Wednesday, May 20, 2020
You Say You Do But You Dont - Personal Branding Blog - Stand Out In Your Career
You Say You Do But You Dont - Personal Branding Blog - Stand Out In Your Career When it comes to hiring you, CMO Laura Ching from TinyPrints.com says it all in Sundayâs New York Times: âOne of the hardest things to screen for is adaptability â" just being able to go with the flowâ¦things move so fast. You can come in and this is what the job description says today, but after a monthâs time, itâs going to look different.â You say you want to be entrepreneurial, you donât want to be micro-managed, and that you want to be creative. But you complain that you are forced to stop a project and start another before the first one is finished. Apparently you donât see or care that the finish line got moved, and thatâs why your company is changing course. Changing maps Why would you believe the map never changes? Look at whatâs happening in Egypt and the Middle East â" and in Madison, Wisconsin. People are risking their lives for change â" all weâre asking you to do is open a new job ticket. Breaking news: When you sign on to company, it is no longer for a fixed job at a fixed salary in a fixed location for a fixed amount of time. You do not have the righteous obligation to bring up the problems and inconsistencies, and complain about a lack of clarity as roles and relationships change by necessity â" or by your CEOâs reading of the companyâs crystal ball. Hereâs the thing. Rigidity is a career ending injury. You can never play in the NBA. You can never negotiate a treaty. You wonât survive a fall on the catwalk during fashion week, or do any of the exciting, highly paid jobs that required a change mindset. Great careers demand great improvisational skills â" the first rule being to say, âYes, andâ¦.â Successful people donât continue to tango when the music changes to hip-hop. Sometimes theyll call an audible I hear such frustration from my coaching clients. They feel they were guaranteed the job they won would be exactly the job they do. What they donât realize is their boss wishes it were true. So do the investors, ad agency, product development people, logistics people and webmaster. Change is painful, expensive and necessary. Do you say you do, but you really donât want want to experience the realities of being successful in business? The excitement that comes with anxiety as your company attempts to innovate, iterate, invent, re-invent and take risks â" including taking the company off one track and moving to another â" and maybe moving back, or moving out of the sector. Look at the success of Ignighter.com. In 2008, twenty-somethings Kevin Owocki, Daniel Osit and Adam Sachs launched it as a âgroup datingâ site based in the US. Itâs designed to help people avoid the one-on-one misery of a first date. The site lets members create group outings so theyâre mingling with a bunch of people at some fun activity. It took off all right but never grew much in the US, where the guys were hustling to make it happen. After a year, they looked at the stats, and even though they had NEVER been to these countries, their site was doing better in Asia, particularly well in India. Guess what they did? They clung to their business plan and kept chipping away at the domestic market. No, just kidding. They moved the focus of the business to India, where there are now two million users. They are about to visit India for the first time, to open an office there, hire local people â" and enjoy the venture capital they got from among others, Rajan Anandan, Googleâs top executive in India. The next time your boss calls an audible, run with it. Look in the direction youâre told to move toward, and find your way there, until youâre told to change direction again. Yes, thatâs how winning teams win. You do want to be on a winning team, donât you? Author: Nance Rosen is the author of Speak Up! Succeed. She speaks to business audiences around the world and is a resource for press, including print, broadcast and online journalists and bloggers covering social media and careers. Read more at NanceRosenBlog. Twitter name: nancerosen
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