Some career advice from LinkedIn

female office worker relaxing with feet on table

I know a number of people don’t see the value of LinkedIn. I, however, find a valuable tool, both as a networking tool and for advice in this continuously morphing economy and job market. Today, I came across this gem with the first line ‘The common advice is to find a stable role with a good team and “vest and chill”.’

I’ve heard that advice for most of my life, though mostly when I was young. Especially to young sailor me. Do the minimum, don’t attract attention…these pieces of advice are rather alluring on the surface. They seem to appease fear, any adversity to risk, to minimise the chances of failure. However, as Mr. LoPrimo, the writer of the post, points out, you’re relying on pure luck. I’ve long given up on that mindset, even though it still haunts me.

For years, I’ve “given plenty of thought” to where I am going. My challenge? There are so many options and variations, it’s so damn hard to pick amongst them. I guess that’s preferable than sitting here after a layoff wondering where I should apply.

I want my career to be more than reacting; I want proactivity, to be ahead of the curve. I don’t want to be playing the game of scrambling to find work again. And to be evolving in a direction of my choice. So I build myself, my mind, pointing towards the future I want.

What about you?

Completed another Certificate: Harnessing the Power of Data with Power BI

close up photo of survey spreadsheet

I’ve been working lately on Coursera’s Microsoft Power BI Data Analyst certificate. I just completed the current course, Harnessing the Power of Data with Power BI. I find this valuable as I don’t know Power BI (BI = Business Intelligence) that well yet. I have extensive experience with Excel and Google Sheets. I studied database theory and design, SQL/MySQL, and created gobs of databases for my Web Development Degree. Power BI is a powerful tool that many organizations want/need for data analysts, which seems like a great fit for me at this juncture of my career. I’ve been working with Excel and the rest of Office for decades. I’ve worked with Oracle and SQL Server databases. I’ve built reports and dashboards. I’ve enjoyed this kind of work to the point of volunteering for it.

So, I’ve slowly been diving in and getting Power BI under my belt. It looks like a key piece for me to evolve into Data Analyst roles, for which I’m pretty excited. Again, it looks like a blend of my skills and interests. Even my current network and server admin work ties in, as databases often live on servers, and thus, networks are crucial.