Technically, ostriches can’t fly because they are not graced
with a working pair of wings. But I love
the metaphor, because few things will facilitate your professional demise more certainly
than keeping your head buried in the proverbial sand.
As a professional leadership coach, I have had the experience of helping countless professionals navigate and recover from what can only be described as professional upheavals. These misfortunes are often described as complete “blindsides”, coming unexpectedly “out of left field”. And yet, upon reflection, most people look back on the period of time immediately prior to the misfortune and say things like, “I should have seen it coming” or I can see now that “this was going on for a while”.
As a professional leadership coach, I have had the experience of helping countless professionals navigate and recover from what can only be described as professional upheavals. These misfortunes are often described as complete “blindsides”, coming unexpectedly “out of left field”. And yet, upon reflection, most people look back on the period of time immediately prior to the misfortune and say things like, “I should have seen it coming” or I can see now that “this was going on for a while”.
The challenge for all of us is to stay present enough to
focus on the changing political tides that are shifting all the time in our
professional lives, without becoming too distracted, preoccupied, or downright
paranoid in the process. When I speak to
professionals about participating in office politics the reaction is always the
same: utter disdain, closely followed by
an indignant proclamation that “I don’t engage in all that”. As if the suggestion of exercising their
professional influence deliberately is something smarmy, akin to a selling of thier soul. Whether you work in large company, a small
family business or even as an independent professional serving customers, your
ability to read the proverbial “writing on the wall” may be the difference
between work-related success and failure.
So what exactly can you do to prevent yourself from falling
victim to the lost customer, the missed promotion, the organizational
restructure that leaves you with a lousy outcome? The best answer: stay engaged and present.
For most of us, the first reaction when things get uncertain
in our work life is to “hunker down”. We
stay “under the radar”, trusting that our good work will speak for itself and
that things will ultimately work out for the best. This approach is risky. Whether you are serving a customer, satisfying a new boss, or trying
to change a reputation issue, actively influencing your outcomes is much wiser. Here's how:
Pay Attention
Observe the relationships of others. Who seems to be in the know? What leaders seem to be losing traction,
involved in less announcements, less visible in decisions, presentations? This
could give you a sense of where the organization is headed. If it’s a customer you are working with, who
is the true decision maker? Make sure
you are getting in front of the right people.
Trust Your Gut
We are all blessed with an instinctive “brain” that lives in
our belly. It allows us to sense when
things may not be quite right. Allowing
your gut instinct to ruminate into worry and fear will not do you any good. If
you can, instead, practice staying tuned-in to those instincts and moving that
“feeling” to the rational brain for further analysis, you can capitalize on the
natural foreshadowing tool that it is.
Stay Connected
Be visible. Make sure
others are always aware of what you “do all day”. This doesn’t have to be an 8-hour commercial for
your personal brand. But copying others
on important emails (selectively), and mentioning your daily activities in
casual conversation, will allow others to stay aware of your contributions. Ask to be involved in key meetings. Ask questions and demonstrate interest,
informally and often.
Listen to Influencers
Within every organization there are those whose power and
influence extends far beyond the hierarchal position or pay grade. Stay familiar with those folks. Pay attention
to where they are focusing their energies. Don’t ever mistake the office gossip
for an influencer. If you do, you will
be doing nothing but wasting your time. And when the conversation turns to conspiracy theories, it’s time to get
back to work.
Embrace Change
Stay open and be on the flexible side. Changes may not be favorable but if they are
already set in stone, resisting them will only alienate you. If you have legitimate concerns, make your
best attempt to share them constructively and then follow orders. Time has a way of exposing flawed decision-
making. You don’t have to be the one to
do that if there is a resistance to rethinking an established direction.
Volunteer
Stay positive and involved. Look for ways to make yourself indispensable. This will keep you “in the
know” when new directions materialize. Helpful people simply do better when it comes to forming strong
professional connections.
Address Tension
When you feel that a bridge may be burning, approach the
tension with an open mind and seek to understand the source of the friction. Remember perceptions are never “wrong”. They represent the other person’s “real and
accurate” experience of a situation. Share information and educate, rather than becoming defensive. Stay away
from blame; it will never change the past anyway. Always bring a future mindset and a goal of
having things go more smoothly in the future.
There is no single strategy that will keep your career
moving in a positive direction and no advice that will protect you from the suffering the slings and arrows of outrageous fortune from time to time. But at least for me, there is nothing worse than being
caught unprepared. "Predict-ability" is
the one skill that will give you an advantage no matter what your future holds.
imagecredit:clivebates.com
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