Thursday 19 February 2015

Job

culled from:careerealism.com


The hard part is identifying if it is the actual job that is not right for you, or if it is just a tough period of time for you, your manager, or the company. Here are a few ways to recognize the difference between a poor fit (and it might be time to start looking) and just a tough time.

1. Your goals are not aligned with the company.

Knowing what you want to achieve in your job is the first step in building a career. Setting goals on what you aspire to and the type of work and projects you want to be involved in helps you focus your work and deliver on the things that make you proud. When these goals for your career are not aligned with the company, you, my friend, are in the wrong job. Your goals as a professional and what you hope to achieve should align with the company goals.

2. You are discouraged from being you.

You should not be forced to be one person at work and another person at home. It’s simply too taxing. Finding a company that values your unique attributes is important. Staying somewhere that doesn’t isn’t a good long-term plan.

3. The culture makes you uncomfortable.

Let’s say you are a super environmentally friendly person and your company doesn’t give a rip about waste. Or conversely, you are the type of person who has completed their job by 5, but the culture is one of “whoever logs the most hours, wins!” These are cultural disconnects that are very difficult to overcome.

4. You don’t see a career path (if you want one).

To many people career progression is important. To others, not so much. So, if you want a career path and your company doesn’t provide a way to advance your career and skills, this isn’t the place for you. Conversely, if you are completely satisfied in your job and want to do that forever, but the expectation is progression, then, this may not be the place for you.

5. The actual job is different than what was described.

Ah, the old bait and switch. In the interview, you get so excited about the culture and the day-to-day, and when you get there, it isn’t even close to what was pitched. It is a massive disappointment.

6. “Other duties as assigned” is the bulk of your job.

If you look at your job description, typically, the first 3-5 bullets are going to be where you spend your time. You feel good about those bullets because, well, that is what you do for a living. When the bulk of your day does not resemble any of the bullets on your job description and you are into the “other duties as assigned” world all the time – let that be a flashing red light.

7. Your manager stresses you out.

If you are always dreading a conversation with your manager, you find that your shoulders are regularly scrunched up near your ears, or you consistently get a stomach ache thinking about your next manager interaction and nothing you’ve done is fixing this, it’s time to explore other options.

8. You show up energetic and are drained before lunch.

When you are working on your favorite stuff, it should give you energy. It is your Zone of Genius. When you are working on stuff you hate, it drains your energy. If your energy is drained daily by lunch, you’re doing too much of the stuff that drains you and you are in the wrong job.

9. You keep saying: “When this XYZ is over, it will be better.”

Saying it once, maybe twice is fine. We all go through periods at work where it is stressful or challenging, but when you continually keep thinking that when something is over, it will be better. Chances are, it’s the job not XYZ that is making life so hard.

10. You’re bored… all the time.

When your assignments and tasks are simply not challenging you in any way and, despite asking for new and interesting things to do, you are pigeonholed, it might be time to find greener pastures.

11. Your accomplishments are never enough.

You’re working very hard to achieve the goals. You achieve the goals, and they are never enough for your manager or the company, this is a big sign that you may not be in the right role at the right company. Feeling valued is a key component of career satisfaction.
So, ask yourself, are these challenges your experiencing consistent? Are you in the right job at the right company? Remember, every career is temporary.

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