Friday, May 29, 2020
Ready for Promotion 10 Steps to Stepping Up
Ready for Promotion 10 Steps to Stepping Up Imagine its Monday morning. Are you relishing the week or are you seeing it as Day 1 of a new hostage situation? Are you managed by a moron, captive in a role youve out-grown and fearful that the smell in your nostrils is that of your career, stagnating? If so, its time to move up or move on. Youre under-utilised, highly employable and a person of action (right?), but storming into your bosss office, pounding the table and demanding your just rights â" promotion or youll walk â" is highly unlikely to deliver what you want. A deep rooted certainty that you know best, a conviction that everyone else is inadequate and threats amounting to blackmail are no basis for convincing anyone youâre a team player and ready for more responsibility. So what is? Step 1 Imagine yourself attending an interview for that next step-up role. Ask yourself three questions: What role are you applying for? Whatâs the scope of responsibility? What might you be expected to achieve? If you were applying for a vacant role, then that thinking would have been done already by your potential future boss. In your case, you have a blank canvas on which you can imagine your ideal role or your next logical career step. Step 2 Consider the practicalities. Think about how your imagined role fits within the organisation. Are you focusing on your bossâs job, or a new role entirely? Where does the company have problems? For a new role, how could a new appointment and a change in structure be brought about? What are the benefits of doing so? Step 3 Now work out why someone should appoint you. Why are you suitable? What have you done previously that indicates you can take on extra responsibility? Why are you better than other candidates that might be found? How would you approach starting the job? What would you look to achieve in your new role? Step 4 Make a final decision. If you decide that the step is too great today thatâs not a problem, your thinking will help you identify where youâre weak. You can start to bolster that immediately, secure in the knowledge youâre being a proactive career builder, not just a moaning Minnie or a critical Colin. Step 5 Commit. Nail your flag to the mast and set sail before the tide turns by booking an appointment with either your boss or HR. The formality signals theyâll need to pay attention, youâre not just cruising by for a casual drop-in no-worries chat. If youâre asked for a reason, avoid the word promotion and stay non-threatening. âHey boss? Youâve had your go and Iâm thinking you should move on,â will see you facing a well armed wall of negativity before you even get in the room. Step 6 Keep things open. Run the discussion as an enquiry, not a demand. Let your boss know that you believe youâre ready to look at taking on more. State why you think the time is right, but keep it short, sharp and focused â" this is no time for a rambling discourse on the bleak path of your career-life to date. As a matter of strategy, ask your boss how they see things and what opportunities there could be. You never know what they might surprise you with, plus you donât risk selling yourself short. Step 7 Be patient and realistic. The ideal result would be a prompt, defined and supportive well-structured plan that could include further training. Congratulations and a glass of something celebratory would be in order. The sub-optimal result would be a load of wooly promises accompanied by, âWeâre working on it. It will all take time and itâs a bit complicatedâ. If your boss looks shifty and sounds nervous, itâs a fair bet youâre driving into a blind alley. Step 8 Look grateful. Whatever comes back, or doesnât, look and sound appreciative. If youâve now got a new role to look forward to, be thankful for the help and support. If youâre disappointed, gutted even, thereâs no benefit in showing it. Step 9 Set a new course. If you havenât got the result you want, itâs time to look outside. Thankfully, all of your earlier thinking will help you to focus on the type of role to look for and help you draw together a much stronger CV. Step 10 Set a deadline for action. Today. Now. Make it this Friday. This is really hard to do when you feel like youâve just been kicked in the teeth, but trust me, itâs the best therapy. Aim to find something to apply to by the end of the week. Look for ads, but if you donât find any, target suitable employers directly. Donât let the days, weeks and months just slip by in a sea of demotivation. In conclusion, one way or another, youâre moving forward. You made a decision, thought it through and took some actions. If your existing employer wonât recognise your potential itâs their loss, so find a more enlightened one that will. Youâve already proved that youâre capable of taking on more, by having the guts to do what youâve done already. Too many people just sit and wait for the job fairy to happen by. Itâs your life and your career, hit it hard! I wish you well with it, good hunting and always remember â" no prisoners. About the author: Jon Gregory is an author, editor, blogger trainer on all things job hunting, interview prep career development.
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