Beyond Massachusetts Employmet Law: Protecting Your Job in a Down Economy
Lately I've been hearing more and more from employees in Massachusetts who have been fired from their jobs or discriminated against at work. Some involve wage claims, others are retaliation claims. Many of these fired employees are forced to leave a bad employer (due to a new manager) and are looking to move on with a fair severance package or appropriate settlement arrangement, others just want a fair chance at having their jobs back. Some employees who are moving on are leaving jobs behind where they have worked for years. Now they wonder, how do I keep my new job in this tough economy.
An email from Keith Ferrazzi I received today discusses Stephen Viscusi's Bulletproof Your Job: 4 Simple Strategies to Ride Out the Rough Times and Come Out On Top at Work, a book on your personal brand at work. Here's his list of a few favorites he pulled directly from the book that can help those finding themselves in a new job or looking to secure their current employment positions.
Five Tips to Bulletproof Your Job Today
1. Introduce Yourself: "You don't need to get your name on a billboard to make yourself known to a company bigwig. You just need three things: say your name, assert your connection to her, and share your personal pitch... Follow up with an e-mail or handwritten note, reminding him of your brief meeting and saying how much you enjoyed it."
2. Volunteer to Lead: "Offering to take the lead shows you have a stomach for risk, the capacity to learn, and the desire for accomplishment that others might not possess."
3. Be Positive: "In short, positive people are easy to work with and negative people are not. And smart positive people are among the most valuable in the workplace.... You can choose to be positive - and to set off the whole chain of positive influence - simply by indentifying your current worldview and habits and making conscious positive adjustments... All you have to do is smile."
4. Be A Mentor: "...step up and offer a bit of support that will help newbies feel a connection that will make them want to stay in the game and get with the program... It allows you to plant seeds of influence and support throughout your company and your industry that will grow and become more valuable to you over time... You just need to know the ropes of your workplace and have some experience that would be helpful to someone else... Keep things informal, meet regularly, keep it professional, and keep up the connection."
5. Improve Your Networking Skills: "Job survival and advancement are about always having a substantial list of professional acquaintances... The most influential and useful are usually those who work in and around your field, but it's not at all unusual for an outsider to be the most effective person in your network... For every person you collect into your network because she may be helpful to you, you should count on being called onto be a resource for her, too."
