This blog is to share current observations, perspectives, practical applications, and of course, opinions. It will cover organizational structure and management, process, process improvement, and project management.
Showing posts with label job seeking. Show all posts
Showing posts with label job seeking. Show all posts
Wednesday, June 13, 2018
Monday, January 12, 2015
Start the New Year with Knowledge
In a recent conversation with a couple line associates, it came to my attention that many managers have no experience managing people. I commented about education and thought maybe they don’t teach management in college. The response I received was “they do in business school.”
Personally, I don’t have a business degree, but my very first college class was management. I have been managing people my entire career. One possibility is the proliferation of MBA graduates has caused the mindset you must have this degree to be a manager. Let me tell you here and now, managers exist in all industries! And most don’t have business degrees. Unfortunately, with or without a business degree there are many bad managers. I firmly believe management of people is an innate skill, either you have it or you don’t. People with marginal people skills can be coached. There is no dearth of management training books, seminars, or courses?
So why are there so many poor managers? There is a plethora of answers and I can not begin to cover them all. Here are just a few I’ve learned while consulting:
- Haphazardly promoted into management, because the associate was good in their previous position (Peter Principle, of course many managers didn’t learn it)
- Education credentials in their expertise, but without people skills
- Sychophants
- Great sales people
- Age discrimination - the company wanted young managers
- Nepotism or favortism
How can this situation improve, as it is detrimental to productivity, company culture health and creates higher associate turnover?
- Like the 12 step program, the higher level managers must recognize the problem. To do this they must have an open-door policy or mechanism to hear from the lower ranks. The 360 program is a good tool for this.
- Upper level management must be in touch with operations and human resources
- Provide management training and feedback
- Be bold enough to make manager changes
- When hiring, look for management courses, experience or people skills on the résumé
- Recognize people management skills can come from any industry
If you’re a job seeker or looking to grow in your career, look for ways to develop your management skills. I learned many of my techniques from excellent senior managers. I picked what I saw was effective and ineffective ways to motivate people. The most effective tool, I’ve experienced, is a mentor. A mentor does not have to be within your company. Stay in touch with your mentor frequently to review observed and your own people management techniques.
Start the year off with new skills and knowledge.
Monday, February 6, 2012
Interviewing vs. Consulting
Every interview I have experienced, seems more like free consulting than a job interview. Granted I appreciate the non-traditional questions, i.e. what are your strengths and weaknesses, but the questions seem to be solving their problems rather than conveying my long term skill sets.
What if candidates could charge for their time and expenses, if they are not offered the job? Do you think this would change the interview landscape? Think of it as "spec" work. No one likes, or should, do work for free. If you build it, it has value. If you educate on problem solving, it's the same thing.
Labels:
candidate,
consulting,
education,
interview,
job seeking,
problem solving,
skill sets,
spec
Thursday, March 25, 2010
From Silly to Absurd
The economy has redefined many job descriptions and I've written about position consolidation before. This one takes the cake. I spoke with a recruiter yesterday looking for the following skill sets in one person.
Account Executive
Industrial Engineer
Brand and Marketing
Digital Pre-Press
Consumer Products
Graphic Design
[Discipline] Engineer
I'm afraid to ask, "how many more disciplines can you get in one person?" Okay, I can't resist. They forgot plumber and physical therapist. Now it's complete.
Account Executive
Industrial Engineer
Brand and Marketing
Digital Pre-Press
Consumer Products
Graphic Design
[Discipline] Engineer
I'm afraid to ask, "how many more disciplines can you get in one person?" Okay, I can't resist. They forgot plumber and physical therapist. Now it's complete.
Labels:
economy,
job consolidation,
job description,
job seeking,
marketing
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