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Find Your Dream Job: Insider Tips for Finding Work, Advancing your Career, and Loving Your Job

Building Relationships Throughout Your Job Search Journey, with Julie Magers

Find Your Dream Job: Insider Tips for Finding Work, Advancing your Career, and Loving Your Job

Mac's List

Careers, Business

4.8624 Ratings

🗓️ 14 January 2019

⏱️ 20 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

If you have the skills and passion for a position that doesn’t yet exist, there are some specific steps you can take while you wait for that position to be created. Networking to build relationships, volunteering to keep your experience current, and finding a group of people who share your vision will allow you to be patient while you wait. On this bonus episode of Find Your Dream Job, Julie Magers and I talk about how she worked to create a position that didn’t yet exist. It required patience, staying engaged in her profession, and building relationships every step of the way. Two years later, she is still loving the dream job she created for herself. Learn more about Julie’s career history below in this installment of our Success Stories series.   What do you do for a career? Who do you work for? I work at OHSU’s Division of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry as their one and only Family Support Specialist. In fact, I am one of two total employees filling this role in the entire University! In this role, I am developing strategies to enhance and elevate the inclusion of Family and Young Adult Support Specialists across Oregon, specifically in two programs: the Emergency Department Diversion (EDD) Pilot Program and the Early Assessment and Support Alliance (EASA). People in these positions have lived experiences with navigating the systems of care that serve youth living with mental health conditions and/or developmental or intellectual disabilities. We help by walking beside the family, sharing what we have learned through experience, providing emotional and educational support, and helping them learn to advocate for their needs to be met. We also help to “translate” the communication among families, youth and their health/education/insurance providers in order to promote collaborative approaches to serving the child and family’s needs. How long did it take you to find this job? I was searching for this particular role for about eight months. How did you find your job? What resources did you use? What tool or tactic helped the most? Because this is a somewhat newly emerging workforce, my best tactics and strategies to find this position included networking, serving in volunteer roles on advisory councils, researching the agencies and organizations that hire Family, Young Adult, and Peer Support Specialists, and being ready to submit my application as soon as the most favorable position was announced. What was the most difficult part of your job search? How did you overcome this challenge? I had been working as a Family Support Specialist at a local non-profit with a focus on mental health and developed one of the field operations for the EDD Pilot Program in that county. I was very interested in serving in a role to improve the support, training and inclusion of this workforce in all of the program sites across the state, but that position didn’t really exist. I think the most difficult part of this journey was being patient and waiting for the systems serving children and families to create the position. To overcome that challenge, I remained “plugged into” the work in any way possible and stayed in touch with industry leaders in the field. What is the single best piece of advice you would offer other job-seekers? Do what you have to do to have the income you need to pay your bills, while simultaneously pursuing your dream job! Why do you love your job? I have the honor to walk beside families who are in crisis with their children, spun around in a system of care (our mental health system) that does not readily guide them in getting their children access to critically needed care. When I was in a similar situation, I had a mentor who helped me learn how these systems work so that I could make them work for my daughter – now I get to pay it forward and share that knowledge with others. I also have the privilege to work with mental health service providers and bridge the communication with their clients, promoting family and youth driven care. Everyone wins when all parties are able to collaborate for the best possible outcomes for children and youth experiencing emotional and behavioral health-related challenges. Learn more about Julie on LinkedIn and her company website, or follow her on Twitter!   Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript

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0:00.0

This episode is sponsored by Plaud, the AI wearable gadget that takes notes of meetings and calls.

0:07.6

Are you tired of writing everything down?

0:10.5

Or do you zone out in meetings and forget key takeaways?

0:14.6

Let AI do it for you.

0:17.3

Meet Plod, your AI-powered meeting sidekick.

0:20.7

This tiny AI gadget is the perfect accessory to your phone.

0:24.6

It creates notes, generates transcripts, and summarizes critical points and action items.

0:31.6

With the Plawed, you can stay focused and not worry that you might miss an important idea or next step.

0:38.4

You can also contribute more to the conversation and stand out in your next meeting

0:42.9

because you're not concentrating on note-taking.

0:46.2

It's simple.

0:47.2

You talk and plot handles the rest.

0:50.3

Find peace of mind at work today.

0:52.7

Ready to work smarter?

0:54.4

Type PLA-U-D into Google and get a discount with my code dream job.

1:01.1

That's PLA-U-D.

1:04.7

Music This is Find Your Dream Job, the podcast that helps you get hired, find the career you want, and make a difference in life.

1:22.6

I'm Mac Pritchard, your host. I'm also the founder of Max List.

1:27.0

It's a job board of the Pacific Northwest that

1:29.5

helps professionals find fulfilling careers. To get your dream job, you need clear goals, great skills,

1:37.0

and a good network. You also have to know how to look for work. One of the best ways to get good at job

1:44.0

hunting is to talk to people who do it well.

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