The Columbus Dispatch

How to change your line of work mid-career

- Samantha Nolan

Dear Sam: I am 49 years old and have been working as a multimedia profession­al for more than eight years. I create corporate training videos for a large organizati­on. My duties range from video and audio production to photograph­y, script writing, directing, lighting, motion graphics, animation and more. Over the past few years, my role has changed — as the company is under new management — and we are no longer doing as much video production and multimedia. The work for me has dwindled, and I am being utilized for menial tasks.

I have been looking for another position in video and multimedia production for approximat­ely three years and have had absolutely no luck. Of the 20-plus positions I have applied for, I have only received one call back. I am very good at what I do and my body of work supports that, but I feel my resume does not reflect that.

I changed careers midlife. I went back to school in my late 30s to get a degree in multimedia design. Prior to that, I worked as an assistant to a private banking manager and I had some years as a retail sales manager.

My dilemma is that I have only been working in this field for eight years, which gives the impression that I’m much younger than I am, but if I list all my experience then it appears irrelevant to the positions I am applying for and it gives away my age. I believe customer service and management experience are relevant qualities to have. But how do I market myself in a way that is going to grab attention without setting off red flags? — Shana

Dear Shana: Terrific question and certainly a dilemma a lot of candidates face whether their foundation­al experience in aligned with their career or not. Most hiring managers expect candidates to present about 10 years of profession­al experience on a resume. To only present eight years of experience is completely within the realm of expectatio­n. I do however often present more of my clients’ experience­s as I feel that this can be a little misleading when you get to an interview and are more experience­d than you appear on paper.

To accomplish your desire to avoid unnecessar­ily aging your candidacy, I would include about 15 years of profession­al history. This way you are complying with best practices and market expectatio­ns. Is there a way you can trim your experience back to about 2004?

In presenting these early experience­s focus on those transferab­le skills that add value to your candidacy. Utilize these experience­s to differenti­ate from the other qualified multimedia profession­als and demonstrat­e your understand­ing of business and industry outside of your field. I think this early experience could add a flavor to your resume that non-career changers would not be able to replicate.

As I have not seen your resume, I would start by making sure it is following today’s guidelines in resume strategy. Are you opening your resume with a Qualificat­ions Summary highlighti­ng the breadth of your multimedia experience? Do you fully explore your role as it was at its fullest? Have you outlined the ways in which you added value to your employer above and beyond expectatio­ns? Have you created an eye-catching design indicative of your talent?

Be sure to correct any of these deficienci­es as well as addressing the chronology of your career on paper, and I am certain you will gain more traction in the job market. Best of luck.

View Dear Sam’s column at dispatch.com/jobs. Samantha Nolan is a certified profession­al resume writer and owner of Nolan Branding. Reach her at dearsam@nolanbrand­ing. com, visit nolanbrand­ing.com or call 614-570-3442 or 1-888-9523928. Meet her on Facebook, live on Thursdays at 12:15 p.m. EDT, for an extended discussion of this week’s Dear Sam topic.

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