Monday, 27 July 2009

Work experiences you need

Developing and growing your career requires experience. It is through our successes and failures that we learn the most.

We tend to think about work experience as one-dimensional, in other words, that it is about experience in general. There are, however, different experience sets that we need to go through in order to develop our career. This depends first and foremost on our preferred career direction. The aim is to gather experiences that lead us toward our future direction.

Lets take an example. Ellen Goldman interviewed 36 CEO's to identify different types of work experiences that were important to develop the ability to think strategically. She identified 9 types, including for example:
  • General work experience: a wide ranging variety of experiences that are significant in scope and are autonomous.
  • Being mentored: particularly early on in one‘s career with have frequent contact and immediate feedback on performance.
  • Being challenged one-on-one by a key colleague about one‘s thinking.
  • Dealing with the threat of organisational survival by an external entity: for example a takeover threat or the loss of a key customer.
Think outside the box when it comes to what sets of experiences you may need.
Then, write down one action you will take to get one of these experiences in the next 14 days. Experiences won't happen unless you start somewhere!

Further reading: Goldman, Ellen F. (2008). The power of work experience: Characteristics critical to developing expertise in strategic thinking. Human Resource Development Quarterly, 19 (3): 217-239.


Friday, 10 July 2009

Amazing story of unique skill to business

This is an amazing short video clip of how a unique skill can be turned into a lucrative business. I'm sure this artist didn't setup to make millions...but watch the end of the video.

You'll enjoy the 2 minutes, click here.

The take away message: a niche market can be worth a fortune. If you have a talent, there may well be a way to make a career out of it.

(Thanks to Tom Poland for sharing this via www.The8020Blog.com)

Wednesday, 8 July 2009

You are not your job

It's the second BBQ question: "So, what do you do?" Nine out of ten people will respond with their job title after which the questioner immediately makes implicit conclusions about that person based on a stereotypical understanding of their job.

Those people who define themselves by their work find it difficult to change careers and are more affected when one of life's curve balls are thrown at them.

This is particular true during periods of unemployment. according to Canadian career expert, Norman Amundson. His research showed that the closer a person’s identity is linked to their work, the greater will be their difficulty in coping with the unemployment period.

You are not your work. Your career is certainly an important part of you, but it's only that: a part.

It is far more effective for your identity to be based on personal capacities and attitudes rather than on a traditional working relationship.