Escape from Corporate America: A Practical Guide to Creating the Career of Your Dreams

Escape from Corporate America: A Practical Guide to Creating the Career of Your Dreams

by Pamela Skillings
Escape from Corporate America: A Practical Guide to Creating the Career of Your Dreams

Escape from Corporate America: A Practical Guide to Creating the Career of Your Dreams

by Pamela Skillings

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Overview

Does your corporate career leave you stressed out, burned out, or just plain bummed out? You’re not alone. The good news is that there’s a way out–and you’re holding it. Written by career expert and corporate escapee Pamela Skillings, Escape from Corporate America inspires the cubicle-bound and the corner-office-cornered to break free and create the career of their dreams–without going broke. With no-nonsense advice and unflagging humor, Skillings shows you how to

• assess your job’s “suck” factor–from terminal boredom to boss from hell
• identify your true calling–brainstorm fantasy careers and test-drive your dream jobs
• develop your Escape Plan–set goals, figure out your timing, and evaluate your finances and health insurance options
• find jobs that don’t bite–entrepreneurial corporate environments, energetic start-ups, the nonprofit sector, and flexible work options
• be your own boss–explore entrepreneurship and freelancing, assemble an advisory team, and start a business while you collect a paycheck
• follow your creative dreams–learn how to make time for your artistic passion and develop a plan to quit your day job
• overcome any obstacle–deal with fear, doubt, negative people, and other bumps along the road

Plus, Skillings shares success stories from dozens of corporate escape artists, including celebrity TV chef Andrea Beaman, Cranium CEO Richard Tait, and many others.

Full of practical strategies and fun-to-follow exercises, Escape from Corporate America will help disgruntled office workers everywhere find more meaningful, fulfilling careers.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780345507372
Publisher: Random House Publishing Group
Publication date: 05/13/2008
Sold by: Random House
Format: eBook
Pages: 352
File size: 3 MB

About the Author

Pamela Skillings is a journalist, author, and successful entrepreneur with over ten years years of experience as a senior marketing executive at companies including Citigroup and MasterCard. She is the founder of Skillful Communications, and also conducts career-related seminars in New York City. Born and raised in a small rural town in Pennsylvania, Skillings's first published writing appeared in the local paper alongside photos of prize deer carcasses and Dairy Princesses, and has since explored careers as diverse as cocktail waitress, focus-group hostess, and pharmacy assistant. She lives in New York City.

Read an Excerpt

One

This Is Not Your Father’s Job Market

If you cannot work with love but only with distaste, it is better that you should leave your work.
—Kahlil Gibran

So I was sitting in my cubicle today, and I realized, ever since I started working, every single day of my life has been worse than the day before it. So that means that every single day that you see me, that’s on the worst day of my life.
—Ron Livingston as Peter Gibbons in Office Space

Some of the most seemingly successful corporate movers and shakers have a dirty little secret. They hate their jobs.

Bob in Accounting is burned out and on the verge of going postal—better stay away from the mailroom. Diane the VP of sales just got downsized for the second time in two years, and Ted the new marketing guy is counting the milliseconds until five o’clock.

The corporate career path can be exciting, well paid, and highly prestigious. On the flip side, Corporate America can also feel like a creativity-destroying, soul-deadening maze of politics and bureaucracy.

While some thrive in the rat race, others feel trapped. If you’re sick of trying to conform to the corporate dress code, the corporate mind-set, and the corporate “culture,” you’re not alone.

If you picked up this book, it’s because there’s a part of you that dreams of a career more fulfilling than your current nine-to-five rut. A little voice inside has been telling you that something has to change.

So why haven’t you made a break for it? Wiggling free from the golden handcuffs of a “good job” that’s making you miserable isn’t easy. The idea of walking away from a steady paycheck and health benefits can be terrifying—especially if you’re not 100 percent sure what you really want to do with your life.

That’s how millions get stuck in lives of quiet corporate desperation. But it doesn’t have to be that way. You don’t have to choose between cubicle slavery and abject poverty.

Today there are plenty of job options beyond the corporate ladder. And there are plenty of ways—both practical and radical—to make the leap from a life of daily distress to a career that inspires you.

I Hate My Job

Recent surveys show that a record 50 percent of American workers are dissatisfied with their jobs and 80 percent fantasize about leaving their current gigs. Surprisingly, despite higher salaries and better benefits, corporate workers are more miserable than those in other types of jobs.

Studies have revealed that employees of small companies are more than twice as satisfied as employees of large corporations. Meanwhile, free agents and entrepreneurs are even happier, with 87 percent reporting they are satisfied with their jobs.

“Corporate America is not aligned with the needs and requirements of its increasingly diverse workforce, and radical changes in attitude mean that a growing number of young Americans are dissatisfied, disengaged, and unproductive,” according to a report by researchers from The Concours Group, who conducted a survey of more than seven thousand U.S. workers.

“Sometimes I fantasize about getting hit by a car,” confides Dina P., a midlevel manager for a large financial services corporation. “Nothing too serious. Just bad enough that I have to miss work for a while.”

Of course, millions of people in other professions experience similar issues, but corporate types face unique challenges. After years of ascending the corporate ladder, most have attained a certain salary level and a certain degree of career success. Feelings of identity, self-worth, and belonging are all tied up in their job titles. They feel like they have a lot to lose by walking away.

Suck It Up, Cry-Baby

So what’s wrong with these people? They’re not ditch diggers or sweatshop laborers. Dina and David have cushy office jobs, make good money, and enjoy generous 401(k) plans. They should be happy, right?

Your grandparents would have scoffed at the concept of job fulfillment. Previous generations mostly saw work as a necessary evil—you weren’t supposed to like it. They felt lucky just to earn enough money to feed their families and pay the rent. After all, does anybody really like his job?

The answer today is a resounding yes. There is a fortunate segment of the population made up of people who love what they do for a living. Their eyes light up when they talk about their work, and they’re proud of the contributions they make.

“I was always in a sour mood on Sunday nights because I had to wake up the next day and live a bad, bad nightmare all over again,” says David R., a corporate attorney. “I felt like I was trapped in the movie Groundhog Day.”

Today work is more personal than ever before. Who you are is what you do. Sure, it’s important to maintain perspective and not take opportunities for granted. With so much poverty and suffering in the world, the ability to choose a career that brings joy and fulfillment is a privilege. But for those who have the option, why waste the majority of your waking hours in a job that makes you miserable?

The average American spends more than one hundred thousand hours at work over the course of a lifetime. And that’s a very conservative estimate, given ever-increasing workloads and later retirement ages. If you truly believe that work shouldn’t be fulfilling or interesting, that it’s just a means to a paycheck, then you’re missing a lot.

Realistic Expectations

No job is all fun and free beer. That’s why they call it work. Let’s face it, even the most tedious corporate job beats cleaning toilets at the bus station or running the deep-fryer at Mickey D’s.

And not every corporate job is a pit of Dilbertian despair. Some corporate executives love their work. They believe in their products and services and get a charge out of helping their companies succeed.

All jobs have both positives and negatives—and the negatives are different for every individual. One person might find number-crunching financial reports tedious while another thrives on the challenge. One employee may love the excitement of a demanding, competitive work environment while another gets ulcers just thinking about it.

Executives with seemingly great jobs can be just as unhappy as anyone else if their work lacks the elements that they value. For those looking primarily for financial gain or prestige, high-level corporate gigs can be very rewarding. For others who prioritize flexibility or exercising their creativity, corporate life can be hell.

It’s not just about the money. A recent survey by The Conference Board found that 17 percent of those making $15,000 a year say they are satisfied with their jobs, compared with just 14 percent of those who make more than $50,000.

Marcus Buckingham, the author of The One Thing You Need to Know and an expert on employee satisfaction, told USA Today that some of the most disengaged people he’s encountered were senior executives running empires and earning millions of dollars.

Table of Contents


Introduction     ix
Quiz: Are You a Corporate Casualty?     xvi
Plan Your Escape
This Is Not Your Father's Job Market     3
Bad corporate versus good corporate
Advice from Scott Adams
A brief history of corporate malaise
The new work order
Break up with your job
The Trouble with the Rat Race     24
The phases of corporate disillusionment
Corporate burnout
Terminal boredom
Square peg syndrome
Balance disorder
Meaning deficiency
Toxic workplace blues
The corporate malcontent's iPod playlist and movie night
True Callings and Wrong Numbers     58
The myth of the true calling
Career fantasy
Detective work
Trying on your dream jobs
Let's Get Practical     80
Your money or your life
Worst-case scenarios and bag-lady fantasies
Strategic moonlighting
Your escape plan
Your escape fund
The health insurance question
Financial planning worksheets
Exploring Escape Routes
Corporate Jobs That Don't Suck     111
Defining corporate greatness
Portrait of a great place to work
The voice of the people
Finding a corporate job that doesn't suck
Your guide to interview code
The best companies for you
The step-by-step plan
Take a Break     130
The flexible revolution
The part-time VP
Flextime
Telecommuting
Part-time
Sabbaticals and leaves of absence
Making your business case
The step-by-step plan
Swim in a Smaller Pond     155
Start-ups2.0
Small can be beautiful
The challenges of small
From corporate to start-up
Finding the right job for you
The step-by-step plan
Go Solo     174
The solopreneur movement
Trends converging
Thank you for downsizing me
Blogging for dollars
The accidental entrepreneur
Going solo by moonlight
You can always go back
The step-by-step plan
Build a Business     210
The big idea
The entrepreneurial dream
Corporate-to-entrepreneur hall of fame
From hobby to big business
It's good to be Grand Pooh Bah
Do you have what it takes?
What kind of business is right for you?
The corporate rock star
Beer is a wonderful thing
The step-by-step plan
Follow Your Creative Dreams     240
The creative dream versus the corporate reality
This is not my beautiful life
Telecommuting from Elvis Costello concerts
Are you a creative soul trapped in a cubicle?
Finding creative time in a busy corporate life
Having more fun at The Office
Work to live, but don't quit your day job
Taking the leap
Make a Difference     268
The pajama game
Make a difference part-time
Make a difference in a corporate job
Explore teaching
Work for a nonprofit organization
Dancing out of corporate
Make a difference through entrepreneurship
Going Over the Wall
Going Over the Wall     293
The fear factor
What will people think?
Your identity crisis
Making it look easy
Should you hire a career counselor?
The boomerang effect
Your career vision
Have a Nice Escape      309
The Escape Tool Kit     311
Acknowledgments     323
Meet the Corporate Escape Artists     325
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