INTRODUCTION
(WHAT'S
ALL THIS ABOUT AN OASIS? I JUST WANT TO FIND A DECENT
JOB!)
"Reality
is what refuses to go away when I stop believing
in it."
(Philip
K. Dick)
|
There
is no denying that the business of finding, getting and
holding on to a job has become increasingly difficult.
The post-war covenant of the ‘job-for-life’
has been irrevocably broken in the private sector and
the papers are full of articles stating that no one can
afford to live on a Public Service salary these days.
So where does that leave you? Well, a good starting point
is to accept the realities of the marketplace, generate
an understanding of how that marketplace goes about hiring
and build your approach on those foundations. Simple as
that. Sorry. (You were expecting maybe some rocket science?)
Ugly
Fact No. 1
JOB
SECURITY IS A THING OF THE PAST. REALLY.
|
Irrespective of your performance, of how well your department
or division is doing; irrespective of the strides taken
by your organisation on a local, national, continental
or global level, your job can evaporate overnight. Psychiatrists
tell us that one of the most fundamental coping mechanisms
that human beings use is denial – in fact, most
of us go through life denying the one certainty, death.
In my experience, too many people apply this kind of thinking
to their careers as well.
If
your expectations are realistic and your approach to the
job-hunt is just a little bit more professional than the
next person’s, your chances will dramatically improve.
If you take it up a notch and maintain a focus on your
career, instead of merely job-hunting, you will be head
and shoulders above the average. Learn to combine a long-term
focus on your career with meticulous preparation and presentation
for every aspect of the job-hunting process; and you will
be head, shoulders and torso above the competition.
Ask anybody you know who has to conduct selection interviews
as part of their job and they will tell you that professional,
courteous, well-researched and prepared candidates are
very rare animals. Interviewers have a tendency to lunge
across the table and grab such people with both hands
(see page 38, The Bogeyman.)
DON’T
JOB-HUNT – CAREER-HUNT
You would never take a journey in your car without a clear
destination in mind – you would just end up panicking
when you arrived at the first junction and didn’t
know which way to turn. And yet many people take exactly
that approach to their working lives. They
drift into something that they can do, or that they have
some modicum of talent for, whether or not it gives them
any real sense of satisfaction; and they follow the path
of least resistance in that job, drifting along with the
current, hoping for a promotion.
In
the past, you could at least rely on the organisation
to not dump you unless there was a very good reason –
as long as you were not downright incompetent and the
company was not haemorrhaging money, you were reasonably
safe. Today, there is no such security. This makes it
all the more imperative that you pursue a career that
you:
(a)
are good at and it would be a good
idea if you were very good at some aspects of it –
way better than average; and
(b)
enjoy more often than not – if
you are miserable more than half of the time in your
work, it is not good for your mental or physical wellbeing
(see page 372, Stress). It is also likely that someone
will notice that unhappiness. Happy workers are productive
workers and organisations in today’s cut-throat
marketplace are desperately in need of productivity
from their workforces. They will therefore want to hold
on to the most productive and best-motivated staff if
times get tougher and they have to trim the workforce
…
CAREERING
ALONG?
You can define the word ‘career’ in two ways
– as a noun or as a verb.
NOUN:
A job or occupation undertaken for a significant period
of a person’s life, usually with opportunities
for progress. Somebody’s progress in a chosen
profession or during that person’s working life.
(Well, that doesn’t sound too bad. ‘Significant
period … progress …’ It might even
be a bit of fun and pay a few bills along the way.)
VERB:
Move swiftly and in an uncontrolled way in a specified
(or unspecified) direction. Rush forward while lurching
or swaying. (One phrase you never want to hear over
the P.A. on a train, plane or bus is, ‘Folks,
I’m sorry to have to tell you this, but we are
careering out of control …’.)
A
CONSIDERED APPROACH …
My recommended approach to managing your career is very
straightforward (still no rocket science – sorry),
highly structured and can be encapsulated in these three
maxims:
 |
Get
short-listed. |
 |
Chance
favours the prepared mind. |
 |
At
the end of the day – remember it is only a
job. |
1.
GET SHORT-LISTED
If you are not a player, you can’t compete. Get
your fundamentals – the nuts and bolts of job-hunting
– correct from the outset. You don’t have
to think particularly strategically to do this, but there
are pitfalls for the unwary. WMO? will provide
you with useful insights for every stage of the process
and will help you to significantly tighten up your approach.
2.
CHANCE FAVOURS THE PREPARED MIND
That was Louis Pasteur’s answer to a question on
his approach to science and discovery. Thomas Jefferson
was a bit more wry: ‘It’s funny –
the harder I work, the luckier I seem to get.’ If
your current approach has not been consistently working,
starting to think this way will make all the difference.
You may have been getting to interview and even second
interview, but just not getting the final call-back. A
skimming or tactical approach to the process of landing
and keeping a job will only take you so far …
Managing
your career on an ongoing basis and undertaking job-hunts
as required are both enormously demanding activities.
In many cases, the effort involved in finding, researching
and securing a job is more challenging and time-consuming
than performance of the job itself. Only you can decide
how much effort to put into staying on top of your career
or any job-hunt and how much exertion that job is worth
to you. But I have always felt that it is better to be
a little over-prepared and not need it than to be under-prepared
and suddenly find yourself tongue-tied in the midst of
a vital interview. So the Chance Favours the Prepared
Mind maxim (which reminds me of that moment in The
Wizard of Oz when Dorothy says, ‘Toto,
I have a feeling we’re not in Kansas any more’)
brings you through a more strategic approach to career
management and playing in the bigger leagues.
3.
REMEMBER IT’S ONLY A JOB
Maintaining a sense of perspective in your career is central
to any balanced approach to life. Unless you are working
in the medical field or in an intrinsically dangerous
environment, it is very unlikely that an error on your
part is going to result in anybody’s death. So try
and bring a ‘nobody-is-going-to-die-here’
perspective to bear on the process as you go through it.
Every
day, people are told that they are going to meet their
maker. Despite the great strides we have taken in medicine,
doctors still have to deliver that awful piece of news
all the time. And I am willing to bet hard cash that no
one who has just been told they have six months to live
has ever said, ‘Gee, I wish I’d spent
more time at the office.’
Whether
you love or hate your job, whether you live to work or
work to live; remember at the end of the day, it is ONLY
A JOB! This is particularly important to bear
in mind as you choose the career moves you make, but it
is also a valuable perspective to maintain as you job-hunt.
That process can become all-consuming, to the detriment
of your relationships with your family and friends. It
is critical that you learn to prioritise and manage your
time, and build in enough leeway for domestic tasks, the
hunt, your family, your friends and yourself (see page
18, Managing Time Effectively).
MAKING
AN INVESTMENT
The professional, targeted approach that I am recommending
necessitates a considerable investment of time, effort
and energy (and perhaps a little cash along the way.)
What is your return on that investment? Well thus far,
your outlay consists of the few pounds that you have spent
on this book and now you are going to invest some, a lot
or a whole lot of time ... see
more
Extract from Where's
My Oasis? (The Essential Handbook For Everyone Wanting
That Perfect Job) by Rowan Manahan. © Published
by Vermilion (Random House) and priced at £12.99stg
(circa €18.00), the book is available at all good
booksellers and online through Easons
and Amazon.
More details here.