This
blogs borrows from the PRINCE2 seven principles of project management blogged
about by projectmanuk; it shall attempt to put the emotional
aspects of your career to the side in order to help you progress and achieve your
ambitions and goals. It is particularly aimed at minority groups, as they are
significantly more likely to face challenges in their work life. But that being said, the principles can also
be applied to a career less likely to face these challenges - quite often the
people who would be best placed to lead organisations don’t do so because they
place organisational improvement before individual politics; in this
circumstance nearly everyone misses out.
- Business justification:
Consider your career as a range of short-term
projects
·
Undergraduate to graduate,
·
Traineeship to chartered,
·
Chartered to senior, etc.
Then work out how what is required to get you
there, how much this will cost and what additional time you will need to put
in. Compare this to the return on your investment - and by return I don’t just
mean the average salary you are likely to make, but also the value you place on
doing your job, the experiences it will give you and the opportunities it will
open up. Keep a check on this at certain key points in your career as
circumstances can change, ensure you’re are getting what you need and reassess
if you are not. If your career is no longer worth the investment it might be
worth finding out why and possibly moving firms or changing careers.
- Defined roles and responsibilities:
Find out exactly what
your job role entails and what the job above you requires. Check yourself
against your ability to undertake these tasks. Don’t wait for an internal
appraisal be proactive so that when your appraisal does come around, you can
justify why you think you are ready for that promotion or rise. If the
promotion comes around before you have ticked all the boxes still put yourself
forward if you have 60% complete. If nothing else it will give you good
experience, but being able to show how you have taken hold of your own
development, and the skills you have learned over a given period, can prove
that you have what is required to do the job even if you’re are not 100%
fighting fit. Also, find out the roles of your managers - I don’t advise that
you poke a bear with a stick by pointing out where your managers are going
wrong, but rather help where you can - show you are an asset that will move the
company forward. In short, make sure you really are doing your job and push to
achieve the skills you will need for a promotion. Most importantly, make sure
people know about it otherwise there really is very little point - I don’t know
about you, but I’m too busy trying to manage my own life to be able to notice
every detail of someone else’s.
- Manage by exception:
Learn to trust your colleagues and sub-contractors
whilst still holding them accountable for their work, in other words let go a
little. No one will thank you for micro-managing, and at a professional level
you shouldn’t have to. Rather, build relationships and trust and empower those
around you to want to produce good work - you’ll be surprised how often people
do when given the chance. This doesn’t mean you should be “soft”, if people
don’t deliver hold them to account, ensure they redo work and let them know
what is and isn’t acceptable – just don’t start a relationship with them as if
you have already made up your mind that they will fail, or it will become a
self-fulfilling prophecy. Make sure you record the results of your success;
soft skill approaches like this can make managers seem “lucky” as there is no
visible cause and effect - so show the long term gain in your approach by
measuring how often your projects/contractors come in on time/budget/quality
and present this to your managers at appraisal. As previously mentioned, they
often only know what you tell them, so tell them more.
- Focus on skills:
Think about the skills
you want to develop; realistically these should tie into your career plan.
Working on the development of these skills can provide you with a way of
talking about your development that avoids an emotional situation. For example,
instead of talking about how you would have liked to have progressed further
and feel unhappy that you haven’t, you can work to develop additional skills
that will get you there and use the sum of these skills as evidence for
promotion.
- Learn from experience:
Don't risk making the same again and again no
matter how unfair the situation might be; consider why certain aspects went
well or badly, then incorporate the lessons learned into your approach to your
next project. Humans have an amazing capacity to learn, but when it comes to
repeating errors made during previous projects, we all too often fail to learn
the lessons. If you are not being taken seriously or getting promotions,
consider the message you are putting across, learn to manage upwards and
sideways as well as down and don’t expect that anyone will notice what you have
done just because you have done it.
- Tailor to suit the environment:
Understand how your boss and colleagues work tailor
your approach. That doesn’t mean changing your personality, rather working to
help them achieve their agendas. It can be too easy to base the world of work
upon our own ethics of what is right and wrong; how people should and shouldn’t
act - in reality, this is rarely the case - we all have our own moral compass
and it’s surprising how much they differ.
The biggest problem with discrimination that two-thirds
of minority groups in construction are likely to face is that we will never
know about it. From unconscious bias to paternal instincts, discrimination
rarely makes a grand entrance these days preferring instead to sneak about in
the shadows having a subtle, but important, impact on a career that we don’t
usually notice until we feel like it’s too late.
By taking firmer control of your career you can at
least be sure you are guiding it in the right direction, and whilst this will
not always enable you to overcome discrimination and bias, it will at least
give you a way forward.
Happy Building, Chrissi.
For all things construction and equality, get yourself over to the Constructing Equality Ltd. website.
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