Category Archives: Promotions

Prove you are worth the most, not the cheapest

I enjoy being a highly overpaid actor. (Roger Moore)

There’s always someone who is paid too much, and taxed too little – and it’s always someone else.  (Cullen Hightower)

“I am earning $115,000 per year. But I don’t want to be a food scientist anymore.  I want to be a Java programmer.  I’d like to earn about the same salary, but I’d consider less.  Maybe $80,000 per year.  I also want to move to Pennsylvania.  I don’t like Texas. I almost got a PhD degree so I am sure someone will want me. Can you find me a job?”

At that time Java programmers with 2 years experience were earning $60,000 per year. He had no Java experience.  He was studying it.  His goal was to get certified and then move to his new career.  His degree was unrelated to programming. Dropping from $115,000 per year to $80,000 per year seemed to him to be a sure way to interest an employer.  I had to let him know that he wasn’t worth anywhere near that as a programmer.

His problem was that he wanted to be hired at top dollar before he had a track record. And, yes, he did get hired.  Just not at those terms.  He bowed to reality.

No employer can stay in business when he overpays his employees. If his expenses are high, he has to charge more.  Then his competitors take all his customers away. No customers, no business, no jobs.

In order to be hired you have to be the best bargain of all the people who apply.  You need to have proof that you will do more excellent work for less money than anyone else. That doesn’t mean you have to be the lowest paid.  You have to be the best bargain.

A great salesperson will earn three times what a mediocre one earns.  Yet, everyone wants the great salesperson and will pay for them.  You may pay them three times as much, but they bring in 10 times the profit.  That’s because high volume cuts your overhead costs.  Great salesmen are worth a lot more. Did you notice the ugly fact that great salesmen are worth 10 times more, but are only paid 3 times more?

What about network technicians?  If you can improve computer response time by ½ second per entry by 1000 clerks, you can save $100,000 per year for your company.  If you can keep the computers of 1000 clerks from going down for 10 minutes each week, you are saving the company 166 man hours per week.  That will allow them to save the wages of 4 clerks. A great network technician is worth much more than the one who allows network problems to continue.  The ugly fact is that a great network technician is only paid 2 or 3 times what a barely acceptable one is paid, yet his contribution is 10 times greater.

You need to document what makes you great.  Present it to your boss when you do it.  When you are looking for a job, put dollars produced and saved in your resume.  If you prove you are worth more than you are being paid, there will be less resistance to paying you more.  Prove you are worth ten times more, then accept wages two or three times higher.  It’s ugly, but that’s the way it works.

Tomorrow’s topic is “Why?”

Something To Do Today

Think about your job search. Just think.  And then take notes about your conclusions.

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For 2 weeks: Zen and the art of getting a job

Next:     A man dying of thirst

Later:              Perception is everything

Character counts

Diamonds in the rough

Cleat marks up your back

9 whys to ruthlessly exploit yourself

You are not trying to get the job of “minion” or “muscle”.  Don’t pretend that exploiting your life experience is wrong.  It is not the same as shoving a gun in someone’s face and asking for their wallet.

The real reason most people don’t want to exploit their advantages is that they “want to stand on their own two feet”.  It is a lovely macho phrase that means little. Our society, families and personal lives all rest on the shoulders of those who came before us.  Admit that no matter what you do, others have helped you.  Get on with using the advantages that parents, teachers, friends, clergy and God have given you.

Here are some excuses to fail and reasons to exploit a few of your advantages.

  • I will not exploit my family connections to get a job.

Acorns don’t fall far from the tree.  Employers need reliable hires.  Getting someone from a good family is a much better bet than hiring a complete stranger.  If they can’t hire you, but they suggest someone else hire you, they get brownie points from that other person.  They win as much as you do.

  • My friends are too close to my heart for me to ask them for help.

If your friends object to helping you get a job, they don’t trust you with THEIR reputation. If you are going to let them down, you are not a friend.  If they trust you and you will follow through, helping is what builds friendships.

  • I refuse to manipulate their emotions.

People always hire based on emotion.  Always.  Even if no one talks to you and they only give you a paper test, they hire on emotion.  Paper tests are put together based on what people FEEL  will give them the best employee.  Your pay will be based on emotion – how well they FEEL you will do.  Promotions are based on emotion – how do they FEEL you will do in the new job.  Don’t be dishonest.  Don’t be an actor.  Tell the truth simply.  The emotions behind the truth will help you  Use them.

  • Inviting them to lunch is brown nosing and sucking up.

Actually it is called networking.  In many companies senior partners and executives can be fired for not having lunch with enough different people.  They are evaluated on lunch.  Literally.

  • I won’t tell them I left because I was sick.  I don’t want their sympathy.

You are fine now and it is relevant to understand your resume. If it will substantially help you get the job, tell them.  Talk to a couple of job experts and get their opinion. If it will help, exploit it.

  • I want the job, but I don’t feel right pressing them to choose me.

Aaargh! They want to hire the person with the best attitude.  They want the person who will work the hardest.  They want someone who they can promote.  They want someone who is excited. They want to hire the hungriest person. How can they tell that about you unless you keep asking them, “When will you decide?”, and, “When can I start?”

  • It is greedy asking for more money.

If the offer is very good, take it.  Don’t argue.  Otherwise, ask for more money.  If you really are worth it, get the money.  If they pay you more, you will be less likely to leave for another job because of more pay.  They win too.

  • Taking this job to get experience, when I plan to leave later, is wrong.

Hiring and training you does cost money.  Companies that invest that money have already figured out how to profit from it.  They will either give you a raise and promotion, or expect you to leave.  They will make money.  You won’t cost them a thing.

  • I’m a veteran, but it is not fair to use that to get a job.

The leadership, teamwork, calmness under fire, discipline and fortitude veterans develop is uncommon.  Bring it up.

Your life experience makes a difference.  Whatever that experience is.  You need to use it and exploit it.

Something To Do Today

Think about your job search. Just think.  And then take notes about your conclusions.

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For 2 weeks:       Zen and the art of getting a job

Monday:              Measure and maul

Later:                    Making a silk purse

Why you aren’t paid what you are worth

A man dying of thirst

Perception

Character

Diamond in the rough

Cleat marks up your back

5 soft skills that mean big bucks for technical folks

You can separate yourself from the rest of the technical herd with these 5 skills.  They really are the biggest differentiator in salary outside of raw technical prowess.

Read more….

How to survive a promotion too high

Don’t fall before you are pushed.  (English proverb)

A woman we know well was promoted to a level way above her comfort zone.  She has never failed in the past, but this is a big deal.  One of her friends gave her this advice:

“Congratulations.

Relax.

Cool it.

Just do good work daily and before you know it, it will be a career.”

Good advice any time you find yourself in a job, or interview for a job that is way beyond where you expected to be.

Something To Do Today

Just do good work daily and before you know it, it will be a career.

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Tomorrow:     Who is driving?

Later:              The Zen of getting a job

10 ways to prove you are a fast learner

“I know I haven’t done that job before, but I’m a really fast learner”, so the applicant says.  Then I read the resume and can see nothing to back up their claim.  They have a “C” average in school, worked at a manual labor job and their hobby is woodworking.

I tell them, “Prove to me that you are a fast learner.”

Few have thought of how to prove it.  I ask more questions and try to find out if the person is a fast learner. I ask questions like:

   What do you learn quickly?

   Do others come to you for help with a particular kind of problem?

   What do you excel at?

   What projects did you lead?

   Are you particularly good or renowned at your hobby?

   Which were your best school classes or subjects?

   Who were you favorite teachers or supervisors and why?

   What have you written about?

   When have you won a contest?

   What do you do that causes you to lose all track of time?

Those questions can lead to a list of proofs of fast learning, or not.  If you are a fast learner, prove it on your resume with your accomplishments.

To be honest, being a FAST learner is less important than being a steady learner.  If you pick up new skills and apply them regularly, you can get farther than someone who is occasionally brilliant but lazy.  Employers respect someone who is a consistent learner and worker.

Show consistent learning and how you picked up new skills every year and that is enough. Prove it with new accomplishments on your resume, and I’ll think you are a fast learner.

Something To Do Today

For some reason many people don’t think what they learned is important.  Keep track of new skills you learn so you can brag about them. Prove how fast you can learn.

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Monday:           Re-entering the workforce

Later:                 I don’t want to spend my money on training

Make a game out of it

Before you know it

Who is driving?

Promotions, new job hiring, and “The Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle”

A biologist told me, “One chipmunk was trap crazy. That’s a technical term. Every time I set out an array of traps that one chipmunk ran right into one of the traps.”  Wildlife biologists have to deal with the strange changes that happen when they measure something.  The mere act of measuring changes the thing being measured.  That is the basis of the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle.

What happens depends on our way of observing it or on the fact that we observe it. (Werner Heisenberg)

Tracking performance alters what happens.  For instance, I worked on one set of computer programs where the programmers were paid per line of each program.  Those were the longest programs I have ever seen.  As a salesman I was once rewarded for each call I made.  I made a whole lot more calls but sold no more of the product.  I was gaming the system.  I was winning the contest and losing my job.

So how does this get you a new job or a raise?

Bosses want performance.  They use reasonable, useless, and ridiculous metrics to decide what your performance was.  That is true whether it is a hiring manager at a job you want, or your present boss.

First: Figure out what is the most important measuring stick

Second: Figure out what will keep your boss (or hiring manager) happy.

You should know and care about every measurement of your performance that your boss takes.  It is absolutely critical to decide which are the critical measurements.  Some of those measurements will get you a raise and a new job while others will get you fired.  Most of the rest exist to get you to change the way you work. Look at the message you get from the non-critical measurements. Make your boss happy if you can.  Be prepared to fail on the minor measurements to win a spectacular success on the critical measurements. Keep a record of how well you do on the most critical measurements.

What YOU decide to pay the most attention to will change how you work.  You have to concentrate on the measurements that will get you to your end goal.  Again, the mere act of measuring will change the thing being measured.  That is the basis of the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle. Figure out how to use that to reach your goals.

Something To Do Today

Do you know what you want out of your job?  Money, a promotion, free time or a place to hang out?  Write in your job journal what the most critical measurements are to help you reach that goal.

How to become CIO and some obstacles you’ll overcome

Do you want to become CIO?  There are things you can do whether you are tech savvy from operations or a tech guru from the IT team.  In either case, you have to overcome some pretty big obstacles.

This story has the obstacles and the solutions.  And it isn’t a long read.

4 Technical Career Mistakes

These mistakes apply to IT, accounting, engineering, and other careers.

Here is the link.

Double your value, make more money

 

The other day I had to tell a woman the awful truth.  She is worth twice what she is getting paid.

How would you feel if you were told that you are earning ½ of what you should be earning?

I called up one other company 30 minutes from her home. Only one company.  The owner said, “Yes, we would pay her twice what she is earning.”

This is extremely rare.  The new company will not, however immediately pay her twice what she is earning.  They will initially pay her what she is earning now and give her the chance to prove in their company what she is worth.  She will have goals that are clear.  When she hits those goals, she will get a raise.  We all suspect it will take 18 to 24 months to actually double her income.

She had doubled her value in her old company by extremely high performance.  She is a top producer.  Because her goals there were set, measured and attained in an extraordinary manner, she is worth more. Her old boss wouldn’t pay her more, but her new boss gladly will. The change would not have happened if she demanded to get paid before she produced.  She would have never been given the new job.

You can double your value if find out what you can do that is most valuable to your company.  In most cases you won’t even have to change jobs to get a raise.  If your goals are set, measured and attained in an extraordinary manner, you will get your raise.

Invest in yourself.  Sow the seeds of success. If your company won’t invest in you, invest in yourself. You are worth it. And when you have proven you are worth twice what you were before, go find someone who will pay it.

Something To Do Today

Who is way ahead of you in pay?  Are they doing what you want to do?  Who is not just earning a little more, earning a lot more? Invite them to lunch.  Ask them how they got there and what you need to do to get there.

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Tomorrow:     Surveys

Later:              Please discriminate against me

How to get a friend a job

Are you just like this trumpet where you work? Or like the band teacher?

It was in my mother’s garage.  A trumpet.  We have no clue where it came from.  We took it to the band teacher who said, “That’s a nice old German trumpet.  It should be cleaned and fixed.” We still don’t know where it came from.

The trumpet may play beautiful music again. It only takes up space and makes noise until its value is accurately assessed.  Then a master appears and music dances in the air.

Two things about jobs to learn from this.

  1. You have skills that still are waiting to be discovered.  I don’t know what they are.  If something comes easily to you, if you see things others don’t, then you need to explore those skills and where they lead. Unexpected gifts should be tested and developed.
  2. Other people have great potential to fix the very problems you can’t get your arms around.  The person who can help may already work in your office.  They only need some training and an opportunity.  Give them that opportunity and you have changed their lives.  Plus, they’ll work cheap for a while.  Look around you for talents others are not using.  You don’t have to be a manager to help people develop skills.

Are you the trumpet or the band teacher who can spot a great trumpet?

Something To Do Today                                              

Take a fresh look at your personal skills.  What do you pick up most quickly?  What do you see or hear that others can’t fathom?

Also take a fresh look at the people around you.

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Nest week:           Brass knuckles and the law (and resumes and interviews)

I only allow reality on my desk

Double your value, make more money

Surveys

Please discriminate against me