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    12 Ways to Spot a High AchieverJuly 23, 2013 200,900 1,709 350

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    As part of my day job, I run a company that trains recruiters and hiring

    managers on how to attract, assess and hire top performers usingPerformance-based Hiring. To

    overcome the impact of first impressions - the primary cause of most hiring errors - we suggest using

    the first 20-30 minutes of the interview to look for theAchiever Patternduring the resume review.

    This indicates the candidate is in the top 25% of his or her peer group. None of this has to do with

    academic credentials, how smart someone is, their communication skills, personality or first

    impression. It all has to do with how others have recognized the candidates on-the-job performance.

    Being pretty cynical and somewhat analytical, the following is how I go about spotting a high

    achiever. I don't expect to find all 12, but six or more is a good sign the interview should be

    continued. Note: job-seekers can use this information to make sure the Achiever Pattern is easy to

    spot on both your resume and LinkedIn profile if you have it. If youre not quite there yet, use these

    tips to find a job that offers you the chance to get into this elite 25%. See point 6 below for the

    importance of this.)

    1. They've been assigned difficult challenges ahead of their peers. The best people, includingengineers, accountants, and sales reps, plus everyone else, are typically assigned tasks, clients and

    projects that are normally given to more senior people. If it happens regularly, especially during the

    first year of each new job, youve found tangible evidence of the Achiever Pattern.2. They volunteer or ask to be assigned to projects over their heads. A person needs a lot of

    confidence to take on a task where they have little or no experience. If theyre successful at it

    multiple times, the person deserves double bonus points.

    3. Theyre put on important multifunctional teams. Managers assign their strongest staff members tocritical team projects. Look for a consistent pattern, including teams growing in size, importance and

    impact over time. This is great evidence of strong team skills, as well as the Achiever Pattern.

    http://budurl.com/pbhh1http://budurl.com/pbhh1http://budurl.com/pbhh1http://budurl.com/AGachiever2http://budurl.com/AGachiever2http://budurl.com/AGachiever2http://budurl.com/AGachiever2http://budurl.com/pbhh1
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    4. They get a chance to demonstrate their abilities to more senior executives. Managers put theirsubordinates in front of a company exec to both demonstrate the managers good judgment, and to

    help the subordinate get more exposure.

    5. They get promoted more rapidly. Look for promotions due to exceptional performance. Moreproof: a consistent track record of increasing responsibility at different companies and/or with

    different managers.6. The reason they change jobs is long-term career focused. For each job change, ask the person

    how they got their new job, why they changed jobs, and if these objectives were met. Changing and

    accepting jobs is one of the most important decisions a person can make. Make sure you hire people

    who have made them wisely.

    7. Theyve established and achieved major goals. Rather than asking about a person's goals, ask firstabout the biggest goal theyve already achieved. Then ask how theyre going about achieving their

    next one.

    8. Theyve been rehired by a former manager. Top managers tend to rehire their best subordinatesfrom previous companies.

    9. They rehire their former subordinates. Ask more seasoned managers if theyve ever hiredsomeone theyve worked with in the past. Top people follow other top people.

    10.Theyre the go to person inside their department. Find out where the person has beenrecognized for outstanding work and where theyve coached others. Map this to what you need done.

    11.Theyve received formal recognition outside of their department. The best people havereputations beyond their department and function. It could be a company award, a white paper, a

    fellowship, speaking at a conference, or assigned for special training.

    12.They were mentored and/or mentored others. Just ask, and look for a continuous pattern. Thenfind out why, and the results.

    When I was a full-time executive recruiter, my goal was to find talented people who had a trackrecord of top performance. Finding the Achiever Pattern allowed me to use facts to counter a hiring

    manager who conducted a superficial or biased interview. More important, it provided hiring

    managers a concrete way to trade-off a contrived list of skills and experiences with a track record of

    exceptional performance. As a minimum, just looking for these factors as soon as you meet a person

    will lessen the impact of first impressions. Many times candidates overlook these important factors,

    so its up to the interviewer to seek them out. Once you hire a few top people this way, youll realize

    its worth the extra effort.

    When Working at a Troubled Company Makes Perfect Sense

    July 21, 2013 30,589 383 107

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    Time is Your Most Valuable Asset. Use it Wisely.Is working at a troubled company advisable? Troubled meaning heading into bankruptcy, having a

    deserved bad reputation, struggling to survive, or going through a turnaround. The answer: it alldepends.

    If you want something safe and secure, its probably best to avoid it. On the other hand, if you have a

    high tolerance for risk, can deal with ambiguity, and want to jumpstart or accelerate your career

    growth, it might be the perfect choice.

    Ive been thinking about this issue for many years. It started about 40 years ago when I first became a

    manager. I was with Rockwell Automotive in Troy, Michigan (Manager of Capital Budgeting), and

    my boss, Chuck Jacob, the Controller, and I were interviewing MBA students for financial analyst

    positions. We were going head-to-head with IBM, Ford, and P&Gthe hot companies of the day.

    We were making truck axles and brakes, and while we didnt make the hot or cool company list,

    Chuck had a great recruiting technique. Since the interview schedule was overbooked, and I had

    never interviewed anyone before, Chuck suggested we conduct the first interview together. After

    about 10 minutes Chuck said something to the candidate like: Time is your most valuable asset. What

    you do during the next 2-3 years will affect what happens to you over the next 5-10 years.

    He then drew a chart similar to the one shown, saying that if you go to a big, secure, and safe

    organization like Ford, IBM or P&G, it will take you 2-3 years before you get a promotion. While the

    first year or so will consist of rapid learning, the next few will be doing the same things over again. If

    you spend too much time on the plateaus, after 6-8 years youll really only have 3-4 years ofequivalent experience.

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    Since Rockwell Automotive was going through a major restructuring, Chuck said youd have an

    opportunity to spend more of your time on the steeper part of the learning curve. Taking on bigger

    jobs, being successful, and getting promoted more rapidly is how you get twice the experience in halfthe time. This is how you maximize your use of time. He let this idea sink in.

    Chuck then pointed to me and said, Lou has only been with Rockwell a year and has already been

    promoted. He then described his own experience, saying that he has been with Rockwell three years,

    started at the Corporate office as Director of Financial Planning, became the senior director over all

    business functions a year later, and was just named the number two financial executive for a $2

    billion business unit for a Fortune 50 company. Chuck was only 29 at the time. The technique

    worked, and we hired a number of great people who had offers from bigger "names." None regretted

    their decision.

    Ive been using this maximize your use of time concept ever since, especially when a candidate has

    a difficult career choice to make. Heres the collective advice in a nutshell. It might prove helpful if

    youre considering working at a troubled organization:

    1. Compare the downside to the upside. Unless youre currently on a great career path in an industrythat has a bright future, theres less long-term risk than might be first imagined. That's what the graph

    is all about. There is more short-term risk if the economy is slow and theres a good chance the

    company youre considering wont be around too long.

    2. Youll be able to jumpstart or reaccelerate your career. If you believe youre not as far along inyour career as youd like, a troubled company might be a good place to turn both your career and the

    company around.3. There is a hidden risk in staying put. Playing it safe could put your future in jeopardy, since you're

    not growing or stretching yourself.

    4. You don't need to be fully successful to get some kudos.Even if you dont fully succeed, mostpeople would still give you credit for making the attempt.

    5. It makes greater sense when you have a chance to make a significant impact. If youre justtagging along and hoping things turn out okay, its not worth taking the risk, unless youre desperate.

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    6. Your confidence will increase. Successfully handling a difficult situation gives you the innerconfidence and leadership ability to handle something even more difficult in the future.

    7. Youll have a stronger resume. Having the guts to take on a big task where success wasnt assuredis a career building accomplishment.

    8. Your negotiating power will increase. Companies are always looking for people with a proventrack record of significant accomplishments.

    9. It might be easier to get a job in a different industry. If youre underemployed or want to changeindustries, a troubled situation might be the perfect situation for you. Not only are these jobs easier to

    land since theres less competition, youll be able to recover some lost years due to the accelerated

    learning opportunity.

    10.Dont avoid troubled situations, seek them out. The best people have a track record of taking ontough problems and succeeding. Look for them inside your own organization and ask to be assigned

    to handle them. This is how you maximize your use of time.

    Unleashing Your Inner Thought LeaderJuly 26, 2013 10,242 141 50

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    I talk with working people, students and

    job-seekers all day long, so I hear a mind-boggling number of stories. None of them are boring.

    Sometimes people start to tell boring stories, by mistake. They think that since they're talking about

    professional topics, they should use corporate zombiespeak language to describe the action. They'll

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    say "Well, I was instrumental on a cross-functional team that developed a pan-divisional protocol for

    compliance." Most of us can listen to that for about thirty seconds before we want to kill ourselves.

    The fix is easy. You just have to nudge the storyteller out of Clone Trooper dialect and get him or her

    to give you the human version. Suddenly the story comes to life. Now the account is gripping - even

    mythic. So what, it was a business story? It's an adventure story now. The odds were steep. Thingslooked dark. Somebody on the team -- maybe the team leader - was crazy and out of his depth. When

    the human side comes out, the story becomes visceral, even to an audience hearing it for the first

    time.

    After twenty-five years listening to people talk about their work, I see the thought leader and sage in

    everyone I meet. Every sweet-faced new graduate has incredible stories and wisdom to share.

    Grizzled veterans like me have stories. We all carry around funny, sad, entangled, colorful histories

    and an astounding amount of learning that we can share. We don't tell one another at work very

    often, "Gee, you are really an expert in this topic, and I'm learning so much from you," but it's true.

    We are surrounded on all sides by experts, and we are all experts ourselves.

    I was a corporate and startup HR leader forever. I started writing and consulting when the company I

    worked for (and adored) was sold. I loved being a corporate HR leader, but I desperately needed to

    process what I had experienced and learned working in organizations. I did that by writing and

    speaking about employment and the workplace.

    Like many pundit-type people, I started speaking through the keyhole called "How To." I gave a lot

    of talks to job-seekers, career services folks and and HR leaders. I wrote about how to get a job, how

    to brand yourself, how to start an HR department from scratch and how to navigate at the top of an

    organization, the place where vision and strategy meet.

    The next part was unexpected. The methodology didn't stay neatly on the page. The how-to keyhole

    led directly into a more colorful, compelling and world-expanding view of work and career education

    than I had known I was gestating in all those columns, E-Books and webinars. That worldview is

    called Human Workplace.

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    It's a simple idea, just the notion that when we bring ourselves to work all the way and make work as

    lively, fun and human as any other endeavor, everyone benefits. We believe that work should be as

    human a place as any other spot where humans congregate, from the corner barbershop to the

    farmer's market. We talk about and teach that culture is king, that more trust, less fear, and a human

    voice in everything make a workplace human; and that chipping away at the Godzilla structure of

    rules is as critical as customer service or product development. It's that edifice of rules and red tape,after all, that keeps people disconnected from their power source, disaffected, and out of their bodies

    and right brains at work.

    Once that reality hit me -- that it's the Godzilla structure of linear thinking, data worship, rules,

    hierarchy, fear and workplace ritual we should be dismantling, if we want people to bring their best

    to work - then my philosophical-editorial path was clear. My job description became simple then; it

    was to write, speak and teach Human Workplace ideas and methodology all the time, not overlooking

    the whimsy, color and operatic flourish the reintegration of humanity and the workplace deserve.

    While I was an internal HR person, I assumed that any expertise I could claim came from myknowledge of HR topics. That turned out to be totally wrong. It was the sedimentary build-up of

    understanding how people are at work, how they gel together or don't, the role of energy and the

    power of a human voice and perspective in business processes that informed my worldview the most.

    There's an excellent chance it is the same for you. You might think your subject matter expertise in

    Quality Control is the source of and bedrock for your credibility. I doubt that's true, QC expert

    though you may be. What you've learned and can teach others goes far beyond the how-to realm,

    your function, or anything as mundane as Best Practices.

    Everyone has a story. Everyone has wisdom to share. Our workmates have incredible stories and

    learning that cannot be conveyed adequately through the channels that our particle-focused, wave-blind workplaces offer. We need to connect at work on a different level, with our colleagues, our

    customers, our vendors and our partners, and what better way to get there than to help people find

    their voices?

    We all benefit when we come to work as ourselves, whole and complex, quirky and awesome. There

    is no better way to build trust, community, innovation and all the good things we want at work than

    to help people find their authentic voices and use them. You could start a lunchtime writer's

    workshop at your job, for instance. Wouldn't that be fun? Would it help all of you who participate to

    unleash your inner thought leader, if you did that?

    And since you've read this far, what is stopping you from finding your voice and opening a channel

    for your inner thought leader, right now? It's easy to get started. You don't have to launch a blog or

    speak to the Chamber of Commerce. You only need to get enough altitude on your job and your life

    to think about what's important to you, and what you'd like to share. There are people in your own

    organization or neighborhood and people all over the world who crave the community of shared

    ideas, whether that is manifested in face-to-face events, online community or in some other way.

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    You have a point of view that no one else has, informed by events and dramas no one else will ever

    experience. You are a thought leader right now. You could share some of what you know with a

    larger audience, and if you're already a content superstar, you could share what you know about

    reaching that pinnacle.

    You don't need anyone's permission to tell your story and sing your song. (Unless your company hasa social media policy. Check that out. I hate those policies but I like you very much, and don't want

    to see anything horrible happen when your blog or your podcast series hits the big time.)

    You could start with a journal. Start writing your thoughts on paper, or sharing them with a friend

    who will pay attention. Record a podcast on your phone. Talk about what you care about. If you don't

    like to write, grow your thought leadership flame by curating other people's content on Scoop.it.

    I hereby challenge you to unleash your inner thought leader, the person inside you who has a

    lifetime's worth of good ideas, observations and collected wisdom to share. We want to hear what

    your inner thought leader wants to tell us!

    The more you share your stories (your big life story and the million little stories inside it) the more

    your flame will grow. The more you teach what you know, the stronger your thought leadershipvoice will become.

    http://www.scoop.it/http://www.scoop.it/http://www.scoop.it/http://www.scoop.it/