If you find yourself using up more sick days, you might wonder if the job is the cause.
5. You Stopped Learning
In the predigital age, it was found that 70 percent of your learning came from on the job training itself. Today that numbers fallen to 10%.
With globalization and a shifting economy, learning is not a commodity to be taken lightly. If you’ve stopped learning new skills in your job, you’re limiting how competitive you can be in the job market.
6. The Only Difference Between Last Year’s Resume and This Year’s is the Time on the Job
Every year you should think of what milestones occurred in the last 12 months that you can add to your resume.
If you are drawing blanks on what you accomplished last year, it might be time to move on.
7. The Only Reward is the Money
As a career coach, the first thing I ask the readers on my site is what their biggest career challenge is. We have hundreds of subscribers and not once have we heard that money was the challenge.
In fact, our most engaged readers often share that they in fact get paid well but feel trapped, stressed out, or just lack the motivation they used to have for their job.
Farnoosh on an earlier article at Lifehack shares the same feelings, “Let’s face it: the money is nice and there is nothing wrong with loving the money. But if you only do it for the money, then you are in the wrong job.”
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