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    3 Job Search Tips That Increase Your Success

    1) Approach finding a job as if it were a full-time job, because it is. If you had a job, you would report to work at the same time each day (like 8 am), take an hour (or less) for lunch, and quit at the same time each day (like 5 pm). You would work five days every week. And you would work hard to accomplish as much as you could because your career depended upon it.

    When you are searching for a job, you should follow the same type of schedule because your future depends upon it.

    Treating your job search like a part-time hobby guarantees that it will take longer.

    So, begin tomorrow by reporting to work and spending the day on tasks that lead to a job.

    2) Approach finding a job as if it were a project. That means you should set goals for yourself, make plans, and monitor your progress. You should apply all of the tools and skills that you used in your last job to the project of finding your next job.

    As you must expect, this is an important project. The sooner you complete it, the sooner you gain a promotion into a job.

    3) Be your own boss. Set expectations for what you need to accomplish, provide direction, and monitor your work.

    Meet with yourself once each week to evaluate your performance. I recommend doing this by writing two reports. The first is a candid evaluation of what you accomplished during the previous week. The second is a description of your plans for the coming week. Your plans should include your goals, actions, and priorities.

    The first time that you write these reports, write an evaluation of what you have done so far. Describe the results that this effort has produced. And compare these results with what you wanted to have.

    Next, map out a realistic plan for the next week based on achievable goals. For example, you could set goals for the number of people you will call, the number of networking meetings you will attend, and the research you will conduct.

    In the coming weeks, compare the results that you obtained during the previous week with the goals that you set. For example, if you planned to attend twelve networking meetings and you attended only two, you should a) explain why this happened and b) plan actions that will correct such a difference. You should also analyze why you missed your goal because this provides insights on what you need to do differently. For example, Your goal (e.g., of attending twelve networking meetings) may have been set too high. Or maybe there are things you can do that will make it easier to achieve your job search goals, such as car pooling with a friend who is also looking for a job.

    Finding a job is a full time job. Work through it with a plan and the support of a good boss (yourself).

    I wish you the best of success.

    25 Leadership Maxims

    “We will never know how really good we are as leaders unless we are leading people to be better than they think they are.”

    “Poor performance is less harmful to a leader than mediocre performance disguised as good performance.”

    “Most leaders are striving to get the wrong results or the right results in the wrong ways.”

    “The lowest forms of leadership involve rewards and punishments.”

    “Getting along is not necessarily getting results.”

    “If you can’t feel it, you can’t lead it, and they won’t do it.”

    “Leadership is the trim tab of all careers.”

    “Leadership is seeing hope in any adversity.”

    “To make a difference, be the difference.”

    “In leadership, you don’t have to expect the worse, you just have to make the most of it when it happens.”

    “The best leaders make use of the simplest of ideas.”

    “If you are always right, you are usually wrong.”

    “The best way for a leader to communicate an idea is to bundle it in a human being.”

    “The most persuasive art of leadership is to hide your leadership.”

    “Refraining from action is sometimes the best action.”

    “It’s not so much what you say as a leader that’s important; it’s the action the people take after you have had your say.”

    “In leadership, the value of every need is in its use.”

    “Leadership is not about living a easy life for ourselves but a hard life for others.”

    “We ourselves are our own biggest obstacles to becoming better leaders.”

    “Leadership is showing people not that they must take a certain action but that they GET TO take that action.”

    “Half the art of listening is waiting.”

    “To get the best out of people, embrace the best in them.”

    “People are often unaware of the best that’s in them. When you show it to them, you are half way down the road to motivating them to be your cause leaders.”

    “Achievement needs three things, the leader, the cause leader, and the moment.”

    “In the long run, the most important results of leadership are not what we achieve but what we become in that achieving.”

    “Take This Job and Shove It” is a Country Song NOT a Best Practice

    “Find a job you like and you add five days to every week.”
    -H. Jackson Brown, Jr.

    Sometimes it’s an easy choice to leave a company. However, one of the most important choices that you can make in your career is to leave your current employer in the right way. Like any other relationship, there are faults and virtues with every company. At the end of a relationship, people tend to focus on the faults.

    BREAKING UP IS HARD TO DO
    When you leave a company, it is like breaking up with a boyfriend or girlfriend. Regardless of how you do it, there will still be emotions. The longer the relationship, the deeper the feelings. Keep this in mind during the separation. People express their emotions in different ways so be prepared to respond with compassion.

    IT’S A SMALL WORLD
    I’ve learned first hand not to burn bridges. In fact, I was hired by my former boss within two years of leaving the company. He had moved onto a bigger job with another company and thought of me when a position came open in his department. Since we already had a great relationship, the interview process was both short and painless. Also, the job was a significant step up for me both professionally and financially.

    TO DO OR NOT TO DO?
    Here are a few do’s and don’ts that may help make the transition a little easier for everyone.

    DO write and give a simple resignation letter to your immediate boss and, perhaps, your Human Resources Director, if appropriate. By putting a few key items in writing, it memorializes your intention to leave the company. It also gives you a chance to pre-play the discussion with your boss. The letter should include the following: your last day on the job, open items that you need to complete prior to leaving, and any work that you will need to pass off to someone else.

    DON’T say anything negative about the company or anyone working for the company. While this is a good policy to employ at all times, it is even more critical when you are leaving. Disgruntled employees may seek you out during this time to air their negative feelings about the company or people working for the company. Resist the temptation to entertain these conversations. It is likely that your comments will be shared with others.

    DO give as much advance notice as possible to allow for a smooth transition. Typically, this is two to four weeks. Use your best judgment to decide how long you will need to give keeping in mind what’s best for the company. Be aware that is also possible that the company will ask you to leave immediately, especially if you’re going to work for a competitor. This is nothing personal and should not be considered an insult.

    DO work hard until you leave. It’s perfectly natural to get “short-timer’s disease” as you have already mentally moved onto the new position. Whether discussing movies, books, or relationships; people generally remember the beginning and end more than the middle.

    DON’T take anything that is not yours. Whether it’s a stapler, a book that belongs to the company, copy paper, or paper clips; leave them behind. While you’re at it, tidy up a bit.

    DO make yourself available for your replacement. If the company hires your replacement before you leave, offer to train them. Even after you have departed, it’s a good idea to leave a phone number where you can be reach with times that it is acceptable to call.

    DON’T abuse e-mail, the telephone, or the internet during your last days. Be sure to keep your communication as professional as you have during your tenure.

    There’s no reason that you still can’t be friends when it’s over. If you are careful to maintain a good reputation with the company, their suppliers, their customers, and employees; it will pay off considerably. It may not happen right away, but your paths will cross again.