Workparent: The Complete Guide to Succeeding on the Job, Staying True to Yourself, and Raising Happy Kids by Daisy Dowling
Author:Daisy Dowling [Dowling, Daisy]
Language: eng
Format: epub
Tags: parenting, business
ISBN: 9781633698406
Google: mi3wDwAAQBAJ
Amazon: B08CNNPS8R
Publisher: Harvard Business Press
Published: 2021-05-24T16:00:00+00:00
When you became a working mother or father, chances are you also became so preoccupied, busy, and tired that your attention to career hygiene fell by the wayside. Career hygiene consists of all those things you do to keep your overall professional reputation and future in good form. It includes critical activities like networking, honing your technical skills, staying current on industry news and events, remaining visible to the powers that be, appropriate self-promotion, and raising your hand for unique assignments that can get you further into the career spotlight. It also includes smaller, more tactical items: keeping your LinkedIn profile fresh, having your âkey wins and accomplishmentsâ speech ready for when you bump into your bossâs boss in the elevator, and so forth. Technically, none of those things has anything whatsoever to do with being a parentâbut if youâre not doing them because youâre a parent, youâre creating some real career headwinds for yourself and may be inadvertently stepping out of contention for that next big gig. If and when you decide to âgo for itâ careerwise, youâll want to move back into the front seat, so to speak, on all of these activities. Do an honest assessment, just for yourself: Hand on heart, how much opportunistic networking have you done since the baby was born? Whenâs the last time you spoke to a professional recruiter? What about the monthly departmental after-work drinks eventsâhave you been going to those? Have you given your career, and not just your work, adequate care and feeding? If not, youâll want to ease back into doing so.
If youâre in a more acute career-management moment, like interviewing for a new role or pushing your boss for that big promotion, thereâs something else youâll want to do, which is to create a Third-Person Sellâessentially, a concise pitch about who you are as a professional, why the organization canât live without you, and why you deserve to be in a more senior seat. The Third-Person Sell is a means of pulling together the most compelling aspects of your skills and performance and âpackagingâ them in a way that feels comfortable and genuine to you, that will resonate with the relevant decision-maker, and thatâmost importantâis easily repeatable. When the CEO of your organization turns to your boss and says, âtell me about [him or her],â your Sell is the two next sentences you want to come out of your bossâs mouth. Itâs the senior-leader-resonant version of your professional story.
If you donât have your Sell ready (and few people do), letâs go ahead and create it. To start, ask yourself, How do I want to be known, professionally? Get into character a little: imagine youâre the head honcho making the hire-or-promote decision (in this case, on yourself). Whatâs really important to the organizationâs success, and why is this personâyouâthe man or woman particularly equipped to accomplish it? Youâre a flinty senior leader, and youâve got many other candidates to consider. Why is this candidate uniquely qualified? If this
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