What Do You Know About Professional Golf Careers

January 15th, 2010

Without knowing anything about professional golf careers people might assume the field is dominated with old players, and country club members, however most professionals are neither. In fact, most people that are in this business are nothing more than fans of the sport, with a special duty to help it continue. How did these people come across such an amazing opportunity? It may raise some eyebrows, however it’s not just pro’s taking an early retirement to run the books at their favorite club.

Essentially these careers are a lot like administrative or managerial jobs at any medium sized company. A professional golf career involves managing employees, doing the financial statements of the course, courting members, appeasing other members, and working to keep the inventory of the pro shop together. When the duties are listed out in this fashion, one can quickly realize that professional golf careers are most likely performed by normal people that have a passion for golf.

Those that choose a professional career in golf have either attended golf school or work at a course and are working their way up the ladder. In fact, most golf school graduates become professionals in the field by working at country clubs, and PGA affiliated courses. Paying their dues to work their way up the ranks. Just as in any business, professional golf careers vary in pay, stature, and freedom. Some careers are all about landscaping, while others require a suit and tie. The one constant element is the game of golf.

Most people that choose to work for a golf course as a professional do it out of a passion for meeting people, and for the game itself. Since golf is a game often played with partners, friends or associates, having a people friendly attitude is very important. The game is all about patience and hard work and most people that are golf professionals show those qualities on a daily basis.

Having a passion for this sport is what often leads people to professional golf careers. For some people just being around the sport makes them happy. To work in it, is a total joy for them. Others are fans of the game, historians even, that like to spend time working for a sport that has helped shape their lives. Whatever the reason is, it is often acareer decision made from personal choice.

The most magical of professional golf careers are the ones that people truly appreciate. It is the person that loves to be outside that will truly enjoy a career in turf management. For someone that loves to entertain, a professional golf career in event planning would be the right fit. Whatever it is, one can find it in the golf related line of work.

A Job Search Diary Unemployment

October 15th, 2009

Start a job search diary right now. Even if you have been unemployed for some time, start one anyway because a late start is better than never doing it at all.

Take a plain old exercise book and title it: Job Search Diary. Find a spot to keep it where it will always be close at hand when you need it, probably several times a day.

If you are newly jobless, start out by recording your feelings. Writing out (keep it simple, it’s not the great American novel) what you are thinking, in black and white sentences, helps to sort out your jumbled emotions, clear your mind, and reach a better understanding of your inner self. Jot down your anger, your fears, what you expect, what you secretly dread. Pouring out your soul will release a lot of the inner tension you’re feeling and soothe your nerves.

This record is for you – no one else will ever see it – so you can be brutally honest. If you fear you are a loser who will never amount to anything, write it out. If you think you’re really a good, competent worker but your old boss was a jerk or the company sucked, put it down.

If you have been out of work for a while, make your initial entries a recap of what has been happening in your life since you lost your job. Trace the sequence of events and see if you can remember how you felt at different times. There were probably times when you were overwhelmed and stressed out: record when you felt that way and, if you can recall, what activities you were engaged in when those feelings appeared. There were also probably times when you felt hopeful or elated. Record that too and what events were connected with such emotions.

Use your diary as a place to plan what you want to do. List all activities that you are going to perform that will get you back to work. You might initially plan on updating your resume and reading the classifieds to gauge the state of the labor market. If you are further along in the job search, you might list some networking targets or identify some employers where follow up on earlier contacts might be beneficial. Frequently, throughout the day, record what you did, who you talked to, how you felt.

This is going to become your Special Place where you have a record of your journey from the badlands of unemployment to the green fields of regular work. Visit it often to keep updating your plans, record your smallest successes and failures, and unload your emotional baggage.

When you can’t bear the thought of one more telephone call leading to one more rejection; when you can’t find the energy to get dressed up to visit an agency or cold-call an employer; when you can’t stand the sight of another misleading ad or internet job site; then reach for the comfort of your journal. Read over what you have written and see the changing moods of your long pilgrimage. See if you can identify a pattern. What were you doing when you felt despondent and alone? What were you doing when you felt upbeat and positive about the future? Concentrate on your own specific actions, not merely your reaction to outside events. If you can find a thread relating what you do to how you feel, you have found a valuable key for managing your hunt for work. You now know what to do to feel pretty good and what not to do to avoid a recurrence of despair.

Maintain your diary throughout your job search and it will become an increasingly rich source of information about you and your inner self. It will challenge you to get active and it will comfort you when you just want to curl up into a ball and turn your back on life.

Then close it up and lock it away in a safe place. If you ever find yourself jobless again (and it happens to many of us over and over), take it out. Reread it for the insights you will gain, and the mistakes you’ll be able to avoid, in your next (probably shorter) job search campaign.