the Netherlands. Monday 27th May at three o' clock in the afternoon however is a whole different ball game. If I was still in England right now I would be presently be in a state of fever pitch excitement in the build up to this coming Monday. Why I hear you ask?

This Monday Watford FC, fondly known as the Horns by fans, takes on Crystal Palace for the last place left in the English Premier League at Wembley. The Championship play off final is the last 90 minutes (as long as extra time and penalties are not needed) of the Horns' 2012/13 season. And had I not moved to the Netherlands I know for sure I would be one of Watford's 34,000 allocated ticket holders. I would be there at Wembley donned in yellow. Had I still been living in England I would also have seen this amazing end to the semi final game against Leicester City from the stands, and not on You Tube:



I would have followed the unbelievable season from my season ticket seat at Vicarage Road and not through my IPad and the BBC.

Before I moved overseas I was a season ticket holder and had been for many years. My parents took me to my first Watford match thirty years ago in 1983. In 1984 Watford lost to Everton in the FA Cup Final. Heartbreak. And between 1984 and 2000 I witnessed most of the highs and lows of every season, at Vicarage Rd and at many other stadiums across England.

I was at Wembley in 1999 when Watford successfully beat Bolton Wanderers 2-0 for a place in the Premier League. The day was indescribable. The atmosphere was electric. The tension was unbearable. The celebrations were memorable and lasted until deep in the night. Thousands of people united in the particular joy that only sports fans can explain. In 2006 Watford were again in the play off final, this time played at the Millennium Stadium in Cardiff. Twice in the play off finals. Twice winners.

And so here we are, fourteen years later, days away from another Wembley appearance. This one will be a very different experience for me though. Monday is not a Bank holiday in the Netherlands and at kick off I will be in a meeting in a hospital. I'll be following the match online as much as I can and whilst it's certainly not the same as being at Wembley in the flesh, it's the best I'll get this time around. And though I can't be there, I'll be hoping the outcome is the same as it was back in 1999:

COYH!!!!!!! 

Selasa, 14 Mei 2013

Want to be British? Get the Guide.

Going through my mails (catching up...) I found this....


This is the ultimate illustration for what it takes to be British. I mean, real, proper British. If you can't queue you're not in the British club. As a nation we pride ourselves on our queueing abilities and woe betide anyone who does not queue in the correct way. Should you fail to queue in the official manner you will be .........tutted at. A lot. And if looks could kill....... 

Lucky for inexperienced foreign queuers that us Brits are incredibly polite!


(link: http://p.twimg.com/Aw0HUoMCMAAEtWn.jpg:large)

Rabu, 08 Mei 2013

How publishers can win at mobile commerce

In the never-ending quest by marketers to put the right offer in front of the right consumer at precisely the right time, inner space is becoming the next frontier for mobile commerce – and a major opportunity for newspaper publishers. 

Inner space is the precious geography inside a store, where marketers have their last, best chance to persuade consumers to buy what they are selling. Here’s why

Kamis, 02 Mei 2013

Print circ fell 42% at top papers since 2005


A series of changes in recent years in the way newspapers count their subscribers masks a deep, ongoing and troubling plunge that has cut print circulation by 41.6% at the nation’s biggest papers since 2005. 

Print matters because it still produces approximately three-quarters of the revenues at the typical newspaper, according to Jim Conaghan, the vice president of research at the Newspaper