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Career Change for Physicians Are You A Candidate?
By Stephen Rosen
How do physicians change careers? One helpful tool is a Career Change Ability
Scale, which identifies the best career practices—hallmark
career behaviors and career attitudes—of physicians who have
made career transitions to non-clinical occupations.
We call these individuals “career change champions”
and their ‘best practices’ provide important information
and data on how to change, and helped us create our Career Change
Ability Scale.
Working as a hospital administrator for an insurance company or
pharmaceutical firm are somewhat typical non-clinical careers. But
medical real estate, Wall Street, venture capital, new-company start-ups
are some of the less typical career destinations for physicians.
We have worked with both groups.
Typically, physicians (like other highly-credentialed professionals)
generally pursue career paths in three pattern-categories:
| 1. |
About 58 percent of physicians follow straight-ahead career
paths. These are physicians who start as a surgeon or psychiatrist
or internist and remain as a surgeon or psychiatrist or internist.
Some of our clients come from this population. |
| 2. |
About 29 percent of physicians follow a broad career pattern.
These are physicians who start as an internist, and transition
to a hospital administrator; or start as an endocrinologist,
transition to pharmaceutical medical liaison; or start in community
medicine and transition to academic research. Many of our clients
come from this group. |
| 3. |
About 13 percent follow a variant career pattern. These are
physicians who start a traditional medical career and end as
a politician like Bill Frist; or start as a pediatrician and
transition to stand-up comedy; or start as an eye surgeon, transition
to law, and then to venture capital. Most of our clients come
from this group. |
These three general pattern-categories emerged from a research
study that concluded “career self-realization [is] not a fully
conscious [process]”, but has to be “learned from alternatives”—that
is to say by trial and error.
So one purpose of the Career Change Ability Scale is to help physicians
who might contemplate changing careers learn how easy or difficult
it is (in advance of any change), what’s needed to make a
change, and if they’ll be able to navigate the change. And,
of course, it would be highly advantageous to know sooner, rather
than later, which pattern-category we belong to. Most of us don’t
want unwelcome surprises.
The problem for most of us is that we don’t know which of
these categories we belong to until later in life, looking backwards,
when it may be too late to change or after we’ve tried one
job or career and become dissatisfied or burned-out at that one.
Or it can come after we’ve tried many different jobs or careers
and still not yet found the right fit.
The same study also concluded that not only was ability necessary
for career success and career well-being and career achievement:
personality was a major factor. Substantive professional or technical-content
skills (of the sort learned in medical school or as interns) do
not alone determine achievement later in life. Many
other career behaviors and career beliefs found in the Career Change
Ability Scale can be imitated, developed, improved and even incorporated
into new behaviors.
Changing careers may be advantageous but adventurous—since
many of us don’t get it right the first time. Trial and error
seems to be the rule. Of course there are exceptions such as people
who know from a very early age what they want to be when they grow
up. (Non-medical but well-known examples: Mozart, Steven Spielberg,
Albert Einstein followed “straight-ahead career paths”
over an entire lifetime.)
However, it can be daunting to contemplate shifting directions,
moving outside of your comfort zone, and into the unknown. How do
you decide? Is it practical? How easy or difficult would it be?
What options are available? These questions are useful to consider
before moving ahead.
Non-clinical
Career Directions for Physicians
• Medical/Health-Care Communications (Publishing,
Marketing, Market Research, Editing/Editorial, Acquisitions,
Writing, Advertising)
• Pharmaceutical Firms
• Investment Analysis
• Investing
• Financial Engineering and Development
• Management Consulting
• Public Health
• Entrepreneurial Activity
• Medical/Health-Care Start-Ups
• Venture Capital
• Recruitment/Medical Executive-Search
• Medical Real Estate
• Personnel/Human Resources
• Management/Administration
• Insurance
• Lobbying
• Public Service (Government, Foundations, Non-profits).
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Here are some questions (adapted from Richard Fein) that you should ask
yourself to find out if you are ready to change careers:
1. |
Are you thinking positive new directions, not
wanting to flee a bad career/job? |
2. |
Could you come back to your old career/job if you had to? |
3. |
Have you researched new career options? |
4. |
If a new career doesn’t work out, would it have been worth it to
explore? |
5. |
Do people who know you well agree with your idea of changing
careers? |
6. |
Would you accept a low salary to try out a new career? |
7. |
Are you ready to prove yourself to a new employer? |
8. |
Are you ready to work with people younger than you? |
9. |
Are you prepared for the reality that a new career may not work
out? |
The Career Change Ability Scale shows you the obstacles you
face, and have to overcome, if you desire to move into a new
job or career. The 13 statements below are a short version adapted
from the complete 47-item Career Change Ability Scale. |
To interpret the results of the short 13-item version, please note how many of the
statements you agree with, divide by 13, and convert to a percentage. The closer the
result is to 100%, the closer you approach agreement with people who changed careers easily
and happily.
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1. |
I intuitively develop abiding relationships with
friends and colleagues. |
Agree |
Disagree |
2. |
Professional colleagues, mentors, advisors and role models
were important in my life. |
Agree |
Disagree |
3. |
Life is full of random events that I attempt to convert into
adventures. |
Agree |
Disagree |
4. |
In my professional social life I present my truest and best
self. |
Agree |
Disagree |
5. |
I know what I can change, what I can’t change and the
differences between them. |
Agree |
Disagree |
6. |
I redirect my energies, instincts and desires into useful
pursuits. |
Agree |
Disagree |
7. |
Humility is a great virtue. |
Agree |
Disagree |
8. |
The harder I work, the luckier I get. |
Agree |
Disagree |
9. |
I work hard and play hard. |
Agree |
Disagree |
10. |
Decisions I made at important turning points in my career
were beneficial to my career.
|
Agree |
Disagree |
11. |
I am energetic and optimistic about my career and my life.
|
Agree |
Disagree |
12. |
I gain energy, pleasure and renewal from my work or career. |
Agree |
Disagree |
13. |
Excellent job opportunities and offers well-suited to me have
come my way as if by chance. |
Agree |
Disagree |
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