This guide seeks to bust the myths and share the reality and diversity of portfolio careers through the stories of those already working this way. For allied health professionals, nurses and GPs, we describe the benefits and challenges of portfolio careers, how to thrive when working in this way, the practicalities of managing various roles and some word of wisdom from those who are already treading this path.
We hope you find it useful.
Content taken from Bristol, North Somerset & South Gloucestershire Training Hub but examples are from Dorset AHP’s in portfolio roles.
What is a Portfolio Career?
Portfolio careers are becoming more prevalent within the health sector as individuals seek flexibility, autonomy, and balance. The fluidity of portfolio careers means that the individuals can gain a breadth of skills, knowledge, and experience across a variety of roles and organisations.
Having a portfolio career is a way of working that combines different roles, jobs and income streams that suit your interests and your career and life aspirations. This might be a mix of part-time, fill-time, voluntary, self-employed, or freelancing work. It might be a combination of clinical, managerial, leadership, teaching, research, consultancy, or project-based roles. You might work within the NHS, in a private practice, with the third sector or with industry.
“Portfolio careers can provide a platform for opportunity and can bring enthusiasm and energy to your career”.
Common to all portfolio careers is the autonomy to choose what work you do and the skills to self-manage across your various roles and commitments. For many, their portfolios evolved over time as they considered different opportunities and sought to bring variety into their careers.
This guide gives real examples of portfolio careers, describing how they came about, what the different roles are and how they fit together across a working week. Each portfolio is unique to the individual and has come about through a combination of hard work, creative thinking, patience, and persistence.
Why Choose a Portfolio Career?
The motivation for choosing a portfolio career is wide and varied, so too are the benefits that people gain from working in this way. Often, individuals want to develop themselves and progress their career and can sometimes find this difficult to achieve within a traditional clinical working environment. Many of those who work in a portfolio way are looking to broaden their skill set and experience, to try different types of work whilst maintaining work-life balance. The flexibility of a portfolio career is attractive to many, alongside the control that comes with being able to choose roles that suit your current circumstance and life commitments.
“Having a mix of clinical and non-clinical roles replenishes my energy levels and makes me a better clinician”.
For many having a variety of roles within a portfolio can bring energy to their work and helps to balance the intensity and stress that come with challenging clinical positions. The variety and breadth of experience also enables individuals to appreciate the different challenges and opportunities across organisations.
Working for different organisations increases awareness and understanding how the wider health system fits together. It can present opportunities for building relationships and networks that enable individuals to bring skills and knowledge from one role to another and to share these with colleagues and patients.
I want to see different challenges in different areas.
I want to see the bigger picture by working in a variety of places.
I want the opportunity to meet and work with different people.
I like variety – I get bored easily.
I like the combination of different roles on different days.
I like the challenge that comes with doing a variety of roles.
I want to use different parts of my brain to do different things.
I’m curious to learn new things and different skills.
I have different interests, I couldn’t possibly pick one.
Practicalities of a Portfolio Career
Portfolio careers don’t come neatly packaged. They take time, energy, and commitment to create and maintain. Working for more than one employer means managing the logistics of more than one role and one organisation. Self-employment may also be part of the portfolio mix, which may mean relying on professional expertise for advice and guidance.
Knowing where to start can sometimes be a challenge. The simple checklist seeks to cover the basics in terms of key practicalities to take care of across your portfolio career. You will need to set time aside to deal with the admin that comes with a portfolio career.
I have more opportunities for progression.
I can develop my leadership skills.
I get a breadth of experience.
I can use my skills and learning across my different roles.
You can find a balance and see your children grow up.
You can work around taking care of yourself.
It can enhance your wellbeing and make you happy.
It gives you flexibility to work around your life commitments.
Every day is a learning opportunity.
The variety provides motivation and interest.
You meet more people, build your network and then more opportunities present themselves.
Portfolio Career Checklist
Common challenges and how to overcome them
Being organised
Managing time
Communication
Setting boundaries
Thriving in a portfolio career
Knowing yourself and what makes you tick
Anyone has the potential to make a portfolio career work. Whether you plan in advance to work in this way or whether it evolves over time, knowing yourself and what makes you tick can help to ensure your portfolio works for you. Some simple questions can get you started:
- What are you passionate about?
- What are you interested in?
- What would a successful portfolio career look like for you?
- How would you manage yourself across two or more roles?
- How will it make you feel when the demands of one role impacts on another?
- What risks are you willing to take to create a portfolio career?
- What would you be giving up if you had a portfolio career?
- What options are available to you right now?
- Who in your network could support you?
- Which of your strengths will help you achieve your portfolio career?
“If it is right for you, a portfolio career can be very rewarding”.
Know your strengths
Increasing your self-awareness and being honest about what your preferences are and what works for you, will help you decide whether a portfolio career is for you. Understanding your strengths and aligning them to the work you do as part of your portfolio can promote engagement, a sense of calling and improve energy and productivity. You can use different tools to understand your strengths, work with a coach or mentor or simply seek feedback from colleagues and peers.
Finding your tribe, connecting with others
Portfolio careers are different to traditional ways of working. Knowing where to start and what opportunities are out there can be challenging. You don’t know what you don’t know – so how do you find out? By connecting with others and finding your tribe.