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Career Managementin
Turbulent Times
Dame Rennie Fritchie
Dame Rennie Fritchie
– Commissioner for Public Appointments– Mainstream Development Consultant– Vice-Chair Stroud & Swindon Building
Society– Pro - chancellor Southampton
University– Hon visiting Professor York University– Gloucestershire Ambassador– Charities - Pier Piper, Winston’s Wish– Radio Producer/Presenter
Session 1•Share personal journey•Analyse your interests/intentions•Tools and techniques•Biography Questions•Decision Making Process•Work Life Balance•Dealing with Feedback
Session 2
• Getting Started• Power Bases• Influencing Styles• Assessing your Support• Creative Thinking• Partnership working
My Personal Journey
Biography Questions
1. What kind of human being do you want to be?
2. What do you want to do with your life?
1. Where are you?
2. How did you get there?
3. Where do you want to go?
4. How will you get there?
5. What will you do when you arrive?
6. Where to next?
7. How do you begin?
Career Management
in
Turbulent Times
Decision Making Processadapted from Ben Heirs
Stage 1
• THE QUESTION
• Formulating (or reformulating) a question and gathering information.
Stage 2
• THE ALTERNATIVES
• Creating alternative answers to the question.
Stage 3
• THE CONSEQUENCES
• Predicting the future consequences of acting on each of the alternative answers and creating the necessary contingency and hedging plans to support each alternative.
Stage 4
• THE CRITERIA
• Having considered the implication and consequence list in order, the three or four main criteria which will guide the decision.
Stage 5• THE DECISION• Evaluating the alternatives
developed in Stage 2 that survived Stage 3 in order to make a decision to act (or not act) by selecting the best alternative answer, together with the best contingency plans, to the question posed in Stage 1
Career Management
in
Turbulent Times
Work Life Balance
1.As soon as you get a new diary go through it and put in all your important dates -
Birthdays, Anniversaries, holidays, special events etc.
This will prevent squeezing them around your working life.
2. Say ‘NO’ early if it is something you don’t want or can’t do. If you find this particularly difficult then give an indication of your direction of travel e.g. ‘I think it is highly unlikely, but I will come back and confirm’ or ‘I don’t think it will be possible but I’ll let you know.’
3. Recognise that things always take longer than you think, so build in ‘buffer time’.
4. In times of stress or pressure, prioritise. Only do, what only you can do.
5. Separate out the important from the urgent. Tackle the urgent in fast time but give slow time to the important.
6. Give yourself entry and re-entry time between work and home. Leave ‘baggage’ behind.
7. Perfection is not always a healthy aim. Remember, “not everything worth doing is worth doing well”.
8. Guilt can be a destructive and time consuming emotion, let it go.
9. Use speed-reading to churn through the paper work. E.g. Articles - First Paragraph. Last paragraph. First line in intervening paragraphs. Books - First chapter as above. First and last paragraphs in intervening chapters.
10. Practice delegating and mandating. If you don’t have the resources and staff to do this then negotiate for more or reduce your workload. Some jobs are just too big. Don’t agree to mission impossible and then blame yourself when you can’t achieve it.
11. Remember, being part-time doesn’t mean your contribution is limited. You can be wholeheartedly and wholly present and in this way add real value. It isn’t necessary to expand your time to almost full-time on part-time salary.
12. Think about the things you do just for you and make sure you have them plentifully scattered throughout your diary.
Remember nobody loves a martyr!
Career Management in
Turbulent Times
Feed Back
4 questions
•Is the feedback valid to any degree?
•Do I rate or respect the person giving the feedback?
•Is it important that I take notice?
•What action can I take without compromising my integrity?
Career Management
in
Turbulent Times
Session 2
Career Management
in
Turbulent Times
•Getting Selected
•60% Image•30% Exposure
•10% Ability
Career Management
in
Turbulent Times
Power Bases
1. Formal Authority2. Expertise3. Resource Control4. Personal/ Communication Skills
Career Management
in
Turbulent Times
Influencing Styles
•REWARDS & PRESSURES•Behaviours•Evaluation. Prescribing goals and expectations. Using incentives
•PARTICIPATION & TRUST
•Behaviours•Personal disclosure. Recognising and involving others. Testing and expressing understanding.
•COMMON VISION•Behaviours•Articulating exciting possibilities. Creating word pictures and long term visions. Generating a shared identity.
•LOGICAL PERSUASION•Behaviours•Proposing. Reasoning for and against. Using factual language.
Career Management
in
Turbulent Times
Assessing Your Support
Allies
Bedfellows
Opponents
Enemies
Career Management
in
Turbulent Times
Creative Thinking
•Plus
•Minus
•Interesting
Career Management
in
Turbulent Times
Partnership Working
1. Consult2. Co-operate3. Collaborate4. Co-create
Career Management
in
Turbulent Times
TRAVELLERby
ANTHONY MACHADOTraveller, the only way is your footsteps,
there is no other.Traveller, there is no way, you make the
way as you go.As you go, you make the way, and stopping to look behind, you see the path that your feet will never
travel again.Traveller. There is no way only foam trails
in the sea.