About 53 percent of Russians ten years ago made career plans, only 10 percent of those surveyed are on track, and 5 percent are even better. However, 38 percent said they had collapsed expectations, according to a SuperJob study.
Women make plans less often than men (51 and 54 percent, respectively), but their careers are more likely to develop in the right direction. Among doctors and nurses, most of all those whose service is on the planned path (29 and 28 percent, respectively). Among programmers and marketers, one in four said this, and among system administrators, designers and lawyers – 24 percent each.
Economists, purchasing managers, and engineering technicians are more likely to report that things are going worse than expected. The respondents, whose income exceeds 80 thousand rubles, report having career plans much more often than others (62 percent). Of these, about 25 percent say that their career growth is progressing at the planned pace or even faster.
Earlier it became known that the coronavirus pandemic has forced people around the world to work less. The proportion of jobs offering a four-day workweek has tripled in the past few years. There are 62 vacancies with such conditions per 10 thousand applicants.