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Article by Stephen Semprevivo
Technology and globalization have had a
profound effect on the relationship between employees and
employers in the 21st Century. With the average job
tenure somewhere between 18 and 36 months the phrase a
permanent job is an oxymoron. Today one cannot count on an
employer to take care of you. Trading 20-30 years for
security is a thing of the past.
That having been said, it is the realization of this
and the effective decoupling of our career with a specific
job, which is the first step in effective career management.
Skills and knowledge have replaced loyalty and dependence in
today's very fluid job market . Here are seven principles
to help guide you as you self manage your career:
- Know
thy self. In other words, know what you like and what
you want to do. Put some time into this! Close to 70% of
people in today’s work force say they are not happy with
what they are doing. It is difficult to imagine that you
can reach your full career potential not enjoying what you
are doing so don’t be in this group. As part of this
self-exploration, analyze your strengths and your true
successes and come up with your top two or three skills.
Based on this strive to bring who you are to what
you do. Jumping to the next hot thing will likely fail
finding a career that you enjoy could mean the you never
need to “work” another day in your life.
- Incorporate
yourself. Not
literally, but philosophically.
Think like a business: Invest in yourself. Develop
your own mission and build your own brand. Relax and take
a longer-term perspective once and a while. That is how
business emerges as leaders in their space; you can do
this as well.
- Master
the art of self-promotion. Doing good work by itself
will not cut it. You must promote your work and your
successes. All
successful people are self-promoters. Remember, however,
self promotion is the truth about you well told, not
half-truths or embellishments.
- Constantly
reinvent yourself. All things in the universe begin,
rise, peak and then wane.
You need to continuously reshape how you do things
and continuously get better at what you do. You are your
product and if you are not learning more or earning more
at what you are doing, it is time to make a change.
- Build,
activate and cultivate a network. We have spent a lot
of time discussing the power of networking at past
sessions “Networking Basics” and “Advanced
Networking”. It
is a crucial component to self-guided career management
which involves more giving on your part than getting, but
which can have dramatic results.
- Consider
the portfolio approach to work. A portfolio approach
to work focuses on a variety of work focused around one
theme. For example, if your passion is marketing, taking
the portfolio approach to work you may do some consulting
for various companies. You may also choose to work part
time as the Director of Marketing for a smaller company
who cannot afford a full time person. You could also
decide to teach a class at a local university and write a
few articles based on your experiences. With a little
effort those articles could turn into a book and before
long you are a perceived expert in the area you have
chosen to focus on. This could lead to getting board seats
in related companies.
If it is still one full time role you desire, this
approach may still be a good idea, still it will broaden
your contact points and exposure.
- Embrace
life long education. Pursue learning that will stretch
your capabilities. Read and study outside your profession.
Don’t make the mistake of getting tunnel vision or
focusing too narrowly.
In
summary YOU need to be responsible for your own career. DO NOT
let any one job define who you are. Go beyond this and define
and pursue your own career goals.
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