Anonymous wrote:Community college professor. Best job when kids are small.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would consider moving. Lots of lovely small cities without any waits for after care, camp, etc. Do you have family somewhere?
This is also a very good point.
No way would I live in the DMV with kids if I wasn't married (with two healthy incomes)
Anonymous wrote:A lot of my neighborhood friends work from home most or all of the time. Lots of in-house lawyers, feds (some economists and scientists) and financial services back office (like HR, etc.)
Anonymous wrote:Thanks from OP. I value your input and ideas. And I have bookmarked and reviewed all of the websites mentioned by PPs here. Thank you.
I do not have any background in education or HR, so unfortunately a job in teaching or in a school or as a professor or in recruiting is not going to be possible. I feel that I have been too long out of the game to consult, and also would have some imposter syndrome trying to go that route TBH.
I have completed some certificates for marketing-related technology and have tried to stay up on market trends, but I do not have actual experience in newer platforms, just training. I have reached out to prior colleagues and am networking, along with working with recruiters and spending hours a day trawling on career pages.
I am a marketing generalist without a typical "hook" that ports easily to discrete projects (like graphic design, UX, editing, e-commerce), and that is proving to be a negative differentiator for me.
The FT in person angle is difficult. I am on wait lists for aftercare, including the YMCA, JCC, Boys and Girls Club, local tae kwo do studio, etc. in my town and the few surrounding it, along with the four formal programs the school engages with. I'm just way behind with that in a heavily populated area because I had no clue I would be needing these services until recently. My only option would be to be to find a permanent sitter if I must be FT on site. I am not against that but also am not sure how easy it will be to find a reliable person.
Remote work (with 1-2 days hybrid) and 30 or so hours would be ideal. Even if it is lower paying, and I keep financing my medical insurance. I am trying to look at this next year as a building year and just find something that works for now. A year from now if I can get the aftercare set up for the 2024-2025 school year then I would want to find something FT and in person if required to start building up finances.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I could use some career advice, please.
I am coming off a long hiatus from the workforce after being a SAHM. I am now a newly divorced single mom with two elementary aged kids who will be living with me full time. I need to find a job that I can do remote for 30-40 hours per week while my kids are in school that has flexibility in order to take them to school and pick them up in the afternoons (one of my kids requires medical appointments late afternoons twice a week). Hybrid would be hard but I could make it work if it were 1-2 days a week and I could find a dedicated babysitter.
I have 20 years experience in corporate marketing and a Masters degree. I am OK returning to something entry level and low pay to get my feet wet again; I used to be at senior manager level but know I may have to start again at an assistant level. I am also OK doing a career pivot, and have been looking at other options like a virtual secretary, but even that somehow is hard to break into. I prefer a W-2 job to a 1099. I would love benefits (paying OOP for medical for myself now, luckily kids are covered still on their dad's plan) but know I likely will not get them if not FT.
I have been scouring LinkedIn, Indeed, Idealist, SimplyHired, Upwork, SimplrFlex, FlexJobs, and other sites without much success. I have my profile submitted to temp agencies and recruiting firms, and am spending time networking, have a career coach hired, and reworked my resume.
Any suggestions I am not thinking of? The only other option I am sad to admit I am considering is cleaning houses because I can do it when the kids are at school.
Yes! I just negotiated this. 9-3 pm, Director-level role so I could pick up my child. Remote with ocasional travel for team meetings 2-3 times a year.
Negotiating skills are key!
Anonymous wrote:School bus driver