Career Explorer Tools

Once you know your Agilities, use these interactive tools to see more options for yourself in relation to income, preparation, demand, and salary information for each type of career.

Introduction

Welcome to the interactive Career Explorer Tools©, developed by The DeBruce Foundation!

The Career Explorer Tools are a fast, personalized way to discover career options and learn more about their salaries, industry growth, and training. Use these interactive tools to see more options for yourself in relation to income, preparation, demand, and salary information for each occupation.

Learn the purpose of each tool by watching the introduction video, then scroll further down to interact with each tool. To get the most out of the Career Explorer tools, take the Agile Work Profiler© to get a list of your ranked Agilities.

“I love seeing what career options are available for someone like myself. I feel overwhelmed with the amount of choices and this simplified the process.”

Do you know your Agilities?

These interactive tools may be personalized based on your Agilities. Agilities are your work strengths and interests. Take the Agile Work Profiler, a career assessment that gives you a list of your ranked Agilities. This will help you get the most out of these interactive tools!  You will likely find it helpful to keep your list of Agilities with you.  

Here’s what you can do with the Career Explorer Tools:

  • With the Occupation Decoder, you can explore occupations and learn about the industry, education, salary, and skills
  • With the Occupation Explorer, you can explore salaries for the jobs that use your strengths and interests
  • With the Opportunity Explorer, you can explore industry growth and find the fastest-growing job opportunities 
  • With the Agilities Comparison, you can compare job opportunities that use your strengths and interests
  • With the Education Explorer, you can search for education opportunities by degrees offered, state, cost, and specialty

Where does this data come from? 

Sources:  The DeBruce Foundation, Agilities, https://agilities.org, The U.S. Department of Labor, O’Net, https://www.onetonline.org/, and the Bureau of Labor Statistics, https://www.bls.gov/soc.