Finding the Right Job for You
- The Basics
- What Kind of Job is Right For You?
- Explore Your Options
- Building Your Skills
- Strategies for Seeking Employment
- Next Steps
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What Kind of Job Is Right for You?
Whether you are searching for your first career or looking for a new one, it is important to find a career that helps you earn enough money to meet your needs, that you can do well, and that is satisfying to you. It is also important to develop your skills in new ways. It is great to find a job that you enjoy doing, but it is also important to think about how what you are doing now can prepare you for your long-term goals.
Even if you have a long way to go to reach your goals, thinking about your long-term career can help you focus on your current job search. But you don’t have to know exactly where you want to end up. Each job you have will help you learn more about your interests, acquire new skills, and develop your long-term goals.
Thinking carefully about the skills and interests you have now is a good way to begin your search for a satisfying job. The tools below can help you get a clear picture of your interests and skills.
Discovery: Understand Yourself
Self-Assessment/Personal Inventory
There are many tools available to help you learn more about your likes, dislikes, and how your personality fits with different work settings and occupations. Some assessments can cost money, while others are free. Different assessment tools work differently and focus on different things. It can be a good idea to take more than one assessment, to get a broader look at yourself.
The Job Accommodation Network (JAN) has an excellent guide called Finding a Job that is Right for You: A Practical Approach to Looking for a Job as a Person with a Disability that has helpful information for your job search. The guide is divided into four steps, and the first step, "What kind of job is right for you?" includes links to worksheets to help you learn more about what is important to you, your interests and strengths, and what you need from a job. Each worksheet has a slightly different focus:
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The Job Priority List Worksheet helps you list the things that interest you the most and the job features that are most important to you.
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The Overcoming Obstacles Worksheet helps you anticipate challenges you may find when looking for work. Thinking of solutions to problems that you might run into before you get started can make your job search easier and more effective.
- The Personal Inventory Worksheet helps you begin building a resume by organizing your experiences to show your interests and strengths.
NCCareers.org has multiple tools to help you, like an Interest Finder to identify your personality types, a Career Cluster Match to decide the best combination of your work, skill and academic interests, and a Skills Matcher to find career options that might be a good fit.
CareerOneStop.org explains how self-assessments can help you find a good career fit. The site offers three different assessments:
- Interest Assessment looks at how much you enjoy different tasks and activities
- Skills Matcher focuses on your skills and knowledge
- Work Values Matcher looks at the qualities in a job or workplace that are most important to you
You can answer a series of questions on the U.S. Department of Labor's O*NET Interest Profiler to discover what you like to do. The Department of Labor also hosts MyNextMove.org, with tools to help you figure out what you want to do for a living.
Talking to a Career Counselor
It can be hard to choose from all the different self-assessment tools. It can also be difficult to know what to do with the results once you have them. A career counselor can help you choose the right test, understand what the test results mean, and help you get started with your career planning. Often these services are at a low cost or no cost to you.
You can find a career counselor at a NCWorks Career Center or at an Employment and Independence for People with Disabilities (EIPD) office.
Your Individual Needs
Interests and skills are important when deciding what work you might like to do, but it is also important to know what you need your job to do for you. A good way to explore the financial and other benefits you need from a job is to complete the Personal Needs Assessment Worksheet inside the Finding a Job that is Right for You guide from the Job Accommodation Network (JAN).
Reasonable Accommodation
If your disability makes aspects of your job difficult, you may want to ask for a reasonable accommodation. A reasonable accommodation is any change in the work environment or in the way things are usually done that leads to an equal employment opportunity for you as a person with a disability.
Reasonable accommodations can include modifications to the facility, changes in the job process, and assistive technology allowing you to meet the expected job performance standards.
NCcareers.org offers an overview of job accommodations. Disability Rights North Carolina explains your Disability Rights at Work and answers Frequently Asked Questions About Employment Rights.
You usually start an accommodation request, either verbally or in writing. Get information on how to put your request in writing.
If you have developed strategies or used equipment to successfully accommodate your disability, then you may want to share this with your employer. However, if you have not needed an accommodation before and do not know where to start, contact the Job Accommodation Network (JAN).
JAN is a free service that offers:
- Accommodation experts to guide you through the accommodation process.
- Publications with accommodation suggestions for different situations.
- The Searchable Online Accommodation Resource (SOAR), which asks you about your situation and then offers accommodation suggestions.
Finding Careers That Match Your Strengths and Interests
Once you have a clearer picture of your skills and interests, you’ll need to figure out what type of work might suit you. The sites below have tools that help match your interests with possible jobs. They also explain what types of education and training you may need to prepare for the career you are interested in. Even if you already have a job or career in mind, it is a good idea to explore the sites below. They may suggest a career you hadn’t thought of, but matches your interests.
- NCcareers.org has tools to let you explore occupations and plan your career.
- The U.S. Department of Labor’s O*Net Online offers careers search tools. O*Net lets you look for jobs that use a specific skill, tool, or software. It also allows you to browse groups of similar occupations so you can learn about jobs that are related to the job you are interested in.
- CareerConnect, from the American Printing House for the Blind, lets you browse careers by field or interest area. It also allows you to explore specific careers and offers details about the knowledge, interests, skills, and abilities needed.
- CareerOneStop has an education and training page that includes the education requirements and training needs of different occupations.
- Although it is aimed at high school students, Career Exploration from the Bureau of Labor Statistics helps you use your current interests to find and explore different careers.
- Careers and the disABLED magazine has in-depth articles and information on career options.
What Does the Future Look Like for the Type of Job You Are Seeking?
Before you become too focused on a specific career, it is good to understand how easy or hard it is to find a job in that area.
Each year the North Carolina Department of Commerce publishes a report predicting the short-term and long-term job market in the state for the next 10 years.
CareerOneStop has information on:
- Industries with the Fastest Growth
- Occupations with the Largest Employment
- The Highest Paying Occupations
- Wages and Employment Trends by Occupation, Job, and State
- Wages by Education Level
In addition to resources for exploring careers and job searching, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics has information on occupations that are expected to:
- Suffer the largest wage and employment declines
- Experience the largest growth in total number of jobs
- Grow the fastest
By looking at websites that list jobs, you can see the types of jobs that are in demand in your state or local area. You can find local job openings at Monster.com and Indeed.com.
Learn more
Programs That Support Work
Learn about programs that can help you prepare for and find work.
Employer-Sponsored Health Coverage
Your job, your parent's job, or your spouse's job may offer private health coverage as a benefit.
Building Your Assets and Wealth
Discover ways to save up money while working.
Get Expert Help
North Carolina's Employment and Independence for People with Disabilities (EIPD) helps people with disabilities prepare for and find work.
SSI and SSDI
How Work Affects SSI and SSDI
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Call the Ticket to Work Help Line
1-866-968-7842 -
Call Employment and Independence for People with Disabilities (EIPD)
1-800-689-9090 -
Call Employment Source
1-910-401-5495
NC Medicaid
- Contact your Department of Social Services (DSS) office
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Call NC Medicaid
1-888-245-0179
Medicare
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Call Medicare
1-800-633-4227 -
Call the Seniors' Health Insurance Information Program (SHIIP)
1-855-408-1212
Work Preparation
- Contact your Employment and Independence for People with Disabilities (EIPD) office
- Contact the Division of Services for the Blind
- Contact your local NCWorks Career Center
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