Do you have a case of the Mondays this morning? Break out of
the Monday morning blues by making some time in your schedule for your own
career development. Creating your own career development routine is a great way
to focus on yourself (which many of us have a tough time doing) and to prepare
yourself for the future. Your future may mean a new role at your current
company, a promotion, a new job at another company or a completely different
career path. Whatever your future may be, start preparing for it now.
So here is my recommendation to you. Take 10 minutes a week,
which we can all do, for this little routine.
1. Set your goals – expanded role, promotion, new
job or permanent role. Once you focus on what you want, think through a plan on
how to get there and start a list of all the important things you need to do to
prepare for it. If it’s a promotion, start scheduling some time with mentors
and your manager. If it’s a new job, start your list of updates needed: LinkedIn,
Resume, Cover Letter, etc.
2. Get out there – and by “there” I mean get on
social media. There is a wealth of information to prepare you and a vast
network to help you. The peanut butter and jelly for professional development?
LinkedIn is your peanut butter and Twitter is your jelly. Use LinkedIn more
than you already do. Actually do what everyone says you should do – add a profile
pic and update your information. But don’t stop there. Scan the newsfeed on it.
Its not just articles about editing resumes or how to interview well. You can
find out articles on public speaking, building presentations, market data,
weight loss, nutrition, work-life balance, everything under the sun. LinkedIn
has INfluencers – well-accomplished and respected individuals that write
articles for their followers. All these resources in just this one site provide
such a wealth of professional development opportunities. Let’s not forget
Twitter. Get on Twitter. Twitter is valuable in so many ways, but that’s for
another post.
3. Start a career tracker. It doesn’t have to be
anything fancy - even just a simple excel spreadsheet to record your
milestones, achievements and accomplishments.
Did you help your company save some money and come under budget? Record
it – especially the dollar amount. Did you help generate revenue for your
company in a new product or initiative? Record it – especially the dollar
amount and percentage. Did you work
through a project and had a really challenging time with the team? Record
it - especially how you helped the team
through the challenge. Spending a few minutes each week reflecting on your time
at work and documenting your milestones will help you prepare for the future.
If your company requires you to write a self-evaluation on your performance for
the year, you already have a documented list of your accomplishments. If you
want to start looking for a new role and need to update your resume, you
already have the foundation for making those updates to your resume and
preparing for interviews. And remember – the resume you want to prepare is one
that highlights your achievement and accomplishments in addition to your job
responsibilities.
4. Reach out to your network. Your network could be
former colleagues or managers, high school or college friends, family, etc.
Embrace the power of your personal network to help you professionally. I know
I’m not the first career genius to write an article about the importance of
scheduling “coffee chats” or lunches. But if you already don’t have a solid
routine of networking and keeping in touch with people – stop reading articles
about the importance of networking (with the exception of this one. . .just
finish it at least) and start sending out some emails and scheduling some catch-ups.
I spoke to someone from college the other day. We hadn’t talked in 12 years, but
we were on the phone for almost an hour. It was one of my favorite conversations
of the week. We picked up right where we left off and discovered that we have
an ability to work together in the future. It’s amazing what can happen from a
ten-minute conversation.
#careeruniv #getthejob #careerplanning
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