What should I say when asked where I see myself in five years?
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Karen James Chopra, LPC, MCC, NCC, has been counseling career clients since 1999 and has helped hundreds of clients change careers, find new jobs and deal more effectively with workplace challenges.
In addition to her private practice, she has worked for two national corporate outplacement firms: Lee Hecht Harrison and Resource Careers. These are the organizations that help people who have experienced a layoff or downsizing to find new jobs, and their programs are usually considered the gold-standard of job search technique.
Ms Chopra is a regular presenter on career issues, having taught career theory at the graduate level, designed and delivered numerous workshops, and served as a regular guest commentator on WMAL’s career radio show “Your Career Life.”
She is a career-changer herself. Before entering the counseling field, she worked for nearly a decade as a trade negotiator for the United States Government, first at the Department of Commerce and then at the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative.
Ms. Chopra holds a number of relevant licenses and certifications: licensed professional counselor (LPC) in the District of Columbia; Master Career Counselor (MCC), a designation of the National Career Development Association (NCDA); and National Certified Counselor (NCC), a designation of the National Board of Certified Counselors (NBCC). She belongs to all of the relevant national and local associations involved in career counseling, including the American Counseling Association (ACA), the National Employment Counselors Association (NECA), the National Career Development Association (NCDA) and the Washington Metropolitan Area Career-Life Planning Network (MAC-LPN).
Her B.A. is from the University of Virginia, and she received a masters of science in foreign service from Georgetown University, and a masters in community counseling from George Washington University.
What should I say when asked where I see myself in five years?
Host: What should I say when asked where I see myself in five years?
Karen James Chopra: Every client I have hates this question, where do you see yourself in five years? The company is asking this question for a couple of reasons. One, they want to know that you do have some type of career plan and so you do need to have some type of answer for this question. The other thing they are looking for is to determine whether the job that you are currently interviewing for matches up with your career plan.
Transcripts
Host: What should I say when asked where I see myself in five years?
Karen James Chopra: Every client I have hates this question, where do you see yourself in five years? The company is asking this question for a couple of reasons. One, they want to know that you do have some type of career plan and so you do need to have some type of answer for this question. The other thing they are looking for is to determine whether the job that you are currently interviewing for matches up with your career plan. If you have a fantasy about winning an Academy Award and you are playing for an accounting position, the company can have some questions about your commitment to this particular job and how long you are going to stay. So what you are looking for in a response to where do you see yourself in five years is an indication that you see yourself in the field probably having advanced and developed some level of expertise, perhaps there is a specific title or accomplishment you wish to have attained and then a little bit of a description of why you think this job is a good stepping stone to that particular career and that's all that they are looking for. As long as it lines with their job, they are likely to be happy with the response.
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