career advice

College Students: 4 Questions to Help You Find Your Niche

College Students: 4 Questions to Help You Find Your Niche

Finding your niche means you’ve found work that gives you purpose, keeps you challenged, and makes you excited to get out of bed in the morning.

Below contributing editor Olivia Smelas’ offers a college student’s perspective on how you can use your hobbies and interests to find your niche and kickstart your career.

How to Step Up and Lead (When No One Else Wants To)

How to Step Up and Lead (When No One Else Wants To)

Rising to a challenge isn’t easy. It requires you to buckle down, do the hard work, and persevere. And at the end of it all? You end up growing exponentially because you stretched the limits of your ability. We all have times in our lives where we encounter something new—sometimes expected, other times blindsiding you. What matters is how you tackle the challenge. This week, we’re looking at how Carmen Vernon became a leader.

How to Learn from a Bad Work Experience

How to Learn from a Bad Work Experience

Rising to a challenge isn’t easy. It requires you to buckle down, do the hard work, and persevere. And at the end of it all? You end up growing exponentially because you stretched the limits of your ability. We all have times in our lives where we encounter something new—sometimes expected, other times blindsiding you. What matters is how you tackle the challenge. This week, we’re looking at how Carmen Vernon persevered through a tough internship. She wanted to quit many times along the way, but she stuck it out and learned a thing or two along the way.

Turning Down a Job Offer: Finding the Best Fit for You Post-College

Turning Down a Job Offer: Finding the Best Fit for You Post-College

Turning down a new job offer seems counterintuitive, right? Wrong!

There are many factors that determine if a job is a good fit, including salary, culture, commute, benefits, coworkers, supervisors, and the actual role itself. Sometimes . . . there are more cons than pros when thinking through these factors. And if that's the case, you need to move on to find a job that will better for your workplace happiness.