14.1 – Maintain and Deliver Career Resources
Purpose & Context
Career Development Professionals (CDPs) collect and identify career resources and deliver services to support career development. CDPs ensure that these resources (virtual or physical) can be easily accessed by clients at their convenience.
Effective Performance
Competent career development professionals must be able to:
- P1. Research information and resource needs, for example by:
- Using a questionnaire
- Categorizing information requests
- Conducting focus groups
- Evaluating labour market needs
- P2. Select resources, considering, for example:
- Alignment with identified needs
- Cost
- Currency of information
- P3. Keep up-to-date resources (virtual or physical) accessible to clients, for example:
- Assessments tools
- Career information, e.g. occupational profiles, labour market information
- Résumé guidance and samples
- Cover letter guidance and samples
- Interview preparation guides and resources e.g. interview simulations, tutorials
- Social media training modules
- Contacts, e.g. employer brochures, industry directories, volunteer recruiters
- P4. Evaluate services:
- Identify key performance indicators:
- Usage statistics, e.g. number of appointments, attendance, assessments, online visits
- Satisfaction data, e.g. user, employer
- Outcomes, e.g. job offer, job acceptance, job maintenance, acceptance to education program
- Develop measurements tools
- Measure outcomes
- Analyze findings
- Recommend improvements
- Implement recommendations
- Identify key performance indicators:
Knowledge & Understanding
Competent career development professionals must know and understand:
- K1. Labour market information, e.g. local, regional, national
- K2. Career resources, e.g. occupational profiles, industry websites, professional associations, training materials to
support job search, job search websites, career related self-assessment tools, educational programs
Contextual Variables
Competent career development professionals must be able to perform this competency in the following range of contexts:
Depending on the volume of information requests, CDPs may require a dedicated database in order to determine growing information needs
Career resources may be virtual or located in a physical space where CDPs provide tailored career services
Glossary & Key References
Terms
Industry-specific terms contained in the standard defined here, where applicable.
Information Sources and Resources for Consideration
Context Rating Scales
Criticality
Q: What is the consequence of a professional being unable to perform this skill according to the standard?
Frequency
Q: How frequent and under what conditions is this skill performed?
Level of Difficulty
Q: Under routine circumstances, how would you rate the level of difficulty in performing this skill?
Time Required to Gain Proficiency
Q: What is the average length of time or number of repeated events that are minimally necessary for an individual to become proficient in performing the skill to the standard?
A competent career development professional requires a minimum of three months experience to acquire the skills necessary to manage career resources.
Autonomy
Practitioners typically perform this competency without supervision, and alone.
Automation
It is somewhat likely that this competency will automate.