The Ultimate Guide to Career Change at 40 and Beyond
The Ultimate Guide to Career
Change at 40 and Beyond
Career Change at 40 and Beyond
© 2016 Wishingwell Coaching
The Ultimate Guide to Career Change at 40 and Beyond
Career change at 40 and beyond can be scarier than career
change at an earlier stage in your career.
Why?
Because not only do you feel you have more responsibility,
you also probably feel you’re getting close to retirement,
and are “too old” for a change.
The stakes are too high to fail at this point in your life, and
therefore you feel you had really better get it right or you
might not have time to recover.
Yet you wouldn’t be here if you didn’t feel stuck.
You are probably having trouble knowing how to make the
move not because you lack the practical skills like how to
interview for a job, (though you might not have done that in
a while) but you don’t want to leave the stability of your
current situation – even if you don’t like it – for something so
uncertain.
After all, with all of your responsibilities, how practical does
it really feel to jump head first into the unknown with no
idea which direction you want to go?
It seems impossible to figure out. But it really isn’t.
You CAN figure out what you want to do next.
© 2016 Wishingwell Coaching
The Ultimate Guide to Career Change at 40 and Beyond
Not only that, but a career change now can be better than
at any other time in your life too.
Think about this – you have more freedom to do what you
want on your own terms than you have at any other point in
your career.
Why?
Anything you lack in energy will be made up for in skill,
wisdom and experience.
And you’re not that likely to make all the mistakes you’re
afraid you’re going to make, because your decision is going
to be a well thought-out one.
It’s because you’re more mature, have responsibilities and
need to get this right, that you’re going to take your career
change seriously.
You’re going to get the right resources, network with the
right people and get the right skills before you do anything
big.
That’s why you’re here.
So let’s take a look at how this all works.
© 2016 Wishingwell Coaching
The Ultimate Guide to Career Change at 40 and Beyond
Making the Move
A career change at this point in your life into doing what you
love is a transition, not a flying leap.
For people with responsibilities like you and me, taking a
flying leap into something we think we’ll love just isn’t going
to happen.
Sure, you might fantasize about telling your boss that you’re
quitting today, but you can’t do that. (Well, you could, but
you wouldn’t like the consequences much! For some people
who really, really hate their jobs they do up and quit, but
that’s a special circumstance.)
But here’s the good news: You don’t have to take that flying
leap.
So forget what you’ve seen about a dramatic resignation, or
about leaving everything behind to live in a commune in
India.
Doing what you love is a reality for people with
responsibilities just as much as it is for the 20-somethings
without any.
It just looks a little different.
© 2016 Wishingwell Coaching
The Ultimate Guide to Career Change at 40 and Beyond
You’ll have to plan an exit strategy.
You’ll have to know what you’re getting yourself into.
You’ll have to have financial security the entire time.
It can still be done.
Every person’s situation is different, but the three elements
above (exit strategy, knowing what you’re getting into, and
financial security) will be huge factors in the transition.
Here are things to think about with regard to each one.
Let’s go over them in more detail:
Exit strategy
For some people, whatever comes next is something they
can ramp up while they are still working steadily.
For some, their current job may allow them to wind down
while their new job gains momentum.
And for others still they must work, save, plan and strategize
for a while as they work towards making the move more fully
at some future date.
Think about which of these is right for you.
© 2016 Wishingwell Coaching
The Ultimate Guide to Career Change at 40 and Beyond
In any case, you’re going to be working a main job for at
least a little while as you transition.
One very difficult thing to do is to remain focused and
positive at a job you don’t like while you make the move.
It can help to remember that this job is serving a function:
it’s allowing you at least the financial stability to make the
move to something better.
Hold onto that emotionally so that you can survive if your
current work situation has gotten very difficult.
Also, if you need a job for a while as your dream job or
business is in the works, you might consider doing
something else in the interim.
For example, if you’re a qualified sales & marketing rep, but
you hate your company, go find work somewhere else as
you build your business or find another career.
There’s no need to suffer at a particular job any longer than
you have to.
Knowing what you’re getting yourself into
Knowing what you’re getting yourself into means that you’ll
have to (as much as possible without being psychic!) know
what the next situation is likely to hold for you.
© 2016 Wishingwell Coaching
The Ultimate Guide to Career Change at 40 and Beyond
If you’re making a transition and there are things that you
could have or should have predicted that end up being
problems, you’re going to kick yourself.
So start by doing your research and thinking from the end.
Here’s an example I see quite often.
Many people come to me thinking they want to start a
business doing something, usually something like coaching
or being a yoga instructor or some other helping
professional.
But after a little work together, what we discover is that
while they love the coaching/yoga/helping aspect, they
don’t really like the business aspect, nor do they believe
they have the skills to be successful.
They don’t enjoy marketing.
They don’t want to work long hours.
They don’t want to be “on the hook” the way small business
owners are financially.
Once they have figured out what they would have been
getting into, they realize the path they were heading down
was actually not right for them.
© 2016 Wishingwell Coaching
The Ultimate Guide to Career Change at 40 and Beyond
They reconsider, taking the helping skills that they do love
to use and reapplying them in a way that they will find
enriching and not draining.
You have to think about your situation and know what
you’re going to be getting yourself into.
Does it feel right for you?
Financial Security
This one is pretty self-explanatory.
You never want to feel like you don’t know where your next
paycheck is coming from, whether you’re transitioning to a
new job or starting a business.
Many people are tempted to quit jobs they hate so they can
focus full time on starting a business or looking for a new
job.
I would never say you shouldn’t – there is something to be
said for putting it all on the line and not giving yourself an
out – when it has to get done it often finds a way.
But sometimes the financial stress of that situation is too
much. It can squash the creative energy you have, wreak
havoc on your sleep and health, and generally leave you in a
worse place than when you started.
© 2016 Wishingwell Coaching
The Ultimate Guide to Career Change at 40 and Beyond
You’ll have to think long and hard about this decision and
how you operate under pressure, and also what your current
financial situation is like and how bad the stress at work is
for you.
Sometimes making it happen is not just about wanting it
bad enough. There are things outside of our control that
can go wrong, and giving ourselves such a small margin for
success may be too stressful.
Instead, make sure you have the kind of financial security
you need to make the move. This requires taking a good
look at what your financial situation is.
Use Your Experience - Don’t Lose It!
Many of you are probably thinking about moving to a career
in a completely new field, and at this point in your career
you’ve gained skills and expertise that you don’t want to
leave behind.
Luckily for you, you don’t always have to kiss them
goodbye.
There may be a powerful intersection of your skills and your
new field, or there may simply be a way in which you see
your new field from the perspective of someone who
already has earned her stripes.
© 2016 Wishingwell Coaching
The Ultimate Guide to Career Change at 40 and Beyond
What’s the perfect intersection of what you’re trained to do
and what you’d love to do?
Are there any similarities or skills that translate?
Even if the fields seem completely dissimilar, looking for
higher-level skills, like leading large groups, teaching, public
speaking, etc. can still translate and be valuable to an
employer.
No matter what, you’ll be bringing something novel to the
situation. That means you’ll have a chance to see your
situation in a new way, and be the one to bring fresh ideas
and insights to work that might be in dire need of
innovation from someone passionate about making
improvements.
When it’s just you running your own business, you’ll find that
you’ve probably got what it takes, and any gaps that need
filling in terms of skills or experience can be quickly filled –
you’ll figure it out.
You’re much higher up on the food chain now - even if you
decide to make a move to a totally different industry, you
have years of experience in the workforce that will serve you
well no matter what you end up doing.
© 2016 Wishingwell Coaching
The Ultimate Guide to Career Change at 40 and Beyond
Doing Something Meaningful To You
If you’re looking to make a career change now, it might be
because you just don’t like your job or are tired of your
industry.
But it might be because you’re ready at this point in your life
to do something that means more to you than just a
paycheck.
But if you’re like many people, having the desire to do
something more meaningful doesn’t mean you know what
that meaningful something is . . .
So how do you find it?
Ask yourself:
What do you want to do next?
This may sound like a simple question, but many of us
overlook the fact that our desires can drive things like our
careers.
We’re taught that careers and finances are serious business,
and that wants and feelings are to be kept out of it.
© 2016 Wishingwell Coaching
The Ultimate Guide to Career Change at 40 and Beyond
Even if you don’t believe this completely, there’s still
probably a part of you that was taught this. So you resist
doing what you want to do, because you believe it’s
impractical. But it doesn’t have to be by definition.
So start here, thinking about what you want, and then see if
you can figure out how that can get you paid.
I recognize that taking on that one statement – what you
want to do - might take you months or years to fully tackle.
But if there’s one thing that stops you from moving forward
with something you already find meaningful it’s fear.
Whether you’re at the very beginning of doing what you
love – just trying to find your passions and define your
dream – or if you’re on the other end, starting to make it
happen, I’m sure of one thing.
You’re afraid.
But you’re not as afraid of going for it as you think you are,
because there’s an even greater fear than going after your
dream.
And that’s never going after it.
Imagine it.
© 2016 Wishingwell Coaching
The Ultimate Guide to Career Change at 40 and Beyond
When it really is too late, you look back and you think about
what a shame it is that you wasted all your potential, gave
away all your time to things you didn’t care about, and
never saw what might have been . . .
The fears related to going for it are usually fears about
failure or success, or fears about what people will say.
But I challenge you to really think about it.
Which difficulty would you rather come up against?
The pain of regret - which you can’t do anything about - or
the struggles related to making your dream happen?
Thought so.
When you don’t know what you’re looking to do, people will
often encourage you to try to find your passions.
To me, passions are activities that get us fired up.
They are often the tools we use to accomplish our mission.
Our mission, sometimes called our ‘purpose’ or our ‘why’ is
the thing we want to accomplish in our lifetime or be
engaged with during our life.
Our mission is the thing that makes us feel “at home” or
“on purpose” and without it we feel a little lost in life, like
© 2016 Wishingwell Coaching
The Ultimate Guide to Career Change at 40 and Beyond
we’re drifting and like there’s something we should be
doing, but we don’t quite know what it is.
I think people often say they want to find their passion when
what they’re truly seeking is their mission.
Passions without mission can be fun, but they sometimes
lack a deeper meaning.
This is why passions can seem all over the place – we have
too many, we sometimes get bored of them. They can lack
the substance of mission.
Mission can be an overarching life goal that can take on
many different forms during one’s lifetime. For example,
one might be a lifelong teacher, and the form that it takes
on may look different at different points in life.
Finding your mission looks a little different for everyone,
which is why a one size fits all prescription is so difficult to
create.
Just like in therapy, no two client experiences are the same.
But in therapy there is an overarching framework of how
therapy works , which consists of building an alliance with
the client and helping them re-write their negative story into
a more positive one.
The same is true for finding your mission, though the
framework is different. One of the elements for the
© 2016 Wishingwell Coaching
The Ultimate Guide to Career Change at 40 and Beyond
framework is that your whole life up until this point has been
leading you to it.
It can feel very difficult to see until you find it and then it’s
like it was staring you in the face the whole time.
An intense and personal approach to finding your passion
and your mission, like coaching, helps you because it is
much easier for someone to see this from an outside
perspective than it is to spot these patterns from inside your
own life.
Finding Your Passion
You’ve heard over and over that passion is what you should
be looking for in a career.
And I have nothing at all against passion.
In fact, I think when we feel passionate about things we are
able to go that extra mile – we have the burning intrinsic
desire to do something because it’s “fun.”
But when it comes to building a great career, you have to
think about more than just fun.
© 2016 Wishingwell Coaching
The Ultimate Guide to Career Change at 40 and Beyond
You have to think about who you are as a person and what
means something to you – and that’s why this has all been
so hard to figure out.
The reason is that you’ve never been forced to define
yourself.
You don’t really know who you are.
You may disagree with me. After all this time on Earth you
probably think you know.
But I’m not talking about things like whether you enjoy art
or accounting. I’m not even talking about things like your
Myers-Briggs type or how many years of therapy you’ve
been in.
I’m saying you still don’t know what resonates with your
soul.
That’s why I get so many emails asking me “How do I come
up with good business ideas?”
And the truth is, I have no idea.
Because I don’t know what a good idea is for you.
Sure, I can help you discover it, but I can’t just pull it out of
my hat like a floppy-eared rabbit.
© 2016 Wishingwell Coaching
The Ultimate Guide to Career Change at 40 and Beyond
Something that might be dazzlingly fun for me could make
you shake in your boots.
And the thing that would be a dream come true for you
would make me want to pee my pants in fear. Or make me
think about gouging my eyes out because I’m so bored.
Before you can find THE thing, you have to know yourself.
And not just your personality. Your soul, too.
You’ve gotten here, to the point in your life when choosing
what you want to do with yourself is on the horizon, and
now you’re drawing a complete blank.
Or nearly complete.
Hey, I did it too. It’s human nature, I think.
Until you are faced with the question of what would you do
if you could do anything, you don’t really know what you’d
do.
We’re never really taught to think about it.
But now that you’re there, or nearly there, to a place where
you have to decide what you’d do if you could do anything
– maybe because of impending retirement, maybe because
you were smart about your money and can afford to
downshift to a less demanding career, or maybe because
you just hate your job so much you’d rather take a flying
© 2016 Wishingwell Coaching
The Ultimate Guide to Career Change at 40 and Beyond
leap into the unknown than stay another year – you realize
you have only a hazy idea of what’s next for you.
So how do you actually answer the question, what would
you do if you could do anything?
Most people will tell you that you need to find your passion.
I think it’s important, but in truth, I don’t think it’s the right
place to start. Because passion is fickle. It will leave you as
fast as your steamy young Italian lover, and then be back
again the next day, pleading with you and swearing its
undying love. And that just leaves you confused.
Instead, why not try and define yourself?
Passion is about what you love to do, but purpose – who
you are, what matters to you, or what you want to do with
yourself or more narrowly your career – is more about
meaning.
When you think about who you are, what matters, or what
gives you meaning, what comes up for you?
What is your reason for being? Your WHY?
Of course, if the question were easy to answer we wouldn’t
struggle with it for so long. So what’s happening?
© 2016 Wishingwell Coaching
The Ultimate Guide to Career Change at 40 and Beyond
Sometimes we’re just afraid of being seen by others or of
seeing ourselves. There are lots of reasons why we find parts
of ourselves difficult to face.
So we keep those parts buried. Sometimes we’re listening
too closely to others and not closely enough to ourselves.
Perhaps we’re afraid of being called upon to be “brilliant,”
and so instead of stepping into our greatness we delude
ourselves into thinking we have no idea what we’re here to
do.
But to find your purpose, you must do the opposite.
Be brave. See yourself. And when you think you’ve seen all
you believe there is to see, find someone smarter and more
insightful and braver than you who loves you enough to tell
you the things you don’t want to hear about yourself, but
that you have to hear in order to grow into the person
you’re meant to be.
Uncover those parts. Listen to yourself and SEE who you
are. ALL of it. Do that work. Because when it’s done what’s
left is a real understanding of who you are and what you
have to offer.
Embrace your brilliance. Step into your greatness. Feel your
way toward what actually matters to you. Not what feels
“fun”, not even what feels “exciting.”
© 2016 Wishingwell Coaching
The Ultimate Guide to Career Change at 40 and Beyond
But toward what feels “kick-you-in-the-gut,” “this-is-it”
“I-have-to-do-this” experiences that tell you “If I don’t do
this, I don’t know what I’m doing with my life, and I’ll regret
it forever.”
When you get that feeling, you know you’re on the path
toward your purpose.
No matter how much I talk about purpose and meaning, its
prettier younger sister is always going to be passion. It just
gets more attention.
Maybe it’s just me, but I’d say there’s been a movement
lately.
A movement all around how to live a passion based life.
And with any rebellion, there starts to become rules about
how to do it right – rules about how to rebel – which is sort
of silly because isn’t the point of the rebellion to do your
own thing in the first place?
Whether or not you know it, you’ve become aware of a few
rules about the right (and wrong) way to do this passion
based life thing.
And doing it wrong gives you a lot of anxiety. I know that it
does because I get a lot of emails from you all with
questions and concerns about these things.
© 2016 Wishingwell Coaching
The Ultimate Guide to Career Change at 40 and Beyond
I want to break the rules of the passion based life so that
you know you don’t have to do it the way they say you do,
but that you can make up your own rules.
Let’s commence with the rule breaking now:
Passion Rule Number 1
“You need to have just one passion – and if there’s more
than one you have to find a way to combine/condense them
all into one to have a successful career doing what you
love.”
Wrong.
Life’s just too full of interesting things not to be
multi-passionate, if you ask me. And the truth is, you don’t
necessarily have to choose just one thing to be the next
thing you do in your career.
It may be that you are able to easily do more than one thing
you’re passionate about in a single job (for example I get to
coach and write and be creative in the work I do), but if that
doesn’t work out for you, don’t worry.
Life will allow you to do everything you’re passionate about
in time.
Maybe you won’t do everything as a career. Some things
you’ll take up as hobbies, some as aspects of your career,
© 2016 Wishingwell Coaching
The Ultimate Guide to Career Change at 40 and Beyond
and some as major career focuses at different times in your
life.
Also, if there’s one thing that’s constant, it’s change. So if
you’re looking forward to the day when you get to live out
some passionate dream you have, keep working towards
and planning for it. Your career can morph in the direction
you choose to take it.
Don’t fear that your passion has to be singular and static.
Passion is a living and breathing thing.
Passion Rule Number 2
“My passions won’t or can’t make me a lot of money.”
Nope.
This simply isn’t true. Why should it be? Because many of us
are passionate about things that are “artistic” or are in some
way “softer” we automatically equate that with the idea that
we’re going to be doing what we do for love and not for
money.
If this is what you want, there’s no problem with that. But if
you want to find a way to make your passion pay your bills,
there’s every reason to think that it’s possible.
The secret (yes, I’m spilling the beans here) is to structure
your business so that it actually makes you money, and to
© 2016 Wishingwell Coaching
The Ultimate Guide to Career Change at 40 and Beyond
weigh what you give up in doing so in terms of passion (if
anything) against what you gain in terms of income to find
the sweet spot for you.
With some creativity and deep thinking about what is really
right for you, you can structure a business that supports
both your passion and your lifestyle.
Passion Rule Number 3
“To follow my passions, I must live an unconventional,
nomadic or location-independent life.”
Not unless you want to. Geez, this one really irks me. I get a
little frustrated with this one model of passion based living,
which is the “location independent lifestyle.”
Now, maybe you are ready to pick up and leave everything
behind if you just knew that one thing you really, really
wanted to do.
Maybe, if you sat straight up out of bed tomorrow and it hit
you like a thunderbolt, you’d pack your bags as quick as you
could and head for whatever exotic and sweaty location you
were called to, to carry out your mission.
But I’m guessing probably not.
© 2016 Wishingwell Coaching
The Ultimate Guide to Career Change at 40 and Beyond
I’m guessing that there’s more that ties you to wherever you
live than just not being 100% entirely sure of what comes
next for you.
There’s probably family of some sort. Friends. Obligations,
financial and otherwise.
And given all that, it would probably take you a while to
make this transition in the thoughtful and adult manner that
you make transitions and decisions in.
Do you worry that all this level-headedness makes you too
rational? Do you sometimes think you should pack your
bags as fast as possible and be spontaneous?
I think that only really works in the movies. It’s not all it’s
cracked up to be. The real path to fulfillment is not in being
rash, but in being honest – about your values, your needs
and about who you are and how you feel comfortable
moving through your life. Honor all of that.
Don’t think there’s only one model for embracing a
passionate life. You can take on a passionate life one step at
a time from right where you are.
Passion Rule Number 4
“I can’t start a business or get a job with my passions
because I’m not an “expert.””
© 2016 Wishingwell Coaching
The Ultimate Guide to Career Change at 40 and Beyond
Really?
First of all, chances are you’re probably more expert than
you give yourself credit for.
Second, even if you have some learning to do, there’s no
reason you can’t do it. You may decide that you don’t want
to make the investment it would take to become a doctor at
this point in your career – but that doesn’t mean a career in
medicine is out of your reach.
Whatever it is that you yearn to do, you can find a way to do
it and gain the skills and credentials you need to be paid to
do it.
Passion Rule Number 5
“It’s too late.”
This one really is a matter of choice. As mentioned in
passion based rule number 4, you might decide you don’t
want to make certain choices or sacrifices at this point in
your life – and that makes complete sense.
If it’s something you want so bad that you’re just distraught
that it feels “too late,” then you need to do everything in
your power to make it happen because no one wants to live
with that kind of regret.
© 2016 Wishingwell Coaching
The Ultimate Guide to Career Change at 40 and Beyond
But if not, think about it this way – it’s just life narrowing
your choices (thank you, Life!) because the number of
choices really is overwhelming anyway.
Passion Rule Number 6
“I don’t know how to start with a passion-based business or
job.”
Maybe you don’t know how to start now, but what about
after you do a little research?
What if you enlisted some help in the form of family, friends,
or coaching?
What if you put together a business plan or a job search
strategy?
Any big undertaking feels big until we tackle it
systematically. We often need a plan, some help and more
than one tool in our toolkit.
Passion Rule Number 7
“It’s too disruptive to my life/family.”
What’s more disruptive: this move or your regret?
© 2016 Wishingwell Coaching
The Ultimate Guide to Career Change at 40 and Beyond
If making this move were a problem you HAD to solve,
you’d find a way to solve it, right? Well, think of it as a
problem of that magnitude. Because living with the regret,
the never-having-done, the might-haves and the missed
experiences of not solving it are just not acceptable.
Often, the disruptions that happen in lives and families
because of moves like this can be managed and minimized.
In fact, they can also often be seen as fun new adventures,
too! But whatever twists and turns life takes, staying
stagnant because of your family or some other part of your
life doesn’t have to be the final resolution.
Passion Rule Number 8
“I don’t know what I want to do, or what I think I want to do
isn’t really all that original or earth shattering.”
You can figure out what you want to do.
Listen, I know you probably feel like you’ve beaten your
head against the wall about it. But I’ve worked with enough
people who were in exactly that spot who then got clarity to
know that it can be done.
You need to look at what you like or love doing (or are
passionate about, but don’t get too caught up in that), and
let go of fears around it. You have to go down rabbit holes,
© 2016 Wishingwell Coaching
The Ultimate Guide to Career Change at 40 and Beyond
ask questions, make mistakes, back up and try again, but
eventually by feeling your way forward toward what is right
for you, you will find something that probably feels like it’s
been there all along in one form or the other.
Some people worry that they have a business idea but it’s
not completely new. That’s fine. In fact, that’s good because
it shouldn’t be completely new. You don’t want to reinvent
the business model, just improve how you do business so
people want to do business with YOU. Even a small
improvement on an idea can make all the difference – and
sometimes it’s people’s level of passion in the idea that is
that special something.
Maybe no one has told you until now, but you don’t have to
play by the rules. You get to make up your own rules. When
it comes to living a passion-based life, it really is about
doing what works for you.
Making Your Move
I hope that I have shown you that while making a career
move might require planning and personal exploration, it’s
not impossible.
You probably found me through my post “Top 5 Tips for
Career Change at 40,” which says,
© 2016 Wishingwell Coaching
The Ultimate Guide to Career Change at 40 and Beyond
“Your major concern is probably that your relative age and
inexperience in your new career are a double-whammy.
The truth is, only your inexperience really matters, and luckily that’s
the one you can do something about.
Why?
People your same age with experience can find jobs. The higher
-level jobs, the ones that require a great deal of experience, are
going to pay more and be harder to land. And of course you can’t
get years of experience without years. So it follows that people filling
these jobs will be older.
The complete newbies are landing entry-level jobs. To compete
against them is difficult because they’re young and they don’t need
the paycheck you need.
So it makes sense that the jobs you’re going after will need you to
have some experience in your new field to be considered
competitive.”
Going into this move, one big question is “Is anyone going
to hire me?” The answer to that question will depend a
great deal on what you do right now.
Know that to be competitive, you may need to gain some
experience in your new field. You may need to get training.
There may be other things to consider.
That’s why it’s really great that you’re here. It shows that
you’re taking this process seriously and seeking information
about how this process might work.
© 2016 Wishingwell Coaching
The Ultimate Guide to Career Change at 40 and Beyond
You’re also open to the idea that you can learn things that
will improve your chances of success, which, believe it or
not, is a huge indication that you can be successful. You
already believe in your ability to make a difference in your
own outcome.
So let’s embark on this journey together and see what we
can discover about you, about what’s next for you, and
about what you need to do to get there!
You can expect to hear from me regularly, usually every
Monday in your email inbox.
My big, bold promise to you is that I will help you find and
do work you love, so my emails to you are designed to help
you do that.
I LOVE connecting with real people. So if you want to
drop me a note, please do!
You can reach me personally at
Jessica@[Link]
Let me know if you have a question, want to schedule
coaching, if you just got a fabulous idea, want to share a
resource, or if something I sent you made you think.
© 2016 Wishingwell Coaching
The Ultimate Guide to Career Change at 40 and Beyond
I’m here to help you any way I can. So let me know what I
can do for you.
If you like this book, please consider sharing it! Use this link:
[Link] or just click the bird!
With Love -- J
ess
© 2016 Wishingwell Coaching