Meet the Other Phone. Protection built in.

Meet the Other Phone.
Protection built in.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

Work

Chat with other users about all things related to working life on our Work forum.

What can I retrain in at 50 that will allow me to wfh/hybrid and continue into retirement?

45 replies

DorsetandBeyond · 02/12/2023 18:00

I need ideas for a new career that will see me through the next 20 years. Happy to retrain, but have little in the way of funds for retraining.

I've recently gone through a gruelling and intensive experience of retraining and successfully finding a job in a tech field (totally different to my original line of work) but I feel I'm just hanging on by the skin of my teeth, it doesn't play to my skills, and even though I've been in the role 6 months now I don't feel the fit is getting better - if anything it's highlighting to me how it's not right for me.
The job I'm doing is basically administrative, and I'm going through a later-life process of diagnosis for possible ADHD and autism. My executive functioning skills are pretty poor - I feel a disorganised mess and can't concentrate most of the time (menopause may not be helping). Jobs I've had in the past have had a very minimal administrative element, and I'm realising that this suited me.

I trained in a creative field (Illustration degree) and worked in a very niche creative-adjacent set of roles in London until our family needed to relocate north for my DH's work. My original line of work doesn't exist up here, so going back to that isn't an option (and it was poorly paid anyway).

I have school-age children (one still at primary school, so needs walking/picking up to/from school) and a DH who works long and unpredictable hours in a role that is a "calling", with sometimes emergencies, often evenings and always weekend work to deal with. So these need factoring in with any jobs. I mask well but feel immensely socially awkward and find office roles very stressful. Working from home or predominantly solo working suits me better, but I appreciate may not be possible to find. (My current role is wfh, which is one of the big advantages for me).

I want to find something that feels like a better fit for who I am and what I can do. I feel like I'm shoehorning myself into something I don't have an aptitude for. But I'm starting to doubt what I do have an aptitude for. I did so well at school, A's and top of the year in everything except maths. I seem to have lost all my ability and confidence. And I'm doubtful what I can go into at this stage in life - I feel like my current tech role isn't going to work so well at the age of 60 or 65, I'm worried I won't be able to keep up with the pace of change. But what jobs will suit a 60 or 65 year old? Modern jobs don't seem to be geared for older people. I'm not going to be in a financial position to be able to retire at retirement age - I'll have to carry on, probably more like until 70. It would be good to find something that I can "wind down with" - do part-time or on a consultancy basis later on perhaps.

Any ideas anyone? Things that aren't biased against older people and can be retrained-in without years and years of study and a second degree?

OP posts:
Aria20 · 02/12/2023 20:39

@bloodyfreezinghere what kind of jobs/job titles do you search for quantitative social research - any specific companies/industries. Social research interests me and I did very well with data and statistical analysis in my degree. Couldn't find a flexible wfh role though!

Nonamesleft1 · 02/12/2023 21:18

anon2022anon · 02/12/2023 20:01

@Nonamesleft1 that's really interesting. Can I ask what your skill set is that works particularly well for the police?

Mine is maths and stats. I have an aptitude for puzzle solving. I had been working in academia.

the person I spoke to said police now is a lot about stats, crime patterns, data analysis etc. I particularly enjoyed putting together case files for detectives to work from. Putting together a clues and finding answers is very satisfying!

if you have a tech background there are obviously a lot of jobs as it’s an increasing area so a lot of recruitment for people with techy minds. I saw a job recently for drawing/computer modelling crime scenes which I thought looked
really interesting.

LarkspurLane · 03/12/2023 09:42

KnitFastDieWarm · 02/12/2023 18:16

@LarkspurLane Until a year or so ago I’d have agreed, as editing and proofreading is my field and I‘m a fellow ND WFHer. But AI is trouncing the industry - the attitude of many clients seems to be ‘why pay for an edit when you can use ChatGPT to find errors and rephrase things for you?’ I’m looking at exit strategies so following this thread with interest!

My editing role is quite technical so AI hasn't taken that over yet. I can imagine fiction editing will be destroyed though and I wouldn't be recommending the career to a 20 year old.
Out of interest, what kinds of clients are you seeing using AI?

Startingagainandagain · 03/12/2023 10:24

Civil Service? usually quite a few vacancies and they seem to offer flexible working.

Like you I am in my 50s, autism spectrum and looking for a new career. Currently doing marketing for a charity and I really hate it now. Mainly because I found they misrepresented the job and are trying to go back on WFH arrangements (the one reason I took this job)...

I get bored with jobs really easily as a rule within a year or two and would love to find somewhere I can finally enjoy a bit more and that can get me to retirement.

RethinkingLife · 03/12/2023 14:29

It would depend on your local conditions and what you enjoy doing but you might think about training as a Social Prescribing Link Worker (attached to primary care networks). After a period as that (can be quite brief) you can qualify as a supervisor and then look at the portfolio work that involves working as an assessor or maybe doing some research.

Career structure here.

https://www.nalw.org.uk/portfolio-career/

https://socialprescribingqualification.org.uk/

Home - Social Prescribing Qualification

https://socialprescribingqualification.org.uk

tescocreditcard · 04/12/2023 12:22

SwishSwashSwooshSwersh · 02/12/2023 18:19

waitrose delivery driver. Minimal contact. Lots of line working

Yeah
That's not a WFH job is it? That's a working outside the home job.

AutisticRose · 18/04/2024 07:12

Hi there. I got my autism diagnosis aged 58. Not knowing that I was autistic had led to several burnouts at work and disrupted my career. Since my diagnosis I’ve combined part time library work with research so I work from home part of the week. The work that I do now plays to my strengths. I’m so much happier. Any kind of work could be suitable. The crucial thing in my experience is an employer who understands neurodivergence, healthy working relationships with colleagues, an accessible environment and self-care (having reasonable expectations of myself). Do hope all goes well with your assessments. Simply finding out about autism and/or ADHD can make a huge difference.
move of the research studies I am working on is about autistic people’s experiences of menopause (our website is autisticmenopause dot com) I have also just completed research on autistic people’s experiences of retiring (if you Google Jade Davies Retirement is one hell of a change OSF you should be able to find a free version not behind a paywall. Wishing you all the best. There are some supportive communities of neurodivergent people online - FB and Twitter.

Hedgedbackwards · 18/04/2024 07:17

AutisticRose · 18/04/2024 07:12

Hi there. I got my autism diagnosis aged 58. Not knowing that I was autistic had led to several burnouts at work and disrupted my career. Since my diagnosis I’ve combined part time library work with research so I work from home part of the week. The work that I do now plays to my strengths. I’m so much happier. Any kind of work could be suitable. The crucial thing in my experience is an employer who understands neurodivergence, healthy working relationships with colleagues, an accessible environment and self-care (having reasonable expectations of myself). Do hope all goes well with your assessments. Simply finding out about autism and/or ADHD can make a huge difference.
move of the research studies I am working on is about autistic people’s experiences of menopause (our website is autisticmenopause dot com) I have also just completed research on autistic people’s experiences of retiring (if you Google Jade Davies Retirement is one hell of a change OSF you should be able to find a free version not behind a paywall. Wishing you all the best. There are some supportive communities of neurodivergent people online - FB and Twitter.

This sounds amazing!
From someone who would love an autism assessment.
Similarly disrupted career here 😩

Ed to say thank you for the link @AutisticRose 💐

Needanewjobsoon · 18/04/2024 07:21

Waiting for an assessment here too and fully can't cope with the demand of my job anymore. I'm being paid peanuts in adult education but on a crazy contract which means I'm only paid when courses run.

I can't cope with all the chopping and changing and need a regular income and ideally some progression. 2 degrees, crazily clever but can't work out how to get a job I can progress in 😬

HarpQuartet · 18/04/2024 07:25

@DorsetandBeyond would it be ok if I messaged you? I am looking for a new sort of job and admin is what I'm good at, so I'd like to know about the retraining you did in case it might be something that I'd enjoy. Thank you.

AutisticRose · 18/04/2024 07:38

Thanks! Got the title of the second paper wrong it’s: “Retirement is one hell of a change: Autistic people’s experiences of retiring” if you add OSF to the search it should take you to a free version. Incidentally both my adult children discovered they were autistic after my late in life autism diagnosis. Pretty sure my parents (in their late 80s) are both autistic too. My Dad had a very successful career and my son is doing very well, particularly since he found out he was autistic and understood his needs better. Unfortunately most publicly funded employment support services are for people who are fully unemployed rather than underemployed or wanting to make a career change. That’s one of the reasons we end up helping each other through peer support.

DorsetandBeyond · 18/04/2024 09:41

Ah wow, thank you so much for your posts @AutisticRose. Your research sounds so interesting. I will have a look at the menopause website and the retirement paper. It's so good to feel less alone in this.

OP posts:
DorsetandBeyond · 18/04/2024 09:42

@HarpQuartet yes, definitely, feel free to message me

OP posts:
ALittleDropOfRain · 18/04/2024 09:55

Take a look at User Experience (UX). Depending on your tech skills it might be an excellent side step to something that imo plays to both autistic and ADHD skills.

HarpQuartet · 18/04/2024 10:24

Thank you @DorsetandBeyond , have messaged. Just wanted to add that I'm now having to go offline for a few hours, so if you do have time to reply, thank you, and I'll look forward to reading your message later.

Daffidale · 18/04/2024 10:31

On face of it your tech job should offer what you are looking for.but Tech is super broad. It would be worth looking at what alternative or adjacent roles might be available in that field if what you are doing now feels too admin-y. I would talk to colleagues or listen to tech career podcasts to get a better idea of different roles.

People have mentioned user research, UX/User Interface Design/Interaction Design/Digital Product Design which might all be options given your illustration skills.

If you struggle with focus and executive function user research may be a challenge - there is a lot of organisation and admin needed for that. But something more in user interface design would have more variety.

There is a very good, low cost, entry level course by Dave Travis you can do online. https://www.udemy.com/course/ultimate-guide-to-ux/ which would give you an idea of the work suits you.

The industry can be biased towards youth but is getting better. But in reality no reason you can’t work beyond retirement age and more and more companies are hybrid or remote. Plus plenty of scope to freelance.

Daffidale · 18/04/2024 10:34

Hackajob features lots of different job roles and companies on the blog. It’s aimed at 20-somethings but don’t let that put you off

anythinginapinch · 18/04/2024 10:44

You need a changing fast paced job. 111 or 999 phone handler?

New posts on this thread. Refresh page