PDA

View Full Version : how maintain a long rewarding career!!!



01-25-2008, 02:32 PM
1. Not having a life plan.
All very successful people have a clear life plan, whether memorized or actually written down. They create it, massage it and refer to it often. Nearly 85 percent of people who are satisfied with their life overall have a personal action plan, McKee says.


“Without a plan, we leave our success in the hands of others who may or may not have time to look after other people’s successes,” he says.


2. Not keeping your skill set current.
The business landscape is ever-changing and there is more demand for jobs than supply. Not staying on par with colleagues and those vying for your job will be a deathtrap.


Companies are looking for ways to reduce expenses or get the maximum return on their investments, McKee says, including personnel. “If someone else is capable of producing a greater return, you are at risk of being replaced.”


3. Failing to deliver results.
Winners in business know that it’s all about accountability. Those who harbor a sense of entitlement for simply having put forth effort, irrespective of the results of those efforts, are guaranteed to fall by the wayside.


“Many individuals simply don’t understand that business and professional fields … are becoming more like the radio business,” he says. “If one’s ‘ratings’ are going down, they get replaced.”


4. Confusing efficiency with effectiveness.
Those who think that communicating via e-mail replaces the need to actually talk with people around them fail to recognize the importance of personally connecting with others in today’s highly automated and technological environment. Communicating in person is imperative for success-seekers.


5. Believing you are irreplaceable.
There is no room for “divas” in the workplace. As soon as you convince yourself that you and only you can do the job “right,” your star will surely start to fall.


6. Knowing all the answers.
The old adage remains true: Knowledge is power. Professing to know it all can readily stagnate a career. Winners remain unceasingly interested in learning ideas and approaches.


“The best leaders love to ask questions,” McKee says. “They stay current, get new ideas to follow up on and earn the respect of their teams. With that respect, the team members are more likely to work harder for the boss.”


7. Surrounding yourself with “brown-nosers.”
Serial “labor losers” like having people tell them how smart they are, whether or not it’s true. Successful managers and other professionals accept and encourage intelligence and creativity in others.


8. Forgetting to give credit to others.
Labor losers inappropriately take full credit for positive events despite the help or input received by others. Winners give credit where credit is due.


“People are becoming less likely to sit back quietly while their boss steals ideas or takes credit for great ideas which weren’t their own,” McKee says.


9. Failing to self-promote.
Bragging is one thing, but letting colleagues in your industry know of your success through case studies, promotion bulletins or other such tools is another. Labor losers often fail to recognize the importance of letting others know about their successes, or they go about it in the entirely wrong way.


10. Losing perspective.
Intuitive business people recognize that, despite their best attempts to do everything right, sometimes they approach roadblocks and seek the advice and perspective of a respected friend, colleague or even a business coach. Those who fail to recognize their shortcomings are destined for the unemployment line.

01-25-2008, 05:14 PM
Surprised you did not post your name to ensure your fast track to brass row, that is unless you are already there.

01-25-2008, 06:57 PM
Street cop,

What part of the above do u disagree with? or think is inappropriate?

I'm not the original poster nor in brass row (neither do a I want to be there btw)...

It seems like good advice tho...

A life plan IS a good idea; or do you plan on living just off your FRS (when you retire) and that's it?

01-30-2008, 06:21 PM
Very good and well put dissertation. I want the name of the book you copied it from, also, to avoid all those pitfalls, why not just go into business for one's self?