Metadata
Title
Exploring Careers
Category
undergraduate
UUID
458a01e7fcad425a8e40f7c9a89a8a34
Source URL
https://www.grad.illinois.edu/professional-development/exploring-careers
Parent URL
https://www.grad.illinois.edu/admissions/application-instructions
Crawl Time
2026-03-16T06:28:13+00:00
Rendered Raw Markdown

Exploring Careers

Source: https://www.grad.illinois.edu/professional-development/exploring-careers Parent: https://www.grad.illinois.edu/admissions/application-instructions

Graduate College Professional Development Exploring Careers

Exploring Careers

Whether you have a specific career in mind or are exploring your options, these tools can help you achieve your career goals.

Self-Assessment

The first step to any successful job search—whether academic or nonacademic—is careful self-reflection and assessment of values, interests, and skills. By discovering who you are and what you want, you are better able to focus your career exploration and narrow your job search options.

Here are a few additional benefits of a self-assessment:

Do you want to know more about some of the careers people with advanced degrees pursue? Check out our page of alumni profiles.

Informational Interviews

Once you have some career options in mind, get in-depth knowledge of the field by talking to people in this career. These informational interviews are the best way to research career options.

There are many benefits of informational interviews:

Are you interested in becoming more prepared for your career? Read about ways to gain experience while still in school.

Meet with a Career Adviser

Next to informational interviewing, the best resource for self-assessment and career exploration is a career adviser. Talking about your interests, values, and skills with someone else can be very valuable.

General Career Exploration Resources

ImaginePhD

A career exploration and planning tool designed with humanities and social science students in mind but open to all.

myIDP

An individual development plan and career assessment tool designed for scientists.

Professional associations and trade journals

Trade journals and professional organizations can be powerful resources for career exploration. They can provide information about career paths and are a starting point for networking.