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Re: Career Counselor for recent college grad
As my son was finishing college, he, too was uncertain about his
direction. We sent him to see Toni Littlestone, a career
counselor/coach in Albany, near Solano Avenue. My son found her to be
warm, supportive, and extremely helpful. She helped him understand
himself, what he might be good at, and the world of work. He now has a
career direction that he loves. Toni has a college-age son herself and
seems very comfortable and at ease with this age and stage of life. I
also have a friend whose daughter was floundering after college and
met with Toni for a few months. Toni helped her define a direction,
and also helped her a lot with her resume and interview practice.
She's now in a good job and has a career path. My friend told me that
her daughter felt very happy with the help she received, and that she
herself was relieved to have another person who could advise and guide
her daughter rather than trying to do it herself. Toni's website is
tonilittlestone.com, and her phone is 510.528.2221.
Albany Mom
Re: Mid-life career coach needed
Toni Littlestone has been recommended here many times for
career counseling/coaching, but I have to chime in and say
that she really is wonderful. I'm in midlife myself, and,
based on my experience with her, I think she'd be very helpful
in the situation your husband is facing. She has tremendous
sensitivity to midlife concerns, but she also understands the
realities of the job market--that it can be challenging to
compete with much younger folks. I think she'd be able to
intuit who your husband is and how he can present himself
effectively, without losing his authenticity or integrity.
Also, she's very knowledgeable about the intricacies of job
searches in general. I'm a fan! She's in Albany--528-2221 or
workvision@aol.com.
Re: Career Coach for Biotech
I work in biotechnology and have been in the field for ten years.
Over this entire time, I have worked on and off with Toni
Littlestone, career coach in Albany, about all my job changes,
office politics, interviews, resume tune-ups, dissatisfactions,
promotions--really, everything. Although she is not, of course,
from a biotech background, she has had many clients in the field
and has a good feel for it. She has mentioned clients in
regulatory, safety, science, patent attorneys, HR, clinical
trials, marketing, PR/Communications, and other areas that I'm
not recalling right now. Also, a friend of mine also in biotech
has worked with Toni Littlestone also and has greatly improved
his career path through this work. She's good with strategic
career management, in my estimation, covering both the practical
issues and the ''inner'' or self-management side of the career
equation.
doing well in my field, with help
Re: Looking for a life coach
I would like to respond to your request for a life coach. I
originally went to see Toni Littlestone, a career counselor in
Albany, several years ago for a career question. I have ended up
working with her on and off for several years about all my life
coaching questions, too (like overall life goals, parenting,
building friendships, longing for a spiritual community, career
balance with my husband, self-image, and so on), and have found it
to be a tremendous relief to find someone who can help me with
just about every area of my life. I think of her as my life coach,
and have found the sessions as helpful as talking with my
therapist (even more, about certain things that are not from my
long-ago past and childhood issues), my friends, my husband, or
anyone else, although I love talking with those people, too. I
find that Toni has a warm manner that strikes a balance between
practical and an inner-self focus. It's like having a very good
friend who is wise and caring and only
needs to focus on me and help me with attention, listening, and
guidance. She has helped me listen to what is right for me. We
explore, set goals, laugh together, follow up, and figure out what
has gone right and wrong. I really feel that I have a champion in
my corner.
good wishes to you
Re: Looking for a crackerjack, gifted career counselor
I imagine that you will get several recommendations, and that's
great, because personal chemistry and fit with any type of
counselor is so important. Over the past few years, I and several
of my friends have had excellent experiences with local Albany
career counselor Toni Littlestone (510-528-2221), who helped each
of us with very different questions. I have needed help with both
career transition and also becoming a better manager at my job,
and also with a difficult boss. I've really grown a lot in my
career happiness and level of skill at managing a satisfying
career. One of my friends was helped extensively with interview
practice and landed a great job at a much higher salary than he
expected, and another friend was helped by Toni to become a
consultant in his field after years of working full time (he's
doing really well and is much happier). Yet another friend
started a business and works with Toni regularly to grow her
business and manage her schedule, balancing it with her family
life. One more example--one of my friends got help with her
transition and is currently still working with Toni to become
adept at understanding her work environment after changing to a
field that has very different expectations (she was in teaching
and is now in business, and was terrified at the beginning). Each
of us wanted something different, and has successfully done the
kind of work on our careers that we needed. For my career
transition, she didn't tell me what to do, but really helped me
figure out the right choice and hung in there with me while I
made sure it was right. I would have dropped the ball without her
encouragement. I liked Toni's warmth, insight, and ability to
balance her insights and ideas with drawing out my own innate
knowledge and wisdom. The work gave me longer term skills, both
for career and life, than just what I needed in the moment. My
friends and I often refer to something we learned in the career
counseling process with Toni, and we pass on our tips to
co-workers all the time, too.
career maven
Re: Career counselor who can recommend specific job types
I read your message about what you (or your husband) want in a
career counselor, and that is what I used to want, also. I went
to a lot of career counselors for one or two sessions, and found
that is very rare. Because career counselors work with people in
so many fields, they don't really have the ability to give such
specific recommendations about exactly what each person could do
with their skills in exactly which new jobs, unless they happened
to work a lot with your current/old field in particular, perhaps
in a former career of their own. I ended up doing the networking
and research myself, and learning what I needed to know
firsthand. Ironically, after all those career counselors I met
with, I did end up working with Toni Littlestone, who acted in my
case not as a ''life coach'' or ''therapist'' type of counselor but
as a good, solid guide who helped me keep on track and keep
researching my options. By the time I met with Toni, I had seen
so many others that I was more willing to buckle down and do the
work, to take more proactive responsibility myself and not wait
for someone with answers to do it for me. Although in the
beginning I wanted someone who could magically save me the
footwork, I found in the end that I became more knowledgable and
powerful by doing the exploration and networking and discovery
myself, with guidance, help, and lots of feedback and reality
checking along the way. I got my new job in a new field because
of so much networking. In the beginning, I wasn't that good at
meeting people and presenting myself, but I got much, much more
confident, from roleplaying in sessions and then getting out
there and doing it. It's not that easy to go into a new field,
especially by ''resume alone.'' When people met me, they could
see/hear that I was capable and had good skills and ideas. By the
way, some of the earlier counselors I met with offered me
concrete ideas of what I could do, but they always turned out not
to really fit what I wanted or what employers would hire me for.
Once again, I really had to get out there and figure it out by
meeting people (lots of them) and finding out for myself.
successful career changer
Re: Career counselor who can recommend specific job types
My wife asked me to post because of possible similarities that
might help. I was the top educational administrator of a small
business college, and I wanted to go into something else that
would use my abilities. I went to a career consultant in San
Francisco, a man who charged $200 an hour and promised clear
direction and even leads (which turned out not to be the case at
all). After spending over $2000, his idea for me was to go into
the marketing field in a large corporation. He tried to make my
resume look like that, but it just wasn't believable. I also
wasn't that interested in marketing as a field, but I thought
that if I was supposed to have some of those skills, why didn't I
use them for myself. I talked with a neighbor and got connected
up to try a stint in the recruiting field. It was good
experience, but I ended up not liking it much as a real career
path.
Then, after talking to as many people as I could, I decided on local government administration. I did some networking on my own and started landing interviews. At first, I did not do well in interviews. My wife had been getting ongoing very helpful coaching on politics at work from Toni Littlestone, so I decided to go in for interview coaching. It really worked. I found that I didn't have a good sense of how I was coming across, and had a hard time not sounding like a college administrator, but with role playing, which felt awkward at first but got easier, I really improved my presentation and could translate my educator's perspective to the government.
Toni encouraged me to do more research about the issues facing the government entities in which I was interviewing, and had several clients who worked in the government whom she connected me up with for background. After a persistent search that took a while, I landed a great job with smart colleagues, a good salary, great benefits, and decent hours.
The other area I considered seriously was administration in a much larger college, which I also think I would have liked, but government is fascinating. I thought originally I wanted to go into the corporate world, but after talking with more people, I found that it did not match my personal values.
I have to say that at the start of my transition, I had the illusion that I could get someone to do much of the heavy lifting for me, which is why I was willing to spend $200 an hour. When I woke up and got into gear, my skills as the head of a small college made me able to be the head of my own career search, and to know when I was floundering in the interview process and get targeted help.
Toni was also great at helping with the salary negotiation part of the interviewing process. I ended up getting $20,000 more than the initial offer (which was a big improvement on my former salary). I've been in my job for three years now, have gotten a promotion (also with help from Toni), and am happier than ever career in gear
Re: Career Counselor for medical career
I am in a medical career
and have used a career counselor over quite a few years to help me
navigate. I am trained and have worked as a nurse practitioner, have
worked in research nursing, and now have worked in very interesting
biotechnology jobs that use my medical background for several years (I
did clinical trials coordination, and now work in regulatory affairs, a
challenging and fascinating area to me). My career counselor, Toni
Littlestone, does not specialize in health care careers, but has been
incredibly helpful in thinking through options, strategizing my next
moves, interview practice, and dealing with all the workplace politics in
the biotech field. I should say that even though it's not her specialty, she
has worked with many, many people in health care, as well as lots of
other careers. Her contact info is 510-528-2221 or workvision@aol.com
happy with job
Re: SAHM going back to work
I recommend Toni Littlestone, who works out of her home office.
Her email address is WorkVision at aol.com. She is very attuned to
the individuality of each client, is non-judgmental (and hence
encourages real candor), and is knowledgeable about career
options of all types. She will NOT, however, ''tell you what
you should do.''
Re: SAHM going back to work
I would wholeheartedly recommend Toni Littlestone 528-2221 as a
wonderful and understanding person and a very effective career
counselor. In the space of months she took me from
cluelessness to career possibilities and i too had all the
personality tests which had been completely unhelpful. She
helped me REALLY understand myself, my skills and my needs. I
have recommended her and others have been very happy and made
career switches as well. I cannot recommend her highly
enough. She is very talented at what she does!
Re: Husband considering a job change
My husband recently met with Toni Littlestone, a career counselor and
she was great. Her phone number is 510.528.2221. He just took a job
that he feels he successfully negotiated salary for, and knows that he
made the right choice for himself and our family at this time. What a
relief it was that have an experienced person to guide him (us). Good
luck!
Jennifer
I am seeing a fantastic career counselor. Her name is Toni Littlestone (510-528-2221). She is both an amazing listener and really good at helping you unearth a career that is both something that feels fulfilling and fits with your skill set. I can't say enough about how much she has chagned and is changing my life. I think working with her has been one of the best and most helpful things I have ever done for my career and I wish I had done it about 10 years earlier!! Definitely give her a call! She also has a sliding scale to make it easier to afford. --Looking forward to a better career
Re: Need help finding something permanent
Both my husband and I (and another close friend) have used Toni
Littlestone in Albany. I am sure her name is in the phone book.
She is really great. Very upbeat, lots of good ideas.
kathryn
Re: Politically Progressive Job Counselor
I strongly recommend Toni Littlestone in Albany. She is a
single mom who has lots of clients working for social change
organizations. Her number is: 528-2221. If you would like to
talk with me about Toni or my own stuggle with similar issues,
email me. Good luck!
Deborah
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