When we are new to career development, how do we meaningfully explore the career development field? Are there some useful primers to help us on our way? How do we learn what we do not yet know?
I have been thinking about this for a while, and I have some ideas about a bit of a path to help guide our baby steps. They are:
- Firstly, 'why': the grounding of our practice, Rogerian unconditional positive regard (Rogers, 1957). This focuses on our client who is "in a state of incongruence" and us as the practitioner. We are, unlike the client, "congruent" while having "unconditional positive regard for the client" (p. 96). As the practitioner we have "an empathic understanding of the client's internal frame of reference" and we let the client see our empathy and positive regard over the time of our assistance (Rogers, 1957, p. 96). We accept the client totally as they are: without judgement, and we accompany them for a part of their journey. We can get a flavour of this with a comparison of Rogerian to Eganian practice here (Young, 2025): https://www.samyoung.co.nz/2025/10/rogerian-versus-eganian-career-practice.html
- We next consider the 'how'. We put the client at the centre of what we do. As a practitioner we have no other concerns that of our client. It doesn't matter who pays for the service: it is the person who sits with us who we focus on. If we work within an organisation, it is not the organisation which gets our loyalty: it is the client. Everything is about doing the best we can for the client. Our professional codes of ethics (CATE, 2025; CDANZ, 2016) help us to clearly understand 'how'.
- Moving to the 'what', we might find it useful to understand that there are a lot of theorists in our field, but there are some great books to accompany us. I would suggest as a relatively quick read, the Yates (2024) book outlining useful career development theories for the Career Development Institute in the UK. The text talks us through the 'what', but not yet the 'who'.
- To understand the 'who', I would suggest Inkson et al. (2015) as a superb theory primer with loads of theories clustered around metaphors. At 400-odd pages this will take us a while to digest, but will help us understand the scope of our new field. We can also download a sample chapter of this text from https://au.sagepub.com/sites/default/files/upm-assets/65062_book_item_65062.pdf
- Then I would suggest we understand the 'when', and get a mental map for the time those various theorists arose in our field: Careers New Zealand created a timeline which is now on Tahatū Career Navigator at https://tahatu.govt.nz/career-practice-hub/best-practice/career-theories-and-models (2025). I have also created a theory infographic here (Young, 2013): https://www.samyoung.co.nz/2013/12/a-few-useful-career-theories_10.html
I hope that helps!
Sam
References:
CATE. (2025). Code of Ethics. Career and Transition Educators. https://www.cate.co.nz/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/CATE-Code-of-Ethics.pdf
CDANZ. (2016). Code of Ethics. Career Development Association of New Zealand. https://cdanz.org.nz/ModularPage?Action=View&ModularPage_id=26
Inkson, K., Dries, N., & Arnold, J. (2015). Understanding Careers (2nd ed.). SAGE Publications Ltd. https://au.sagepub.com/sites/default/files/upm-assets/65062_book_item_65062.pdf
Rogers, C. R. (1957). The necessary and sufficient conditions of therapeutic personality change. Journal of Consulting Psychology, 21(2), 95-103. https://doi.org/10.1037/h0045357
Tahatū Career Navigator. (2025, November 25). Career theories and models | Ngā ariā me ngā tauira aramahi. https://tahatu.govt.nz/career-practice-hub/best-practice/career-theories-and-models
Yates, J. (2024). Career Development Theories in Practice: Real-world applications of career development models. Career Development Institute [CDI].
Young, S. (2013, December 10). A Few Useful Career Theories. https://www.samyoung.co.nz/2013/12/a-few-useful-career-theories_10.html
Young, S. (2025, October 23). Rogerian versus Eganian career practice. https://www.samyoung.co.nz/2025/10/rogerian-versus-eganian-career-practice.html











