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Career Quiz: Job, Career or Calling?

How you feel about your work can have huge repercussions in everything you do. Take this quick quiz by Life Coach Sarah Cooper to find out what your attitude to work says about your happiness in life.

How would you describe the way you earn a living? Research by Amy Wrzensniewski, Professor of Management and Organisational Behaviour at New York University, shows that most people view their work either as a job, a career, or a calling.

I’ve drawn inspiration from her questionnaire to offer you a light-hearted version of the test below. Answer the questions and add up your scores to find out which category you belong to – and what that says about your satisfaction with life!

1.    Your Lottery numbers finally come up – you win £20 million! What do you do?
a) Quit my job immediately, check into the Hilton and start spending
b) Keep working – I love what I do
c) Take a break but probably go back to something similar, preferably at a higher level or with a bigger organisation

2.    When you’re working, how often do you check the time?
a) Whenever I get bored or hungry
b) Never – I’m so engrossed in what I do
c) I’ve arranged my desk so the office clock is permanently in my line of vision

3.    What would persuade you to attend a networking event?
a) Nothing, evenings are MINE!
b) The certain knowledge that it would help my prospects…and a couple of vouchers for a free glass of wine
c) Where is it? I’ll be there – I love talking about what I do

4.    Would you encourage your friends or children to enter your line of work?
a) Possibly, if they were interested
b) Definitely, even if they weren’t interested
c) No, I’d probably discourage them

5.    What do you enjoy most about your work?
a) Payday
b) That I’m able to express my passion
c) Knowing I am advancing in my organisation or chosen field

6.    How would you feel if you were doing the same work in 5 years’ time?
a) Great – I never get bored with it
b) A bit disappointed – I’d have hoped for a promotion by then
c) Like I’d just won tickets to watch Olympic croquet

ANSWERS

Add up your points according to the key below

1a) 1 1b) 3 1c) 2
2a) 2  2b) 3  2c) 1
3a) 1 3b) 2  3c) 3
4a) 2 4b) 3 4c) 1
5a) 1 5b) 3 5c) 2
6a) 3 6b) 2 6c) 1

YOUR SCORE

9 or less – JOB
You work to earn enough money to support your life outside of your job: you live for weekends and vacations.  You don’t necessarily dislike what you do, but it doesn’t define you – it’s just a job.

10 to 15 – CAREER
You usually enjoy what you do, accepting that no job is perfect. Often you’re kept motivated by the prospect of a promotion and better pay. You tend to rate how you’re doing by comparing yourself to your colleagues and wider peers.

16 and above – CALLING
You love what you do. It’s not utopia – some days are better than others – but there’s nothing else you would rather be doing. You feel it’s helping in some small way to make the world a better place.

So how did you do?

Congratulations if you made it into the calling category – Wrzensniewski’s research found that people who saw their job as a calling reported the highest life satisfaction. Interestingly, it’s your perception of your work, not its intrinsic nature, which counts. (In a follow-up study, hospital cleaners who viewed their job as a calling talked about the impact of their work – how it allowed the hospital to run more effectively, ultimately benefiting patients).

As someone who makes a living encouraging others to find work they really love, I’m generally an advocate of the vocational or calling approach.  However, I’d qualify this by recognising that different people organise their lives in different ways to make themselves happy. The trick I believe is to listen to what makes sense to you.  If a 9 to 5 job is what works for you, great.  But if you’re a closet calling type in career clothing, perhaps it’s time for a new wardrobe.

If you would like more career advice from Life Coach Sarah Cooper, visit her website at CowsFromMyWindow.com. More short career tests can be found at Jobsite.co.uk

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  • Tim Kyle

    A somewhat restrictive ‘quiz’. Half of the questions do not include categories which many people would choose if they were required to give accurate answers – rather like some of the job application forms I have seen.

  • kuttan

    i am a job seeker

  • natalie tippett

    Im all for these websites, but when i apply for jobs they always come back and sorry your not on the short list.
    Im going to eat bread and water if people dont give me a job, and its very depressing doing nothing.

  • Paul Swainson

    Hi

    The current vacancy market is slim to say the least! It appears there are vacancies everywhere with the exception of Essex? I am subscribed (probaly overly) to many job sites and have noticed that the same role appears over and over again in different descriptions e.g. modified area, salary, title?

    I have a broad based knowledge and experience pool to draw from but i appear to fit into none of the catergories offered by these sites?

    Having had over 12 years experience of the management of many British Standards and awarding Bodies. Indepth knowledge built up over the last 33 years, of the Engineering and Construction industries. I am amazed that i cannot secure a new position, with less travelling (average 4 hours a day)

    I would like to opportunity to discus my current role expectations and experience further?

    I look forward to hearing from you

    Paul Swainson

  • cirsty

    i got 6 :S
    i neeed a job x

  • Lesley Hunter

    16 and above – CALLING
    You love what you do. It’s not utopia – some days are better than others – but there’s nothing else you would rather be doing. You feel it’s helping in some small way to make the world a better place

    Hi all

    I certainly have a calling, but it would be nice after 18 months of no work to actually get a job. I can’t even get an interview, my CV gets pushed to the bottom, I have had my CV rewritten and told I would be an asset to an employer…….I feel going to university was a complete waste of time, how much longer do I have to sign on at the jobcentre and continue getting intervieved and being asked “what am I doing to get a job”

  • Paz

    I need a job

  • Md Abdur Rahman Chowdury

    I need job

  • DB

    The only reason I scored 7 is because I am unable to get the office clock in my line of sight. I detest EVERYTHING about my job, but am unable to return to my preferred occupation (computer programmer) because it is impossible to get commercial experience with new languages, without getting the job first and NO companies want to train people (I would stay with any company I liked until I retired, but this makes no difference)

  • Bobby

    ‘this is a RUBBISH quiz! You can’t even write a program which totals the score and gives you a result automatically??? Sheut website!!

  • youknowitisntmyrealnameneways

    Are you sure you want a job?? It encourages people to be unhealthy and become overweight and lowers self esteem.. I’m gonna have to join the army because I don’t believe many so-called jobs are actually necessary in this world we live… Its just capitalism, which lines the pockets of the greedy, selfish, rich, ugly doughnuts who hide behind mansion gates!!

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