Laura Olert
Laura Olert, executive career coach and senior coaching manager for Randstad Enterprise, a global workforce solutions company. RandstadEnterprise.com
Retirement no longer means what it meant to our parents. According to T. Rowe Price, about 20% of retirees are working part- or full-time, and the trend likely will continue. According to some analyses, as many as 82% of Americans expect to continue working past age 65…52% plan to work after retirement…and 42% envision a “phased retirement,” where they roll off their full-time job onto something different.
Finding a perfect post-retirement job is different from job hunts you’ve done in the past. On the positive side, when we reach retirement, most of us are done raising our kids and have more elbow room to find fulfilling work. But on the negative side, ageism is a real thing. Some employers will doubt your long-term commitment, question your comfort with technology or wonder how you will fit in with the younger workers.
Here’s how to approach finding work as a retiree, along with some ideas for fulfilling, or lucrative jobs for senior citizens.
Before you start searching for retirement jobs, ask yourself a few important questions…
Are you looking for work because you can’t survive without the additional income? Will you be working for health-care benefits while you wait to reach Medicare eligibility?
Will your spouse still be working or perhaps trying to live a retirement lifestyle while you remain anchored to a job? Are you taking care of elderly parents? Expected to babysit grandkids?
This can’t be overemphasized, since purpose and passion are enormous motivators. Within the context of the answers you gave to the first two questions, where does your mind go when you let yourself dream about how you’d like to spend your days? For some, this means simplicity after a career of hustle. For others, it means starting their own business. Some seek the kind of fulfillment that comes from work that gives back to the community. Some want to try something they always thought they’d be good at, while others want to continue working in the field they always have, just on different terms.
The best way to circumvent discrimination is to job-hunt within your network. Former colleagues…even from decades ago…view you not as an age, but as a whole person and worker. They’re a great resource for finding work and not just in your old field.
Any list of best jobs for senior citizens is going to be woefully incomplete, because the possibilities are endless and dependent on your own purpose and passion. There are lots of approaches to take as you brainstorm opportunities, but one way to think about it is to break post-retirement career choices down into the following categories…
If finding the right path after retirement feels overwhelming, talk to a retirement coach. They can help you with your self-assessment and guide you toward jobs that are a good fit for you.
You might even decide that you’re done working forever, in which case, good for you! Your retirement should be exactly what you want it to be, whether that means finding fulfillment in your hobbies or your work.