ESSENTIAL KEYS
AT WORKPLACE
1. Hold the mindset that change provides
opportunity.
There is an ancient wisdom etched into Chinese vocabulary. The Chinese
ideogram for crisis consists of two separate characters. One means danger; the
other means opportunity. The proper translation is that a crisis is a dangerous
opportunity. When confronted with a crisis, you need to recognize both the
danger and the opportunity. Often the danger is more readily apparent, while
the opportunity can be deftly concealed. The thing to keep in mind is to look
for the opportunity as well as the danger. Crisis holds the potential for both.
In studying hundreds of famous people, whether politicians, sportspeople,
business people, or spiritual leaders, I have found that crisis comes to every
person in some way. Those who rise in the midst of crisis and see it as an opportunity
to change and grow become greater and more powerful. They reach heights that
they would never have attained had they never experienced that crisis. As
masterful innovator Walt Disney put it, “You may not realize it when it
happens, but a kick in the teeth might be the best thing in the world for you.”
When change is imminent, hold the mindset that change provides opportunity,
remain positive, and don’t dwell on the danger but dwell on the opportunity.
2. Do not over-focus on the next job position but
rather on the skills to be developed.
The most of peoples today are aware that the company does not have the
same amount of loyalty to you that they used to a few years ago. There was a
time the company would have a track for your life. You could go and meet with
your manager and they could tell you where you are going and when you will get
there.
Today, you are your manager and you need to plan out your own career path
to your dream job. Therefore, it is important that you are not focused on the
job position, but rather on the skills required.
“You have to do the job before you get the
title.”
In other words, if you want to be the C.O.O., then you need to develop the
hard and soft skills required for a C.O.O.; you need the education of a C.O.O., you
need to start dressing like a C.O.O., acting like a C.O.O., speaking like a C.O.O., and
then one day, when you have had the right amount of experience, someone is
going to say, “I think He/She would make a great C.O.O.!”
3. Building relationships with key decision
makers.
It’s not only what you know but whom you know. Its being seen that people scoot all
the way up the ladder of a company through being connected closely with key
decision makers.
Think of football coaches: they build their team and work with players for
years, and then they get headhunted to another club as head coach, and what is
the first thing they do? They try to get their key players to move to the new
club, as well. They are like a positive cliche. Where one goes, they all go. Some
coaches and key players move together all the way through their playing life.
Why? Because just as the players think that the coach has made them
succeed, the coach thinks that the players have helped him or her succeed.
They
are a powerful team, and they feel powerful together. We all need to find an “internal coach” whom
we can work with and who would support us to climb our Everest.
4. Exhibit the ability to get ‘stuff’ done.
How do you build these key relationships? You build them by working on
projects with key stakeholders, complimenting their skills, and making them
look good.
Let, As one senior manager put it to me, “Over the years, I’ve had the
opportunity to work for some great ‘blue sky’ leaders, but they couldn’t
project-manage their way out of a lunch bag. While I’ve probably not been the
best at brainstorming new and creative ideas, in many situations I’ve been able
to take their ‘kernel’ of an idea, pour some fertilizer on it, and make it grow
and flourish into a great program and actually implement it.”
In projects, there are two key parts - the front end and the back end,
people and tasks, marketing and operations, talkers and doers. If the key
stakeholder is a talker, then you need to be a doer. If you are the key doer to
the key stakeholder, then you ain't going nowhere fast! They need you to keep
making their projects succeed.
5. Treat everyone with genuine respect.
It’s not just about managing well, but also about how you treat your peers,
team members, and vendors alike. You never know who you may be working for or
with some day, so treat everyone as you’d want to be treated and keep
confidences when someone confides in you and wants some advice. said one senior
manager in a global I.T. company “I believe in creating good
karma with those you interact with.”
Along with the other things as mentioned already, this
will stand you in good stead with decision makers and bring you allies and
supporters in the organization.
When business takes a turn for the worse and
they’re considering who to cut, you often won’t make the list if you have built
those relationships and have shown the ability to deliver with quality over and
over again.
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