NP Rank:
Expand Career Options with Transferable Skills
Transferable skills are one of the
most important assets when considering new job opportunities. This pertains to everyone, but especially to
those recently affected by a new disability according to Disaboom, the largest online community for people living with or
touched by disability. To connect these valuable skills with the
range of potential opportunities, however, the job seeker must rethink the application
of those skills and get comfortable “repurposing” them.
What are transferable skills? These
are job capabilities that bring value to many environments, rather than being
specific to a given organization. Although the person may have learned and practiced
them in the context of, say, volunteer work, they can be applied to new types
of nonprofit work or to new for-profit job opportunities.
Some examples of transferable skills
might include technology skills, an ability to work with customers/the public,
management expertise, communication skills, or project management expertise,
among many others.
The easiest way to explore
repurposing skills is to start reading job descriptions for industries or
organizations that may be of interest. Check out the wording used to describe
various positions, and line up those skills against their specifications. The
applicant should adapt this language to describe their capabilities. That way,
potential employers who don’t understand what a Project Specialist Grade IV is
capable of will still have a chance to understand the value the applicant
brings to the table.
Reframing skills is a process that
asks the job seeker to identify and understand their skills in a broader
context. In addition, they will need to do the following:
Reconsider the language used to
describe skills. The applicant will want to
describe what they can do in terms that make sense to their audience, which
means they need to understand and describe the language of the potential employer. In order for the
applicant to translate their current transferable skills and experience into
broader opportunities, it’s necessary to describe them in words and
descriptive phrases that resonate with the people who might hire them.
Rethink and repurpose what can be
done with applicable skills.
What roles, responsibilities, and opportunities would the applicant’s skills
prepare them for if their current position didn’t exist? For example, if a
person runs the numbers for an organization but the role of “bookkeeper” didn’t
exist, how else would that person describe what their skills are? Think ability
to organize and make sense of financial information, strong attention to
detail, ability to extrapolate patterns from data and synthesize that
information for strategic decision support.
Develop confidence in skills – and
contribution.
While the applicant probably has had confidence in the work they’ve been doing,
now they’re going to take those competencies in a whole new direction. It’s
important for the applicant to focus on their track record of successes and
know they will be able to repeat them in new environments, even if it does
require an initial learning curve.
At the end of the day it’s up to the
applicant to make sure their confidence factor is where it needs to be. This means understanding and celebrating the
value of their knowledge. It means respecting their skills, and expecting that
others should as well. It means knowing that what they deliver adds value to
projects, and organizations, and communities. It means that they express
confidence and assurance in their conversations, and model a professional
demeanor that calmly says “I understand that I am/will be an asset to any
organization I work with.”
The job
seeker needs to get into the habit of acknowledging what they are good at, with
a focus on what their skills have accomplished. If the applicant is shy about
this, they can recruit a friendly colleague who understands what they do and
have that person describe the greatest assets.
They should understand that they could contribute value to many types of
organizations, both current employer and employers yet to come.
For more
tips, advice and support on finding a job visit Disaboom’s Employment Section. Visitors will find business listings of
potential employers; articles covering employment; post their résumé where it
will be viewable by participating companies and an employment community section
to share advice and support.




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