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First Job Blues: How to Adjust,
When to Move On?

By ERIN WHITE
Staff Reporter of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL
July 25, 2006
Two months into her first job after college, Tanya Lüthi
was miserable. She found her work at an education foundation
to be frustrating, filled with endless, pointless meetings.
Like many college graduates suddenly plunged into real life,
she wasn't sure whether she was simply struggling to adjust
to the working world, or on the wrong career path.
"When it's your first job out of college, you don't have
anything to compare it to," says Ms. Lüthi, who
graduated from Princeton University with a degree in politics
in 2000. "Part of me thought that I was in the wrong
field but part of me felt that maybe I had just been in the
Ivory Tower for too long and now I was being a whiner."
It's a common feeling for people a few months into their first
real jobs: They hate them, but they don't know why. For this
spring's college graduates, the sentiment may be starting
to emerge now. But how to determine the root cause of the
misery?
Brad Karsh, president of JobBound, a Chicago career-counseling
service, suggests grads examine the duties of more-senior
colleagues. Are their jobs appealing? If so, stick out the
entry-level drudgery in hopes of attaining more rewarding
roles. But if the senior jobs also seem awful, that's a sign
you're in the wrong career, company or job.
Another strategy is to find a slightly older mentor at the
company, coaches say. Ask that person: Did you go through
this? Is this normal? When does it change, if at all?
You should be prepared to accept some normal, and difficult,
aspects of working life, coaches advise. For the first three
to six months, expect to feel overwhelmed: Many tasks will
be brand new, and you won't always understand how your efforts
fit into the bigger picture.
For entry-level positions, many duties may be fairly menial,
including data-entry and filing, Mr. Karsh says. Don't fret
if your meatier assignments get radically rewritten, rechecked
and criticized. What should concern you is if your boss criticizes
you personally, rather than your work.
Another thing recent grads struggle with is not having control
over their schedules, notes Barbara LaRock, a career coach
in Reston, Va. That may mean giving up weekends and working
late nights on short notice. "You really have to be flexible,"
Ms. LaRock says.
Unless a first job is unbearably awful, coaches recommend
grads persevere for six to 12 months.
Sometimes, though, a chosen field may prove to be a bad fit.
That's what Ms. Lüthi discovered. At her job with the
education foundation she helped out with marketing, public
relations and strategy. But she found herself in too many
meetings that she thought didn't accomplish anything. The
education-reform work of the foundation, while worthy, also
seemed too abstract; she prefers more tangible, concrete projects.
She asked her boss for more tangible assignments, and got
some. She redesigned the foundation's Web site and wrote a
newsletter. But the job was still unsatisfying.
After about nine months, she visited career coach Peg Hendershot*
of Glen Ellyn, Ill. Ms. Lüthi took several tests and
discussed the results with Ms. Hendershot. The assessment
revealed an obvious gap between Ms. Lüthi's interests
and her work at the foundation.
"The first thing she said to me was, 'You hate your job,
don't you?'" Ms. Lüthi recalls. She needed a job
that would give her more structure and more tangible measures
of success. She had strong quantitative and spatial skills.
One field Ms. Hendershot suggested was architecture.
Ms. Lüthi took an unpaid leave from her job to attend
a summer architecture program at Harvard University. She loved
it, but wanted something even more quantitative. Structural
engineering, she realized, might be a perfect fit. Structural
engineers engineer the structural skeleton of a building.
She talked to "every structural engineer I could find"
to learn more about their jobs, she says. Then, "I took
the plunge." She enrolled in graduate school at the University
of Texas at Austin.
She graduated in spring 2005. Today she's a structural engineer
at a firm in New York. "It's a perfect fit - it's detail-oriented,
it's problem-solving, it's obviously very spatial," she
says. Before, "I felt like I spent all my time in meetings
talking in circles."
*Peg Hendershot is the Director of Career Vision
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