- Make Your Priorities Clear
- Network
- Know when you need to do some extra effort:
- Read Lots of Papers
1. Make
Your Priorities Clear
- The activities you want to include in your plan. What are your priorities? They are likely to include experiments that will give the thesis a conclusion or that may be necessary to publish a final paper. Mandatory administrative tasks will also need attention, and allowing time to prepare for your next career move will give you the best chance of a seamless and successful transition post-PhD.
- As a final year PhD candidate, you are likely to have acquired high-level competencies comparable to those of a junior postdoctoral researcher, in which case your supervisor may offer you responsibility for new projects or graduate students.
2. Network:
- It is not always easy to decide on which career path to follow after your PhD. You have been trained primarily towards an academic research career, and so many PhDgraduates choose to continue on with a postdoctoral position as their first career destination.
- This is perfectly acceptable, and many industrial employers look upon early-career post doctorals favorably. However, it is worth bearing in mind that permanent tenured positions are hard to secure nowadays and competition is tough, with less than 5% of those who complete a PhD ultimately realizing an academic career.
3. Know
when you need to do some extra effort:
- When major deadlines collide, go into bunker-mode. Don’t stay in that mode for too long, but know when you need to put in that extra effort to push things through.
- It’s just a temporary thing, never stay bunkered or hermiting for too long.
4. Read
Lots of Papers
- At the beginning of your PhD you have to read lots of papers. The goal is that you get a clear overview of your research field. You must understand all the important research already done. Once you know the state of the art in your field, you can see where your PhD fits in.
- How you are going to contribute and expand the scope of research? It also gives you a roadmap to avoid duplicating existing research and reinventing the wheel.
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