Dream jobs
Plan:
1. Dream Jobs With Salary Info
2. Dream Jobs That Hardly Seem Like Real Jobs
3. Dream Jobs: Career Success Stories
References
hen it felt like the world was our oyster during childhood, many of us daydreamed about our professional lives as adults. The good news is that lots of childhood dream jobs are totally achievable if you have the qualifications and know where to look.
To show you how possible following your dreams can be, FlexJobs has compiled a list of common childhood dream jobs that are also realistic real-life occupations. With thousands of remote and flexible jobs posted in our database, you’re bound to find a position that’s similar to the dream careers of your youth.
If you’ve been on a path toward making your childhood career dreams come true, check out the dream job list below that represents just a few of the positions kids aspire to become.
Note:
FlexJobs is a subscription service for job seekers that features flexible and remote jobs. With an A+ rating from the Better Business Bureau, the monthly subscription costs allow us to fully vet and verify all of the jobs on our site—ensuring that customers have a safe and positive job searching experience to find remote, work from home, and flexible jobs.
21 Common Childhood Dream Jobs
(Click on a job title to see a full list of open positions.)
Actor
Archaeologist
Artist
Athlete
Chef
Dancer
Detective/Investigator
Doctor
Environmentalist
Firefighter
Interior Designer
Lawyer
Model
Musician
Nurse
Photographer
Pilot
Scientist
Teacher
Veterinarian
Writer
Finding Your Childhood Dream Job
If any of the childhood dream jobs above (or others not shown here) are on your job search list, take heart and keep pushing toward your dreams. Here are a few job search tips that may help.
Get Additional Training and Education
An informal career assessment may show that you need more training to achieve your childhood career dreams. Scope out the educational landscape to see what kinds of classes or certifications you should be targeting to land the job of your dreams.
Volunteer
Look for volunteer opportunities to beef up your skills and resume, especially if your background is a little short on experience or credentials in your targeted dream field.
Change Careers
If you’ve been on a career track that’s taken you far afield of the kind of work you dreamed about as a child, that could mean it’s a good time to consider a career change to get things moving in the right direction.
Start Small
Chasing your childhood dream career doesn’t have to mean diving in headfirst to a new, full-time job, though. You can try out different fields and industries by taking on freelance gigs or part-time work that lets you dip your toes into the dream jobs pool before making a huge commitment.
Target What Makes You Happy
Don’t shortchange yourself on finding career happiness—in other words, do work that brings you career satisfaction and a sense of accomplishment and self-worth.
Explore Remote Opportunities
To truly broaden your job search horizons, look for career opportunities that don’t limit you to a specific geographic location. By searching for jobs with companies all over the world, you can find a wealth of potential employers that can get you closer to landing your childhood dream job.
Ready to Start Searching for Your Dream Job?
Many adults leave their childhood aspirations for their dream careers behind when they enter the work world, but it doesn’t have to be that way! By getting creative with your job search and pursuing any must-have skills for your field, you can follow your dreams straight to a long-term career.
FlexJobs members can search for their dream jobs in more than 50 career categories. Take the tour and learn how a FlexJobs membership can help you achieve your career dreams!
Engineering, marketing, business development—these are pretty standard roles, but if none of them sound particularly exciting to you, take a look at research done by Savoo to see what other super cool occupations exist out there.
From ice cream taster and food stylist to crossword puzzle writer and blimp pilot, here are a bunch of awesome dream jobs (and their respective salaries) you probably had no idea existed.
Do you remember what career you dreamed of having when you were a kid? If you wanted to be a superhero or a wizard, you may have quickly realized that those jobs don’t actually exist.
But there are some more achievable roles that come up again and again if you ask kids "What do you want to be when you grow up?" Very often, the jobs kids mention offer thrills, action, fame, or the chance to help people.
Whether or not children realize it, many of these jobs vary drastically in terms of experience needed, education required, and earnings potential.
Here's a look at some of the characteristics of roles that kids are often inclined to mention as dream jobs. Next time a kid in your life mentions one of these jobs as a possible career, you can share some details on what's involved.
What happens when you land your dream job but it turns out to be anything but?
Friends, career consultants and the media inundate us with a constant barrage of advice telling us to follow our dreams, find our bliss or pursue our passions in our professional lives. Yet this kind of advice is not always easily followed.
Even when it’s heeded, the advice can come with downsides, especially when it turns out that those aforementioned passions involve jobs with routine, day-to-day tasks that people are less than passionate about. In short, work is often hard work.
People land jobs in data science and artificial intelligence, for example, expecting to create brilliant algorithms that will solve big problems. But they often end up performing menial data collection and cleaning tasks. The excitement of working for a startup loses its lustre with difficult and boring work often outside an employee’s primary areas of interest.
And not everyone promoted to the lauded ranks of management is thrilled to be there performing management tasks, or even see the job as a step up.
People romanticize working in the media, fashion, film, fine and performing arts and other cultural industries, but the work often ends up being more drudgery than glamour. Any job, especially an entry-level position, has elements of drudgery.
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