Please hit "WEBCASTS"

Search form

Musings on the Workplace (07) : Not Impulsive Nor Blind, But Purpose-Driven Job Switching

  • Home
  • /
  • Musings on the Workplace (07) : Not Impulsive Nor Blind, But Purpose-Driven Job Switching
Speaker: Dr. Michelle Liew | Video Editor: Goh Soo Mun
07 Nov 2024

How is a salaried man to bless a corporation to grow and raise his personal worth? And, how can a business operator keep his business to stay firm as a rock amidst the winds and waves while he seeks to provide for the welfare of his staff and contribute to society?

Welcome to our programme series “Musings of the Workplace” and hear Dr Liew as she shares the way to handle difficult situations at the workplace.

These days, it is rare to see workers who stay with the same company for life. Most of us would have switched jobs a few times along the way.

How would you know that you have made the right choice each time you decide to change tracks? How can you be sure that you should leave the current position and start afresh with another employer?

We now invite Dr Liew to share her experiences in the several job-switches she went through and pick up some lessons as we go along.

We hope today’s sharing by Dr Liew has made it clear that job-switching in a blind and impulsive manner is not the way to go. We are to move along a purpose-driven direction, instead.

Let us go through the following questions before we end the session:

1.   Have you switched jobs before? What were your reasons then?

2.   Which of the three examples in Dr Liew’s sharing gave you the biggest jolt? Why?

3.   Compare the reasons and ways between your job-switching with those of Dr Liew. In what ways are they similar and different?

I look forward to your sharing. May we sharpen one another and achieve excellence at the workplace.

Continue to discover insightful reflections on the workplace, inspiring you to navigate challenges and cultivate growth. Get a copy of “Musings of the Workplace” today!

Like0 Dislike0
Please login or register to bookmark this post

Leave A Comment

Plain text

  • No HTML tags allowed.
  • Web page addresses and e-mail addresses turn into links automatically.
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.