If you’re starting out on an academic career, your first step should be to talk with your supervisor and senior colleagues about the opportunities in your disciplinary area. What do they recommend? What are the norms for CVs, funding, recruitment processes? What’s their advice for getting you where you need to be?
The postdoctoral stage is a perfect storm of limited time, limited funding, and major life events: a feeling you’re standing at a career crossroads. It can be difficult to find time to look ahead and reflect on your current and future situation, on your next steps, and thus on your priorities.
There are places you can start :
Download the postdoc’s self-assessment questionnaire to self-evaluate your current activities, achievements and goals, and discuss them with a supportive senior researcher, using the accompanying feedback guide
A guide for advanced doctoral and postdoctoral researchers
Once you've attended a Career Café, ask the Graduate Campus for a personal appointment with our career development specialists
You’ll find further advice at Chronicle Vitae and at Nature Jobs . And a podcast on professional development for the academic path with Helium .
How to translate your role on your CV into an equivalent role on another country? The UNIL International Relations pages provide some guidance.
Two external resources are particularly useful :
Who comes first? Who comes last? Who's an author and who isn't? The Swiss Academies for Arts and Science provides some guidance in their guide: Authorship in scientific publications (2013).
Last but not least, since nearly everybody around you has the same questions about careers, your peers may help you directly or indirectly. They may have projects or experiences on how to approach this issue that may help you. In addition, some faculty doc and postdoc associations organize career-themed events.