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The Complete Guide to Careers
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You're going to work for around 40 hours a week, 48 weeks a year, and 40 years of your life, which is almost 80,000 hours in total! So it's best to make sure you're doing something worthwhile and enjoyable—something you really want to do. This quick guide is designed to help you make the most of your career.

We've spent about one week of our life seeking out around 150 of the best career guidance, recruitment, and job-hunting web pages to help you get yourself on the right path. We've wasted the time so you don't have to! The page is broken up into handy sections with several different pages offering a broad selection of advice in each one.

Last updated: 4 March 2010.

Introduction

Do you live to work or do you work to live? No matter how successful you are at work, things could always be better—right? You could always do with a little more money. But even if you're happy with what you're earning, perhaps you'd like more of a challenge or more responsibility? Humans have a built-in tendency to "habituate" to things: we become bored when the novelty wears off. Lots of people are quite content working within their so-called "comfort zone", but just as many people appreciate variety and the opportunity to do something new.

So, wherever you are in your career, how about spending an hour of your time taking stock? Ask yourself what things you're happy with and what could be better. What are your career goals for the next year, two years, five years, ten years and beyond? Maybe you simply fancy a change of job or environment in the short term, or perhaps you have a very specific ambition you'd like to satisfy in the longer term that will need you to accumulate skills, experience, and training over a number of years. How well are you doing overall compared to where you thought you'd be a few years ago? Can you see yourself satisfying your ambitions in the years ahead and, if not, what do you have to change to make things go your way?

Whatever you want to achieve, the things we've compiled on this page should help. From getting your first job as a new graduate to making a career change in mid-life; from writing the perfect job application letter and putting together your resume to finding a job when you have no experience. It's targetted mainly at readers in the UK and USA. If you live elsewhere and don't find what you want here, try using the Google search boxes at the top and bottom of this page to find more relevant information.

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Contents - what's on this page

General careers advice

Careers advice for young people

Graduates

General jobhunting advice

Getting a job if you have no experience

A mid-life career change?

If you're interested specifically in starting a business of your own, take a look at our complete guide to starting your own business.

Tips for older jobseekers

Tips for disabled jobseekers

How to write a job application letter

How to write the perfect CV/resume

Tips for writing your own CV/resume

Example CVs and templates

CV/resume-writing services

There are hundreds of CV-writing services advertising on the Web. You can find lots of them by Google searching in the box at the bottom of this page.

How to give the perfect interview

A CV or resume gets your foot in the door, but the interviews is where you win or lose the job you want. How can you beat nerves and present yourself in the best possible light?

Your legal rights as an employee

General sites

We recommend the Citizens Advice Bureau's Advice Guide: Employment as the best starting point.

Unfair dismissal

Using recruitment agencies

Job search websites

If you're looking for a new job, what have you got to lose by registering your details on a few job-hunting websites? So you just register and wait for the offers to come flooding in? Not exactly: do it properly and job hunting is almost a full-time job in itself. But it's worth the effort if you really want to get on! Here are 20 of the most popular, general job-seeking sites. Don't forget that there are many specialized sites for more specialized jobs. If you're looking for nursing opportunities, try doing a Google search for "job search nursing" or "nursing vacancies" as well as looking on the general sites. (Use the Google search box at the bottom of this page to help you.)

Job centres

UK

USA

General job-searching and vacancy sites

Some of the better known job-search sites, in alphabetical order...

UK: Information and advice about specific careers

USA: Information and advice about specific careers

Can't find what you want? Google search for it here!

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