You are not trying to pick the one perfect career. You're learning what kinds of problems, people, and environments make you come alive. Once you know that, there are many ways to build a life around it — a job, a business, freelance, creative work, service work, or some mix that changes over time.
This guide walks you through it in four phases: take a few tests → let AI help you find patterns → run small real-world experiments → reflect and adjust. Go at your own pace. Nothing here is graded.
Two minutes of setup that makes the rest work.
Open a blank Google Doc (or Notes) and title it "My Career Exploration Inputs." Every test result and reflection goes there. That doc — not this page — is your real record. You'll paste from it into the AI prompts later. There's a scratchpad built into this guide too (Phase 1), but keep your own doc as the master copy.
Opens a fresh doc in whatever Google account you're signed into. Rename it "My Career Exploration Inputs" so you can find it later.
Four free ones first. Two optional paid ones if you want more depth. None of these output "jobs" — they output ingredients.
Paste short summaries. Then hit "Copy everything" and drop it into your Inputs doc.
Run these prompts in order in Claude (or any good AI). Paste your real results where it says [paste...]. Each prompt feeds the next.
This is where the real signal is. A test can suggest a path; only the real world can tell you if it gives you energy.
Anything small, cheap, time-boxed, and reversible. You're collecting evidence, not committing.
No pressure, no "can you get me a job" energy. You're just curious about their actual days.
After each activity, jot one line in your Inputs doc: "This gave me energy / drained me, because ___." Energy is the single best signal you have. Capability without energy is a trap — being good at something you dislike just keeps you doing it.
After a couple of weeks of experiments, come back. The goal isn't certainty — it's a smarter next move.
The whole journey lands here: three different paths you're actively testing. Different enough that you learn something from each. Fill these in (auto-saves), then copy them into your Inputs doc.
The goal is not certainty. The goal is better evidence. Come back and revise these whenever you learn something new.