Careers & Employment Information

5 Steps to Standing Out Above the Crowd at Work


Do you feel like one in a million at work - and not in a good way? When you run into your boss in the hallway, do you get the impression she isn't sure who you are? Are the juicy projects always going to someone else?

If you answered "yes" to any of these questions, you need to raise your work profile. Here are some tips to get you started.

1. Listen more than you talk. If you offer an opinion, suggestion, comment or question at every opportunity, soon people will run away when they see you coming. Remember when you were in college and there was always one smart-aleck who, when the class was asked, "Are there any more questions?" would shoot his hand in the air and hold the class up? Don't be that student in the boardroom. If you listen carefully and confine yourself to intelligent and to the-point remarks, you'll end up looking smarter than most of the people in the room. And when you do have something to say, everyone will listen.

2. Meetings aren't for airing dirty laundry. If you have a problem or gripe with someone, bring it to his or her attention privately. When you point fingers or air departmental problems in a group setting, you (a) blindside the person you're complaining about, and (b) have just about ruined your chances for a peaceful resolution. Besides, the next time you make a mistake, that person will fall all over himself to make sure to bring it up in a large meeting just to watch you squirm.

3. Try to catch people doing something right. Whether boss, co-worker or subordinate, people love to be told they're doing a good job. You don't have to turn into Eddie Haskell to be aware of opportunities to compliment someone. Keep it short, low-key and honest. It's even better if you can pass the compliment to someone else. "Hey, boss, Jim was a huge help to us on the Acme project - he made some suggestions that should save us $20,000." What are the chances that the boss is going to mention it to Jim the next time he sees him? Pretty good.

4. Know when to hold 'em and know when to fold 'em. Pick your battles. If you've made the best case you can for doing something a certain way and the boss decides to do it Sally's way, smile and go along (unless doing it Sally's way is going to send you to jail). If your way really is better, people will remember that when Sally folds like a cheap card table. When you do decide to keep fighting to do it your way, make sure it's something worth fighting for and not just because you can't stand to lose. If you only start a war when the stakes are high you have a better chance of coming out on top than if you try to fight every low-level skirmish like Sherman going through Atlanta.

5. Don't hide your mistakes. As soon as it becomes apparent that something has gone wrong, take it to your boss and be upfront about what happened. Have a plan laid out to correct the problem and limit the fallout. You should be able to tell the boss that you've already put the recovery in motion and exactly what the final outcome will be. The key here is to accept the blame without hand wringing or whining and pointing fingers at your subordinates or other departments. You take the responsibility, and then you take the lead in fixing it.

Looking for more career advice?

Joan Schramm is a career, executive and personal coach with twenty years experience in management, training and coaching. Joan can work with you to figure out exactly what you want from your life and your career, and how to get there without a lot of detours.

For more information about Joan, or to talk about what's going on in your career, e-mail coach@achieve-momentum.com, or go to http://www.achieve-momentum.com - Sign up for a free monthly newsletter, "Angular Momentum" and take a free Job Satisfaction Assessment.


MORE RESOURCES:
Google

AFP

Why tech jobs are beating the employment odds
ZDNet - Jul 3, 2008
... impressively choreographed fireworks displays, we?re capping off one of the most depressing weeks for employment reports in the better half of a decade. ...
Treasurys rise ahead of employment report The Associated Press
US employment slump 'may continue into 2009' Vedior
US ADP Employment foresees larger than expected decline in June's ... International Business Times
MarketWatch - Forbes
all 193 news articles


Telegraph.co.uk

Recession threat as UK jobs vanish
Telegraph.co.uk, United Kingdom - 19 hours ago
This is one of several findings in a survey of employment agencies that also reveals that the number of people looking for work rose in June and the growth ...
June is sixth straight month of job losses Kansas City Star
Little doubt that US is in recession; rest of the world can't ... The Age
Number of Those Unemployed For at Least 6 Months Rises Wall Street Journal
Los Angeles Times - Chicago Tribune
all 461 news articles


Technology Employment Study: OC?s Big in Consumer, Defense Electronics
Orange County Business Journal, CA - 14 hours ago
By Sarah Tolkoff Orange County ranks fourth in the state and 14th in the nation for technology jobs, according to a recent report. ...


CariZMa Introduces First Arabic Employment Tool in the Middle East
Al-Bawaba, Jordan - 9 hours ago
The focus of our research, product development, and service delivery is the application of psychological science in human resource (HR) and employment ...


Employment project hailed
Gulf Daily News, Bahrain - 20 hours ago
Labour Minister Dr Majeed Al Alawi credited the efficient employment scheme for the substantial drop. According to updated figures released yesterday, ...


Los Angeles Times

Suburbia's not dead yet
Los Angeles Times, CA - 14 hours ago
But the biggest reason the suburb-to-city narrative is not following the script of the urban boosters and theorists has to do with employment. ...


Looking at suitable employment for retirees
Malaysia Star, Malaysia - 20 hours ago
According to Assoc Prof Dr Tengku Aizan Hamid, director of Universiti Putra Malaysia's Gerontology Institute, physically and mentally fit retirees and ...


New York Times

When Ex-Employees Vent, or Reinvent
New York Times, United States - 11 hours ago
Zachary Hummel, an employment law partner at Bryan Cave, says noncompete agreements vary in scope. In both cases, people may attract the wrath of a former ...


Employers Should Address Suspected Theft by Employees by Dallas ...
WiredPRNews.com (press release), TX - 3 hours ago
Additionally, the employer should review its applicable employment policies to ensure it complies with set policies and should review its previous actions ...


Recession Proof Jobs and Best Industries for Employment
Associated Content, CO - 2 hours ago
The following jobs may provide the best opportunities for steady income and employment during recession times. These jobs are also the jobs within the ...

Employment - Google News

home | site map
© 2006