Articles : Career and Job Search
Straight Talk About Your Career04/01/06 by Marty Nemko
People place a premium on being positive. That extends to career advice. As a
result, I believe that important negative statements go unsaid. I’ll remedy
that here.
Many people fail to land a good job because they’re lazy, yes lazy.
Psychotherapists may make those people feel better by labeling their laziness
“fear of failure” or blaming it on their good-for-nothing parents, but I’ve
concluded that most of the time, the core reason people don’t land a good job
is laziness. Ask yourself honestly: Have you worked hard enough to find a good
job?
Networking isn’t for everyone. Yes, 2/3 of jobs are acquired by networking.
But most of those are obtained by natural-born schmoozers or by already well-
employed people who network their way into even better jobs. If you’re
currently not well-employed or tend to not be instantly likeable, and
especially if your network is small and unlikely to help you, you could end up
homeless before networking lands you a job. Focus your job search on finding
lots of on-target ads to answer and doing a great job of answering them.
Procrastination is career cancer. You may have first acquired the habit of
procrastinating in school. You waited until the last minute to do an
assignment or study for a test, the adrenaline rush motivated you, and lo and
behold, you got a good grade. Soon, you became dependent on the adrenaline to
get you through an assignment.
But there’s no grade inflation in the real world. Procrastination is career
cancer. If you must do a task, please start it as soon as it’s assigned. Be
aware of the moment of truth: when you’re deciding, consciously or
unconsciously, whether to start the task or procrastinate. If you say you’ll
start it later, chances are you won’t until the last minute, at which point,
you probably won’t have time to do a quality job.
When you reach a hard part, struggle for no more than 15 seconds. The odds are
that additional struggling won't help. At the 15-second mark, decide to get
help, to come back to it later, or that there’s a way to complete the task
without doing the hard part. People tend to procrastinate hard tasks because
they fear they’ll never figure out that hard part—that’s agonizing. The 15-
second struggle technique makes tough tasks less painful.
Owning a home with a big mortgage usually hurts your life more than it helps.
It often forces you into a career that pays well to compensate for its not
being intrinsically rewarding. Spending a lifetime in an unrewarding career
usually hurts your life more than a nice house helps it.
Unless you’re smart, driven, and well-connected, do what is commonly loved
(e.g., the arts, media, biotech, fashion) and you risk starvation. If you’re a
more average person and your passion is commonly held, do what you love as a
hobby.
Higher education is America’s most overrated product. Yes, if you do school
much better than you do life, school may be your best bet for career
enhancement, but other people should avoid a long back-to-school stint.
Consider foregoing State U let alone Private U for You U: a combination of
mentorships, articles, books, workshops, and conferences.
The musts for successful self-employment Self-employment makes ever more
sense in an era in which you usually must be a star to land a good non-
offshoreable job. Self-employment enables you to instantly go from schlepper
to CEO. However, to avoid failing you (or your partner) must:
1. Be a self-starter, not a procrastinator.
2. Be smart enough to quickly solve real-world problems.
3. Have a nose for buying low and selling high.
4. Make a good first impression.
Even more important:
5. Keep your business simple: selling one high-profit-margin, not-faddish
product or service that requires a small investment. One example: Help website
owners drive more traffic to their site.
6. Don’t innovate; replicate. Most innovations fail—at great expense. So, only
wealthy individuals and corporations can afford to risk innovation. Most
people are wise to copy a successful business in a different location or to
buy a franchise. Interview at least a half dozen franchisees before signing on
the dotted line.
7. Hire smart, fire early. Put the time into hiring a great person. If, in the
first day or two, you sense he or she is not working out, fire the person
fast. Significant improvement on the job is rare and each day you wait
increases the risk of having to endure a painful wrongful termination suit.
Enough of the negative. Next week, a column in praise of a kind of worker that
most people criticize.
400+ of career coach Dr. Marty Nemko’s writings are free on
www.martynemko.com. His radio show airs today from 11 AM to noon on 91.7 FM.
His book, Cool Careers for Dummies, in the Reader’s Choice Poll, was rated the
#1 most useful career guide.