jobs.ac.uk - Great jobs for bright people
  • Find a Job
  • Find PhDs
  • Career Advice
  • Jobs by Email
  • Recruiters
  • Your Account

  • Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to secondary sidebar
  • Skip to footer

career-advice.jobs.ac.uk

Secondary Sidebar

jobs.ac.uk Career Advice

  • CV and Cover Letter Advice
    • CV Tips
    • Free CV Templates
    • Cover Letters with Examples
    • Personal Profiles
    • CV Resources
  • Jobseeking and Interview Tips
    • Jobseeking Tips
    • Academic Interviews
    • Professional Interviews
    • Jobseeking and Interview Resources
  • Career Development
    • Academic Careers
    • Research Careers
    • Professional Careers
    • Working in Industry
    • Career Development Resources
    • Global Careers
    • Working From Home
  • Women in Higher Education
  • Resources
    • Academic Case Studies
    • Professional Case Studies
    • Interview questions tool
    • Job Profiles
      • Biological Science Jobs
      • Health and Medical Jobs
      • Engineering and Technology Jobs
      • Computer Science Jobs
      • Physical and Environmental Science Jobs
      • Professional Service Jobs
    • Vlogs
  • Webinars
  • Country Profiles
    • Africa
      • Egypt
      • Ghana
      • Kenya
      • Nigeria
      • South
    • Americas
      • Canada
      • United States of America
    • Asia
      • Bahrain
      • Brunei
      • China
      • Hong Kong
      • India
      • Japan
      • Kazakhstan
      • Malaysia
      • Qatar
      • Saudi Arabia
      • Singapore
      • South Korea
      • Turkey
      • United Arab Emirates
      • Vietnam
      • Uzbekistan
    • Europe
      • Belgium
      • Denmark
      • Finland
      • France
      • Germany
      • Ireland
      • Italy
      • Netherlands
      • Norway
      • Russia
      • Spain
      • Sweden
      • Switzerland
      • United Kingdom
    • Oceania
      • Australia
      • New Zealand
  • Studentship Advice
    • PhD
    • Studentship Resources
    • Vlogs
  • Academic Spotlight Interviews
  • Menu
    • CV and Cover Letter Advice
      • CV Tips
      • Free CV Templates
      • Cover Letters with Examples
      • Personal Profiles
      • CV Resources
    • Jobseeking and Interview Tips
      • Jobseeking Tips
      • Academic Interviews
      • Professional Interviews
      • Jobseeking and Interview Resources
    • Career Development
      • Academic Careers
      • Research Careers
      • Professional Careers
      • Working in Industry
      • Career Development Resources
      • Global Careers
    • Women in Higher Education
    • Resources
      • Academic Case Studies
      • Professional Case Studies
      • Interview questions tool
      • Blog
      • Vlogs
    • Webinars
    • Country Profiles
      • Africa
        • Egypt Country Profile
        • Ghana Country Profile
        • Kenya Country Profile
        • Nigeria Country Profile
        • South Africa Country Profile
      • Americas
        • Canada Country Profile
        • United States of America Country Profile
      • Asia
        • Bahrain Country Profile
        • Brunei Country Profile
        • China Country Profile
        • Hong Kong Country Profile
        • India Country Profile
        • Japan Country Profile
        • Kazakhstan Country Profile
        • Malaysia Country Profile
        • Qatar Country Profile
        • Saudi Arabia Country Profile
        • Singapore Country Profile
        • South Korea Country Profile
        • Turkey Country Profile
        • United Arab Emirates Country Profile
      • Europe
        • Belgium Country Profile
        • Work in Denmark – Country Profile
        • Finland Country Profile
        • France Country Profile
        • Germany Country Profile
        • Ireland Country Profile
        • Italy Country Profile
        • Netherlands Country Profile
        • Norway Country Profile
        • Russia Country Profile
        • Spain Country Profile
        • Sweden Country Profile
        • Switzerland Country Profile
        • United Kingdom Country Profile
      • Oceania
        • Australia Country profile
        • New Zealand Country Profile
    • Studentship Advice
      • PhD
      • Studentship Resources
      • Vlogs

From Academia to Private Sector

From Academia to Private Sector

7 things you need to know

There comes a time in the life of a PhD candidate – and even, from time to time, a tenured academic – when it can be worth considering a transition from academic to the private sector. This can be a difficult step, particularly if you have spent years devoting yourself to academic study, but the rewards can be great. The hardest part of it all is often the question of mindset. Here are 7 steps that will help you on your way.

  1. Self-audit

The largely self-directed nature of academic life means that academics often have many skills in such areas as analysis, research, project management, and grant-writing, to name a few. But the immersive and often very specific application of these skills can mean that it is hard to separate them from your subject area. Ask yourself what specific skills would be required to do your job as it stands, were it to be advertised. Remember to include ‘soft’ skills, such as your ability to negotiate with research partners, for instance, to create and work with teams of colleagues on complex research projects, or to provide nuanced and helpful feedback to your students. Now create a spreadsheet listing these skills, how they map onto your various areas of work, and specific examples of how you have used those skills. This will enable you to separate skills from subject-specific expertise and to build a bank of examples of how you have put these skills into practice. Pay particular attention to any budgetary or financial skills you have deployed, and make sure you emphasise these in any application or interview.

  1. Build your networks

When considering a move from academia to the private sector you may benefit from the ‘soft capital’ that comes from having a place in industry networks. Make a list of your desired employer(s) and contact them to see if they have open days or offer consultations to potential employees. If your target sector has a representative industry body, union, association or similar, approach them to see if it is possible to join as an associate or affiliated member. Keep an eye on their meetings and conferences, and see if you can attend as a guest or auditor. Follow or join in the discussion on any relevant social media groups in your industry – this can often be a great way of building informal contacts and getting advice.

  1. Learn the language of your target sector

Building networks in this way will also enable you to get a feel for the specific ‘language’ used by your sector. You need to familiarise yourself not just with any technologically specific terminology that your target industry in the private sector uses, but also to absorb the general ‘discursive environment’ of your desired sector. Read as much as possible about your sector. Don’t ignore in-house or trade publications,  as well as online forums, and social media outlets.

  1. Enhance your communication skills

Academic life can often involve a great deal of communication to well-informed audiences, as well as a great deal of written and oral communication. But communication styles in industry can involve sending messages that are much briefer, targeted, and that deploy conscious communication strategies (examples of these include: leadership, conflict resolution, process-driven, intuitive, visual, non-linear). If these strategies are unfamiliar to you it is worth doing some work on these, and considering how your own existing communication methods might fit into one or more of them. Again, make sure to think of examples of how your communication to date (in teaching, writing, or working with colleagues) might be described in these terms.

  1. Use professional development opportunities

Your university probably offers a range of professional development courses that could help you in your goal to move from academia to the private sector. Now is the time to book yourself on as many of these as possible. Keep a record of the courses you attend, and be sure to refer to them in your CV: this will also signal to potential employers that you are a self-starter who takes responsibility for your own professional development.

  1. Take advice from the wise

Don’t overlook those who have already made the leap. Investigate the key players in your field, and see if any of them had an academic background or unusual career path. If someone has had a career background that looks similar to yours, you can always try to get in touch to ask them for advice.

  1. Look back from the future

Even having done all this it can be daunting to make the leap, and at times, can even seem impossible. A good trick to have up your sleeve at this point is to imagine yourself in five years’ time, holding down your desired job in your target sector. Now think of three specific examples of what you will have achieved at this point, and then ask yourself what small step you can take today that will move you towards that goal.

What did you think of our article? - please rate

0 / 5. 0


Share this article

Carol Carey

Carol Carey has worked as Lecturer and Senior Lecturer at a number of UK universities, including Manchester, Sheffield, and Exeter, for a total of eighteen years. She blogs on a number of topics in UK HE, including careers advice for academics, research, modern languages, and changing careers.

Reader Interactions

You may also like:

Accessing your careers service as a postgrad

Sustainability in the lab

Exploring the Dynamic World of Human Resources

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

17 + ten =

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Primary Sidebar

Follow us

Elizabeth Berry

Latest Jobs

  • PhD Studentship - Lithium Isotope Separation - A Theoretical Approach for Material Design

    Chemical Engineering, The University of Manchester

    Location: Manchester

    Salary: £19,237 - please see advert


  • PhD Studentship - Crosslinking Heterogeneity and its Relationship to Microplastics Release

    Chemical Engineering, The University of Manchester

    Location: Manchester

    Salary: £19,237 - please see advert


  • Research Associate in Leicester (x2 posts)

    Criminology, Sociology and Social Policy, University of Leicester

    Location: Leicester

    Salary: £39,355 Grade 7


  • PGR Coordinators (x2 posts)

    Student and Academic Services / Postgraduate Research Team, University of East Anglia

    Location: Norwich

    Salary: £26,338 pro rata where applicable


  • Security Systems Administrator

    Estates and Facilities, De Montfort University

    Location: Leicester

    Salary: £24,344 - £27,644 Grade C


  • PhD Studentship: Technologies for decarbonisation of industrial cooking of food while maintaining quality characteristics

    Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering - Centre for Sustainable Energy Use in Food Chains., Brunel University London

    Location: London

    Salary: £21,237 (inclusive of London Weighting)


Footer

jobs.ac.uk - Great jobs for bright people
  • Find a Job
  • Find PhDs
  • Career Advice
  • Jobs by Email
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Terms of use
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Policy
  • Accessibility Statement

Copyright © jobs.ac.uk 1998 - 2024

  • Find a Job
  • Find PhDs
  • Careers Advice
  • Jobs by Email
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Terms of use
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Policy
  • Accessibility
jobs.ac.uk - Great jobs for bright people

Copyright © jobs.ac.uk 1998 - 2022