Title: Getting Ahead In Your Career
1Getting Ahead In Your Career!
2Take Charge of your Career
- Career success means attaining twin goals of
organizational rewards and personal satisfaction. - Find out how to move up in your career.
Researching the job is the first step.
3Take Charge of your Career
- Be aware of the jobs which are peripheral to
yours. This is called horizontal growth. - Strive to be promoted in a leadership position.
This is the same as a temporary leadership
assignment.
4Take Charge of your Career
- Cultivate work relationships with prospective
colleagues in the department you hope to join. - Attend all the training or workshop opportunities
offered. This is what continuous learning is
about.
5Take Charge of your Career
- Spend time searching for paid opportunities in
order to learn transferable skills. The Know-How
present skill abilities and the Learn-How
learning capabilities that one has. - Get promoted by learning more is the new trend.
6TAKING CONTROL OF YOURSELF
- Develop Outstanding Interpersonal Skills
- Develop Expertise and be Passionate about Your
Work - Perform Well on All Your Assignments
- Create Good First Impressions
7TAKING CONTROL OF YOURSELF
- Document Your Accomplishments
- Be Conventional in Your Behavior
- Take a Creative Approach to Your Job
- Keep Growing Through Continuous Learning and
Self-Development
8TAKING CONTROL OF YOURSELF
- Observe Proper Etiquette
- Develop a Proactive Personality
- Take Sensible Risks
- Learn to Manage Adversity
- Develop the Brand Called You
9Develop A Flexible Career Path
- Traditional Career Path
- Series of positions, each reaching a higher level
of responsibility than the previous one. - Clarify your values
- List your Personal Goals and modify as you go
through life. - Have contingency plans.
-
10Develop a Flexible Career Path
- The Horizontal Career Path
- You might move sideways before you move up
- Shows flexibility
- Could show dedication to the organization
- Possibly work same level for two or three
organizations before promotion. - Contingency Plans
11Have An Action Plan
- Set Useful Goals with Logical Plan for its
Attainment - Avoid being too rigid
- Career Paths and Plans are only tentative.
12Practice Networking
- Cybernetworking
- Work the Party Scene
- Active in Community/Church
- Learn Golf
- Nepotism
- Fraternity/Sorority
- Carry business cards
13Achieve Broad Experience
- Try to do it early in your career.
- Achieve more career portability and flexibility.
14Practice Self-Nomination
- Courage to ask for a promotion or transfer.
- Lets management know you want more
responsibility. - Ask/volunteer for challenging assignments
- Be Visible
- Sell yourself
15Find A Mentor or Mentors
- Try to find one immediately
- Need a voice to help you
- Personal Board of Directors
- More the merrier
- Keep in contact
16Manage Luck
- Everyone needs it
- Seize The Opportunity
- Using luck also means clarifying your goals.
- Luck is a Dividend of Sweat, the more you
sweat, the luckier you get. Ray Kroc, former
president of McDonalds.
17Balance Your Life
- Balancing your life among competing demands of
work, social life, and personal interests can
help you balance your career. - Without balance, you run the risk of burnout and
feeling that work is not worthwhile.
18Statistics.
- 95 of senior managers of fortune 500 service and
fortune 1000 industrial are men - 97 of them are white
- In fortune 2000 companies only 5 of senior
managers are women
19The Glass Ceiling Commission
- Works to identify
- Barriers that prevent qualified individuals from
advancing within their organizations - Barriers Include
- Invisible barriers
- Artificial barriers
20The Glass Ceiling Commission
- Created in 1991 in Title II of the Civil Rights
Act of 1991 - Consists of a 21 member board
- Members are appointed by congress and the
president - Chaired by the secretary of labor
-
21Glass Ceiling Commission Findings
- Report published in March of 1995
- The commission identified three levels of
barriers that continue - Societal barriers
- Governmental barriers
- Internal structure or business barriers
22Societal barriers
- Corporate leadership cannot make society culture,
gender or color blind. It can, however, demand
and enforce merit-based practices and behaviors
as a fundamental principle of how to dobusiness.
23Governmental barriers
- Most important, there needs to be vigorous and
consistent monitoring and enforcement of laws and
policies already on the books.
24Internal structure or business barriers
- Without access to such opportunities in the
managerial pipeline, too many qualified people
are stopped short before they fulfill the promise
of their abilities.