Posts Tagged ‘Thomas Friedman’

If You Blend, You Lose – So Stand Out

Wednesday, November 11th, 2009

Employees and job seekers you must Stand Out! Remember that we are inundated with distractions in our high-tech and high-distraction world. If you blend, you lose. If you look like everyone else, they don’t remember you. Being invisible is no way to get a job or keep a job.

Employees: In today’s workplace, many employees are still nervous of layoffs…and rightly so. An unemployment rate that keeps rising and an economy that slow to recover are forcing companies to continue employee layoffs. The best way not to be laid off is to become what author and NY Times columnist Thomas Friedman calls the “untouchable” – untouchable from layoffs because you consistently add value, stand out in effort, innovation and commitment. Click here for his Op-Ed.

So, if you have a job – how do you become the “untouchable” – the “invaluable?” Don’t wait for someone to create this for you. Create it yourself. Do it now.

Job seekers: Great companies are always hiring. Smart companies know there is great unemployed and available talent because of the recession and they are rebuilding their teams to be stronger than ever. Keep applying to jobs that match your talents and play to your strengths (you are more competitive for these jobs). And when you interview, be sure you stand out. As hiring managers interview many people, you must be the one they see as the right fit, and the one they remember (for the right reasons). For guidance, see my 10 Rules For A Great Interview.

Now is no time to blend. Stand out and get hired. Stand out and get noticed. Either way, stand out.

You’re Out if You Don’t Add Value

Friday, October 23rd, 2009

Face it, the world had changed – and so has the definition of value in the workplace. Just getting the job done isn’t enough in our innovative, right-brained and creative world. Just showing up will earn you the honor of being the first to be laid off.

Back in March, my book Fire Up Your Employees and Smoke Your Competition was published. In it, I defined a process for all managers to learn how to attract, hire and retain great value-building employees. It outlines a step-by-step process to determine who is a good fit (who can do the job well), how to find those who have the talents to be successful in the job, and how to connect these “good fit” employees emotionally to their work to ensure they get fired up and passionate about their work. It is a formula to hire and keep the value-building employees. And as our recession endures, we continue to see the need for employees who do not just show up – there is no extra to carry anyone who does not add get the job done AND add great value. That means aall employees need to be fully engaged, thinking, inventing and finding opportunities.

So this message is for both employees and managers:
Managers – define your expectations of your employees, and hire/realign the right employee to the right job. The right employees are more connected to their work, be more innovative in their responses and add greater value. You must hire right, inspire right and connect right in order to activate employees’ value focus. Create a “value building” environment or you are out of business.

Employees – don’t show up at work expecting to just do your job; those days are over. In addition to getting your job done right, you must start sharing your thoughts about how to make the business better. You must become a greater part of the value building of the business. Add value or you are out.

Time for a team effort. Time to create a high contribution workplace and hire employees who feel compelled to make a significant difference. See the supporting perspectives shared by the NY Times columnist Thomas Friedman in his Op-Ed “The New Untouchables.”

“Adding value” is not the same as “doing your job.” Adding value is more important for both employees and managers.

Do you make your people stupid?

Sunday, June 28th, 2009

There really isn’t any other way to ask it…do you keep your people from inventing, thinking, creating and getting excited in the workplace? Do you dictate what to do, how to do it and when it should be done? Do you keep your people stupid?

Fired Up! employees have the freedom to invent, discover and propose – because that is where the great ideas come from. An economic crisis is a great opportunity to see how clever your people can be. Keep them in dark and you will fall victim to the economy. Allow them to invent, solve, questions, try and assess – and they not only become smarter, they become more excited, focused on solutions and engaged. Or, as I like to say on this site…Fired Up.

Check out this link to an article by my favorite author, Thomas Friedman. He concurs. See what you think.

Don’t dumb things down. Fire them up.