How To Be Successful At Work

Photo by olia danilevich on Pexels.com

To position yourself to succeed in a challenging work environment, start by confronting the facts. Don’t ignore reality…’

Greatness in work, art, and science requires obsession over quality and an extraordinary attention to detail.’

‘Don’t just see yourself as an employee- see yourself as an innovator of work. Hunt and cure pain points, ask stupid questions, and zoom in on how you can redesign and create value for others.’

Follow your passion at all costs and no matter how hard you work.’

To avoid the extremes of too little or too much collaboration, top performers discipline collaboration: they carefully select which collaboration activities to participate in (and reject others), and then follow specific rules to make the chosen activities a success.’

‘When you narrow your scope of work and jettison less important tasks, you free up time that you can spend outside work.’

‘Work on how you work, not on protecting your life from your work.’

To maximize your collaboration’s chances of success, you need a forcing mechanism to assure that your collaboration receives sufficient time, effort, and financial support.’

Don’t let a single disruptive person prevent the entire team from implementing a decision that has been well argued.’

‘To vanquish opposition in the workplace, you must do more than persevere. You also need to tailor your tactics to neutralize opposition from people.’

To inspire people and gain their support, line up high-arousal emotions on your side– make them mad and fearful about the present, and joyful and excited about your proposed future goal.’

‘People with a strong sense of both passion and purpose are more energized, getting more done in each hour of work (and they don’t work many extra hours).’

Source

Morten T. Hansen (2018). Great at Work: How Top Performers Do Less, Work Better, and Achieve More

‘The Secret To Surviving And Thriving In Your Organization’

Photo by http://www.kaboompics.com on Pexels.com

Starting from the other person’s point of view is always instructive– it helps you understand what might be concerning them. You can then check this and address it.’

You can’t always hide behide your reactions– even when you’re trying to.’

Networking doesn’t have to be slimy but it does involve meeting people and trying to understand them.’

Relationships are the key to building connections and understanding others. If you can’t understand them, you can’t change their mind.’

‘Organizations are about getting results. But if we just focus on results, nothing changes.’

‘If people don’t trust that you care about them and the project, you won’t get the best results.If they do, then a lot is possible.’

‘Think about others and what they need– up, down and across the organization and outside.’

Aim to communicate well with different people and groups, by telling the truth, thinking from the perspectives of others, asking questions and listening!’

Not speaking up means that nothing changes, meaning you miss a great opportunity to help yourself and your colleagues at the same time.’

Being aware of your own emotions and those of others is important in having difficult conversations as well as in other key workplace situations.’

If others are to trust you, they need and want to know where you stand– they don’t want to have to guess or be blindsided midstream.’

Source

Dawn Metcalfe (2014). Managing the Matrix: The Secret to Surviving and Thriving in Your Organization