Build your career with teamwork,
diverse skills
Being Successful At What You
Do Is Not A Solo Sport
As an HR thinker and
practitioner, I have reflected often about many myths that surround
careers.While everyone begins one's life wanting a great career, not too many
un derstand the concept be yond a mere progression of titles, rewards and
corporate affiliation. While that is for another day , the myth that one alone
can manage to build one's career is very sharp.
Careers must be owned by
each individual. However, it is not a solo 100-metre sprint that can be done,
forget won, alone. Even the best of athletes cannot claim to have built their
careers alone. Nor actors. Nor singers. Virtually , no one! Their careers
cannot be a solo sport.
Spotter:
Everyone -who had the
potential -needed someone to spot their talent. It could be a teacher, a coach,
a manager or a relative. But someone who saw a diamond when it could have
passed off as just a stone. This may be by design or by serendipity . But we
all need a spotter in our careers to give us the early push.
Gardener:
Once spotted, careers need
to be tended. Like saplings, they need to be supported, watered, fertilised and
even de-weeded. Sometimes, fast growth needs to be clipped.Certain angularities
need to be corrected. Done right and in time, a gardener in our career sets the
stage for its proliferation. They can be an interested and capable manager or a
competent HR coach. Competitors and collaborators: A lot of imprinting that
happens on careers depends on the kind of peers one builds a career with. As
individuals, they may be competing rivals or collaborative friends -but they
impact your growth trajectory . You pace your career based on the world around
you. The quality of talent and work ethic in your teams and organisations have
a deep imprint on how your career thinking shapes. It's no surprise that when
you work with the best, you push yourself to be the best. If you are surrounded
by mediocrity , your brilliance, too, would eventually slip into complacency .
Crucial conversations: Personally , this has been the most impactful element in
my career. A manager, coach or even a peer can play this role. Not many ,
however, want or can do this effectively. Very often, we hallucinate about our
careers. Or we develop huge blind spots, more so if we have been reasonably
successful. However, in the VUCA world the past is not always the predictor of
future success. It is crucial to have these conversations once in a while,
howsoever hurtful it may seem then. Careers are about impact and relevance,
today and tomorrow. These are the tough mirrors to see ourselves in. They could
prevent a smooth career from derailing, as the asks from oneself change significantly
at different stages of a career. Brand advocates: In today's world, one's
reputation precedes one's resume. It is all about the brand credibility one has
built. Consistent delivery across a range of pitches and in a variety of
playing conditions is the best reputation to work at. But even more importantly
, your softer dimensions of personality and leadership become the key career
ingredients beyond mere functional skills. The best brand amplifiers for your
career are those who have worked with you. What do all these various
stakeholders typically speak of you? As they spread their wings across various
organisations, a consistent positive reputation reinforces your career. A poor
or bipolar reputation does create career roadblocks.Diversity buoys: Careers
today are always at risk. Industries are disrupting. Functions are being
redefined.Workplaces are no longer static. It is imperative to keep
broad-basing skills and experiences, learning new behavioural and leadership
competencies. It is important to constantly search for newer crucibles of
experience. We need more plurality of managers, organisations, functions,
locations, maybe industries. It is then that we keep reinventing ourselves.
Unfortunately , most people hire for past experience rather than the potential
for new possibilities. Look for those possibilities. Get out of your comfort
zones. Do something you have never done before. And you would possibly make
yourself more relevant and your career more de-risked. But are you scouting for
these diversity buoys? Do you even recognise them beyond the lens of your past
experience?
Careers then are not guided by mere past education and experience. They are products beyond oneself. But it needs people to not confuse individual ownership of their careers with playing a solo sport. Careers are a team sport. Get your team act right and your career will not remain a game of Ludo.
Careers then are not guided by mere past education and experience. They are products beyond oneself. But it needs people to not confuse individual ownership of their careers with playing a solo sport. Careers are a team sport. Get your team act right and your career will not remain a game of Ludo.
By
Prabir Jha
|
The author is president
& global chief people officer, Cipla.
TAS 8NOV17
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