Ways to go Above and Beyond at Your Job (and Get Noticed Doing It)
Have
you ever been passed over for a promotion that you knew in the depths
of your soul you had earned? Have you ever looked at your annual
raise and cried/died a little inside? Have you felt overwhelmed and
unappreciated at the same time? Work at any business long enough, and
you've probably felt all three. The thing is, you might be the best
person in your company at doing exactly what you are required to do,
but if you aren't going above and beyond your basic job requirements
(and getting noticed doing it) then chances are you are going to stay
exactly where you are while getting paid almost exactly what you are
currently making. Here are five tips on how you can kick it up a
notch and get the promotion, raise, or recognition you are after.
1. Don't just come up with ideas. Plan and implement them.
Good
ideas are worth about as much as the whiteboards they're written on
during brainstorm sessions. In fact, they're worth less. Whiteboards
are kind of expensive. Have you ever sat in a meeting where everyone
pats each other on the back about the great idea they're coming up
with, only to leave the meeting and not see a single one of them
implemented? A brainstorm is a dust flurry if no one does anything
after. Take one idea from every meeting you're in, build a workable
plan around it, and take it to your supervisor to ask permission to
take charge on it. They may say no. You may be too busy with other
projects. But you just got face time with your boss showing your
interest in stepping outside your job description on something
creative. You showed initiative. AND if she says yes, you get the
chance to shine.
2. Be the data king/queen.
Sure,
management wants people who are personable and a joy to work with,
but at the end of the day they want someone who knows how to move the
needle. If you know what moves said needle, you're ahead of the game.
Learn the big picture. If you work for a shipping company moving
boxes from the belt to the truck, know how a quarter turn and pivot
instead of a full turn reduces your single box load time by a full
second. Know that in a four-hour shift when you used to load 1,200
boxes, using your new technique allows you to load 1,309 boxes. When
your manager notices this because you point it out to them, explain
how you did it. They will be impressed, and it will help them improve
everyone on the team. Needle moved. You = Awesome.
3. Offer to help.
This
is one of the simplest things you can do in an office, and it is so
important. Be the person who offers to help, not the person who
always asks for it. Sure, ask for help when you need it. There's no
shame in that. But when you hear someone complaining about being
overloaded with an impending deadline, offer to help—even if you
don't know their job. Offer to take their menial tasks off their
hands until they finish. Don't just offer to help management. Offer
to help everyone. If you are known as the person in the office who is
always willing to help everyone, you will have obtained the ultimate
in workplace karma. Your boss won't just want to promote you;
everyone will want you to get promoted.
4. Complain less.
This
one can be difficult. Sometimes complaining feels SOOO good.
Coworkers bond over complaining. They feel united in their misery. In
most offices the break room should be called the vent room. And jobs
are FRUSTRATING. Clients can be difficult. Bosses can be horrible.
Coworkers can be oblivious. One of the hardest parts of being a
manager is knowing that all of this unrest exists and finding a way
to deal with it without making everybody hate you. The technique most
good managers rely on is working incredibly hard to keep people
positive. Happy is impossible. Positive is somewhat achievable, but
not easy. It involves being a mentor, friend, and complaint
recipient, all while maintaining discipline, increasing revenue,
meeting goals, etc. Managers know who the positive and negative
influences are on their teams, even if they're not in the break room
during the complain-fest. Being a positive force is going above and
beyond in the eyes of your boss, especially during the busier times
of the year.
5. Be visible. Let cc: be your proxy.
You
can do amazing things in the dark, and no one will see them. If a
tree staples a cover sheet on all of its TPS reports in a forest, and
no one is around to see, did it actually happen? No. Trees don't have
hands, and even if they did they couldn't operate a stapler. That is
silly talk. But really…
If
you have accomplishments, great ideas, good news, and a positive
influence on your office, and if that is being communicated via
electronic media, CC YOUR BOSS. So many people use cc as a
passive-aggressive way of letting their boss know that someone else
messed up. You can also use it as a passive-aggrandizing way of
tooting your own horn. With the bitter brew of reports and complaints
your manager or supervisor gets in their inbox in a day, being
included in your good-news e-mail will be a delicious cherry on top
of their gross, melted, boring e-mail sundae.
By
Cliff Garrin
Career & Professional Development Specialist
Career & Professional Development Specialist
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