Everyone needs goals and targets in their lives to keep them on track. If you do not have goals, you will find yourself off kilter and stumbling for control. Get your priorities straight and set some goals, both personal and professional. These will help you safeguard your career - because once you are set to achieve these goals, you are actually working harder and better than before. And effort in the workplace is not going to be unnoticed.
Positive Thinking
The way you perceive and accept challenges in the workplace is going to help you safeguard your career. This may sound cliche, but the concept of positive thinking manifests itself in your work. Nothing is impossible when you are thinking positively. With the art of positive thinking, you can achieve anything and that is the attitude that makes winners on the job.
Visualize
If you want something done, then do it yourself. Do not wait for people to do it for you. Go take a course, attend workshops and expand your knowledge. This involves thinking like you already have what you want. It is all about visualizing your success and achieving it. This power of visualization goes hand in hand with the power of positive thinking.
Self-Examination
People who regularly examine themselves where knowledge and motivation are concerned are more likely to succeed in the workplace. This is because by doing so, they are accepting the fact that there is room for improvement and they go ahead and learn the necessary skills to safeguard their careers.
They motivate themselves in whatever way possible to be the best and achieve the most so that their efforts get noticed and they are not the first to be laid off in times of company crises. These are the people who are seen as valuable assets to the company - and this is what matters.
Understand Problems
There are certain things that are beyond your control. You need to accept that problems are part and parcel of the ever-changing business world. You need to understand this and deal with it.
This is how you will grow and learn to find solutions to problems. Do not let problems fester, because later they will be impossible to deal with. Learn to deal with problems head on and be a problem-solver. This is a sure-fire way to protect your career.
It isn't sexy to think about, but in today's world, only the strongest survive in their careers. Make sure you are one of them.
I guess the first question you ask will be why managing. Well, this is because career development, at least for managers and specialist professionals, is much more complicated than it used to be, certainly here in Europe, and also in most highly advanced countries, and is becoming equally more complex in the rapidly developing countries also.
The days of leave school or university, find job, work there for 20, 30, 40 years, is over in almost all sectors thankfully. It may have been a form of security for individuals, but it led to sterility, poor practice, inefficiency, laziness, and hostile resistance to change. True, some rare individuals behaved creatively, enthusiastically, took risks, were ambitious, but these few could never counter the millions who settled in, kept their heads down, and looked forward to retirement sometime in the next century.Thankfully,again, those days are over. Now, all organisations in the commercial sectors, and most organisations in the public sector, are demanding evidence that each individual is continuously developing, is learning new skills, and is preparing for change positively and enthusiastically.
Years and years in the same job, promotion by stepping into dead men's shoes, individuals with only the same skills and knowledge that they had when they started, 10 years in the job, 1 year's experience. These are no longer tolerated, not by the organisation's senior managers, nor by customers. The organisation has a people development policy, each department has a local staff development plan, each individual is now expected to have a personal development plan. In some professions, such as accountancy, the legal profession, engineering, teaching, nursing (a list that is growing rapidly) the specialist must show hard evidence that they are up to date in the knowledge and skills needed currently, otherwise they risk being prevented from continuing in that role. So for those employed by organisations, career development is now, you guessed it a permanent, part-time, job.
A series of activities, such as being aware of developments in the business sector, planning ahead, identifying training needs, selecting appropriate ways to achieve those needs, finding courses, choosing between classroom and distance learning, and of course, finding a way to pay the study fees. And this has to go on year after year after year continuous, continuing, professional development. If you are familiar with quality management techniques, you will recognise this as a form of continuous improvement , kaizen as the Japanese call it. It's a major, never-ending, personal task and as such, needs considerable thought, considerable effort, a strategy, a plan to ensure that you don't fall by the wayside and watch others race ahead, beating you to the best jobs, the key roles, the interesting projects, the higher salaries, the better conditions.
And if you are, or are planning to be, an entrepreneur . There's no escape for you just because you don't work for someone else you have others in your life who are equally demanding:suppliers, clients, customers, employees, other entrepreneurs, professional colleagues, these groups rely on you, expect you, to be as knowledgeable and skilled as it is reasonably possible to be. If you are not, your suppliers will take advantage of you, your clients will reject you, your customers will disappear, your employees will leave you, other entrepreneurs will take away your suppliers, clients, customers, and best employees, and your professional colleagues will lose respect for you.
So there's no escape from managing your career proactively, if you want to have a successful and fulfilling work life.
Both Tony Jacowski & Cj Williams are contributors for EditorialToday. The above articles have been edited for relevancy and timeliness. All write-ups, reviews, tips and guides published by EditorialToday.com and its partners or affiliates are for informational purposes only. They should not be used for any legal or any other type of advice. We do not endorse any author, contributor, writer or article posted by our team.
Tony Jacowski has sinced written about articles on various topics from University, Six Sigma and Information Technology. Tony Jacowski is a quality analyst for The MBA Journal. Aveta Solution's Six Sigma Online offers online and certification classes for six sigma pro. Tony Jacowski's top article generates over 90500 views. to your Favourites.
Cj Williams has sinced written about articles on various topics from Careers and Job Hunting, Education and The Internet. CJ Williams is a tutor and management consultant currently working with Brighton School of Business and Management in the UK, specialising in Business and Management courses taught via distance learning. The writer, CJ Williams, can be contacted at. Cj Williams's top article generates over 5400 views. to your Favourites.