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What’s next for American mid-careers with globalization and the recession?-Part-I

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Between the time I started working on global  outsourcing over six years ago and now – the world has changed drastically with the recession for American mid-careers. Some academics have started questioning if you even need a college degree for the kind of jobs you can hope to get in the US. It’s called  Plan B.

Think about it, the vast majority of mid-skill jobs in manufacturing, software,accounting,non-contact customer service, non-contact market research can either be outsourced to technology or outsourced overseas. For example, this season many more folks used tax software than an accountant/tax preparer  to save a few dollars on the tax preparation fee.

So you are really left  with the high end jobs  like nanotechnology,biotechnology, aircraft engineering and so on.These require long study in science and math starting at elementary school and not very popular among younger people, which a whole other topic.

The other end of jobs are low paying service jobs (slightly better  paid than McDonald’s like retail,hospitality) which really don’t need a college degree.

US organizational acculturation during the industrial and early pre-Internet age  for getting and holding on to these disappearing  “mid-skill” corporate jobs was to conform,stay below the radar to stay employed for life . This is no longer working as no matter how compliant and polite an employee you are – if you are mid-skill  and mid career you could be history. 

Thomas Friedman talked about the “Flat world” and Seth Godin talks about becoming a Linchpin. Here are some thoughts particularly for the mid-career and suddenly mid-skill employee:

In Part-II , I ‘ll explain these points in more detail.

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