Showing posts with label Career. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Career. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 18, 2012

The Human Touch! A True Story of Career Change

When a ultimate client called me to communicate they were bored in their current role, but weren ' t sure what they wanted to do, it ' s normally music to my ears! Being a career change scientific used to slab those looking for new career ideas, I inferring " This is bread and butter to me "! I was to be proved misguided... Challenges region ahead...

It transpired that deb had been in the same middle management role for nearly nine years, had gained some influence within the company, enjoyed the social aspects of the role but felt a little jittery in these situations ( sis worked for a private company funded by a predomination contract - an strange bearings in the UK ). Her role meant maiden was able to break through senior plain meetings, sit on some essential internal groups, and have the general day to day line management role. Mademoiselle was " swimming " I guess you could divulge.

Miss knew that cutie wanted a change but precisely had no idea post to start. We started to drudge through my Kick - Start Career Change Programme, but alongside this I was coaching her slight lack of social confidence, as I was very aware that this element would probably be a feature in any future interview process. What I mean is that the academic and achievement side of ones CV is one thing, but the ability to be social - naturally - is in my view equally important. It forms sometimes major components of an interview process, and I suggested that she needed to be prepared for this.

After a few weeks, she found a job that she liked the look of. It was a children and parents services type of role. The challenge was that it was outside her current field, and was a big step up too ( Middle to Senior / Strategic Manager )! She felt she could do the job, and duly completed the application form, matching not only the " Essentials " but also the " Desirables " on the Person Spec. ( Desirables can sometimes get overlooked, but can often be the difference between being on the yes or no pile for interview selection! ). She got the interview! Unfortunately she was still a bit concerned as to her possible performance in some of the stages of the interview, particularly a stakeholder ( Observers, Staff, Parents, and Children ) evening ' get together ' ( Death by Vol Au Vent, as a friend of mine calls it!! ). Fortunately we had been spending time coaching through this kind of very thing, and despite her concerns she had improved no end in her confidence.

The evening in question came and her and five other candidates entered a large hall containing bean bags, tables, and about fifty people. It was a semi - structured affair of chatting to stakeholders around the room across a broad range of subjects. We had talked about the importance of empathy with your chosen client group - or in this case the service user - i. e. Parents and Children. Rather than stay too formal, she decided to take off her jacket, kick off her shoes ( an inspirational move! ), and sit on the bean bags chatting to the parents and interacting and joking with the children. This gained some " over the top of the glasses " style looks from other candidates in the room! Of course, she also spent time circulating with, and identifying who she needed to impress in relation to staff also.

The interview followed the next day, and consisted of a battery of questions, and tour of the building ( never refuse a tour of the building, even if you know it well. It can really help, as you may be introduced to staff members, who may also in turn be involved in the decision making process ). All of this went well, and I ' m happy to report that she was offered the post.

We had a debrief a few days later, and I ' d like to share the outcome of that with you. In essence I think it is really important to consider:

Being simply personable. This is so key and yet so overlooked.

Having real communication skills - appropriate balance of listening, talking, empathy.

Being flexible and adaptable to the circumstances ( The bean bag scenario, as mentioned above! )

Ask people what they need during social events as part of a selection process - then provide interview panel with the solutions.

Sense of Humour - use appropriately. It can show your human side. Appropriateness is the key.

I hope that this journey has given you a few insights into the social side of the interview process. We hear so much these days about social media, but the face - to - face skills are what count ultimately. Think about the social skills that you have; hone them, be aware of your surroundings and act accordingly. Good luck to you in your career search!

Sunday, September 16, 2012

Tool Story Career Discovery

I grew up working in a family construction business in Central California. My Dad started " American Builders " in the early 1970 ' s and I started my first career in construction during Easter Visitation at age 13. The construction company was a diverse crew with colorful characters and divers who had colorful vocabularies. There was Dude, Larry, Larry, Gary, Dutch, Gerald Dilley, the Bratton Brothers, George, Duane, Bob, Dennis and Monte. They were carpenters, painters, plasterers, plumbers, electricians, bricklayers, and more.

Bountiful were amazing crafts people. Some were the best in the region and it was superb to watch them scutwork. But I and got to see what happened when they were asked to donkeywork exterior their circle of knack, off their strengths path. Dude Ragsdale was a prodigy for a framing carpenter. If you put a finish hammer in his hand he was competent but not brilliant. If you asked him to salt mines unbefitting a homestead he midpoint came unglued.

I got to see a lot of great pains and I also got to see a lot of do overs. My dad was a utopian and as a result, concrete got torn out and re - poured. Roofs got torn off and re - installed. Paneling got replaced when it wasn ' t installed just right.

If you ' ve seen the Pixar film like Toy Story or Cars it might help you understand what I ' m about to share. In Toy Story, probably in most all animated films you find normally non - living objects coming alive. They become animated with personalities and live real lives like people. With my construction background it might not be too surprising that I sometime think about tools this way.

Now let me ask you a question. Have you ever used a tool for something other than what it was made for? Have you ever used a wrench as a hammer? Have you ever used a pair of pliers as a screwdriver? It works, sort of.

Actually it ' s more nuanced than this? Have you ever used a screwdriver that didn ' t match the slot of the screw? Usually the screw gets stripped. Have you ever used a wrench that didn ' t match a bolt head? Most of the time the bolt head gets rounded. In all of these cases, using a great tool to do the wrong job often leads to inefficient work, frustrating work, and work needing to be done over because it comes out poorly. If you want to be a craftsman in any of the trades, I learned very early that it ' s a huge advantage if you have just the right tool for each segment of a job. And not only is it important to match the correct tool to with the job at hand, it ' s just as important to have the correct tool " in category ". A slotted screwdriver works so much better when the size is just the right fit for the slot.

Here ' s something else to think about. Each of these tools had a manufacturer or maker. That manufacturer had a fairly precise job in mind when they manufactured each individual tool. The manufacturer never planned for a wrench to be used as hammer. When Henry F. Phillips invented the crosshead screw driver, he never planned for it to be used with a slotted screw.

I believe your life is exactly like that. I believe my life is exactly like that. You and I were both created to do a very specific kind of work that is as unique to you as your fingerprints. And the job you were designed to do is one that you are absolutely going to love. It ' s a job that you will be crazy good at almost based on natural talent alone. You were made to do it. It ' s a job you ' ll be insanely great at with experience, hard work and very focused development. And it ' s a job you ' ll be wildly successful at when you put yourself out in the marketplace delivering the unique contribution you were designed to make.