
Feeling trapped in your job? "Job Therapy" by NYU psychologist Dr. Tessa West reveals why career dissatisfaction isn't about bad bosses - it's about unmet psychological needs. Based on 1,500+ recruiter interviews, this guide transforms how you view work relationships forever.
Tessa West, author of Job Therapy: Finding Work That Works for You, is a Professor of Psychology at New York University and a leading expert in workplace dynamics and interpersonal communication.
With a PhD from the University of Connecticut, her research on relationships and organizational behavior has been published in top-tier journals like Psychological Science and funded by the National Science Foundation and National Institutes of Health.
West’s work bridges academic rigor and practical application, offering actionable strategies for navigating career dissatisfaction and fostering fulfillment. She is also the author of Jerks at Work: Toxic Coworkers and What to Do About Them, a practical guide to managing difficult workplace relationships.
A frequent contributor to the Wall Street Journal and a sought-after media commentator, West has appeared on Good Morning America, CNN, and NPR, and her insights are regularly featured in The New York Times and Forbes. Her frameworks on job satisfaction and productivity are taught in top MBA programs and utilized by executives worldwide.
Job Therapy offers a therapeutic approach to career dissatisfaction, helping readers diagnose unmet psychological needs in their current roles. Dr. Tessa West identifies five common career frustration profiles and provides exercises to reframe work relationships, set boundaries, or transition to new roles. The book blends psychology research with actionable strategies for aligning work with personal values.
This book is ideal for professionals feeling stuck, considering career changes, or seeking to improve their current job satisfaction. It’s also valuable for HR leaders aiming to reduce turnover by addressing systemic communication gaps between employees and managers.
West categorizes career dissatisfaction into:
Unlike generic productivity tips, West’s approach focuses on emotional triggers and interpersonal dynamics at work. It emphasizes self-diagnosis through therapeutic exercises, such as reframing negative thought patterns and auditing stress responses, rather than résumé-building tactics.
The book includes:
Yes, West analyzes how hybrid setups exacerbate communication gaps and boundary issues. She offers strategies to assert availability preferences and recreate informal feedback loops lost in virtual environments.
Based on 1,200+ interviews with job-changers, West reveals 93% of employees receive no post-rejection feedback, and 67% misdiagnose their career dissatisfaction. These insights shape the book’s emphasis on systemic fixes over superficial changes.
Absolutely. West provides leaders with frameworks to:
Some reviewers note the exercises require significant introspection, which may overwhelm readers seeking quick fixes. Others highlight its focus on individual change over organizational reform, though West counters with evidence-based advocacy tactics for systemic shifts.
While Work Rules! focuses on Google’s data-driven HR policies, Job Therapy prioritizes individual emotional needs. West’s approach complements Bock’s by addressing the human psychology behind engagement metrics like those in Bock’s “oxygen project”.
With AI disrupting roles and remote work lingering, West’s strategies help workers navigate constant change by building emotional adaptability. The book’s focus on identity alignment addresses rising trends in career pivots post-automation.
Sinta o livro através da voz do autor
Transforme conhecimento em insights envolventes e ricos em exemplos
Capture ideias-chave em um instante para aprendizado rápido
Aproveite o livro de uma forma divertida e envolvente
Career unhappiness is a relationship problem rather than just burnout.
Career development is rarely linear and often requires personalized solutions.
Exploring options isn't the same as leaving.
Most professionals experience career unhappiness as a relationship problem.
You can feel highly identified with a career even when it brings little satisfaction.
Divida as ideias-chave de Job Therapy em pontos fáceis de entender para compreender como equipes inovadoras criam, colaboram e crescem.
Destile Job Therapy em dicas de memória rápidas que destacam os princípios-chave de franqueza, trabalho em equipe e resiliência criativa.

Experimente Job Therapy através de narrativas vívidas que transformam lições de inovação em momentos que você lembrará e aplicará.
Pergunte qualquer coisa, escolha a voz e co-crie insights que realmente ressoem com você.

Criado por ex-alunos da Universidade de Columbia em San Francisco
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Criado por ex-alunos da Universidade de Columbia em San Francisco

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Why does Sunday evening feel like impending doom? That tightening in your chest as the weekend slips away isn't just stress-it's your body telling you something fundamental about your relationship with work. Most of us spend more waking hours with our jobs than with our partners, yet we rarely think of careers as relationships that can grow stale, become toxic, or simply stop fitting who we've become. Research involving over 400 professionals across 22 industries reveals a startling truth: career unhappiness functions less like burnout and more like a deteriorating marriage. The problem isn't that you're lazy or ungrateful. The problem is that your relationship with work has changed, and nobody taught you how to recognize the signs or what to do about them.