Four Sure-Fire Ways to Stand Out in Your Career
A young man in a class I was addressing at a Columbia University business class asked me a poignant question. “How do I stand out in my career?”
He was in his mid-twenties, professionally dressed, and his body language exuded self-confidence. He already had a lot going for him, but this is the advice I gave him and would give to any young man or woman who wants to stand out in their career:
1. “Go the extra mile.”
If you only do 90 percent of what they’re asking of you, you won’t stand out. You’ll be average and there’s no pay-off for the effort you put into the job. However, doing more than what is expected is a great investment because it will pay off in your reputation and it’s only a little more effort. Doing more than is required means you’ll be the one management thinks of when there’s an important assignment. You’ll be the one with who gets the promotions.
2. Be a team player.
I promise you, management notices selfish behavior, the kind where a person puts his own good ahead of the team.
3. Work on your people skills.
Learn how to get along with others and how to bring out the best in others. Consider taking the Dale Carnegie Course on human relations skills. Frank Perdue took it, I took it, and my late father, co-founder of the Sheraton Hotels took it. And just how important is this skill? John D. Rockefeller answered this question when he said, “The ability to deal with people is as purchasable a commodity as sugar or coffee and I will pay more for that ability than for any other under the sun.”
4. Constantly learn new skills.
I agree with what Scott Adams, creator of the comic strip Dilbert, says: “Develop a variety of skills that work well together. Each new skill you learn doubles your odds of success.” I’ve made it a rule always to take at least one new course a year, and amazingly, they all come in handy. I think it’s a Law of the Universe that somehow the things you learn, whether (in my case) languages, database programming, public speaking or whatever, have helped advance my career. The more skills you have, the more useful you are to yourself and to an organization, and being able to solve problems for an organization is an incredibly valuable career advantage.
So, to stand out in your career, go the extra mile, be a team player, work on your people skills, and constantly work on acquire new skills.
Search Articles
Latest Articles
Advice for Working with a Columnist
To summarize, unless I’ve told you otherwise in the cover letter, best practices include: answer in a timely way, make factual corrections but don’t re-write, and in most cases, it’s best not to add material. However, I’ll value our collaboration whether you follow this advice or not!
We’re Losing the Information War to Russia
https://www.newsmax.com/mitziperdue/russia-information/2024/06/18/id/1169163 Publication –newsmax.com
A Mother’s Agony: Olha’s Story of Loss and Resilience After the Chernihiv Rocket Attack
https://townhall.com/columnists/mitzi-perdue/2024/06/13/a-mothers-agony-olhas-story-of-loss-and-resilience-after-the-chernihiv-rocket-attack-n2640390 Publication –townhall.com
Ukraine War Survivors Have Long Road to Healing
https://www.newsmax.com/mitziperdue/detention-zaporizhia-oblast/2024/06/12/id/1168465 Publication –newsmax.com
Subscribe to Updates
About Author
Mitzi Perdue is the widow of the poultry magnate, Frank Perdue. She’s the author of How To Make Your Family Business Last and 52 Tips to Combat Human Trafficking. Contact her at www.MitziPerdue.com
All Articles
Recurrent Vaginitis
Recurrent VaginitisMOST WOMEN WILL AT SOME TIME EXPERIENCE VAGINITIS At some point in their lives, most women will experience vaginitis. It’s one of the most common gynecologic condition encountered in the office. Typically, it comes about when the yeast or bacteria...
Take Action: Beating Your Competitors
Take Action: Beating Your Competitors Act Faster Than Your Competitors The super-successful people I’ve known have all had a huge propensity for action. They had tremendous agility in carrying out projects rapidly. I remember one night in late 1951, my father Ernest...
Transforming Cardiovascular Disease Prevention In Women
Transforming Cardiovascular Disease Prevention In WomenCARDIOVASCULAR DISEASE (CVD) IS USA’S LEADING CAUSE OF DEATH FOR WOMEN One in four women will die of CVD, and to put this in perspective, the annual CVD mortality for women is double that of all forms of cancer...
Obesity In Women: New Insights
Obesity In Women: New InsightsOBESITY HAS MORE IMPACT THAN ANY OTHER CHRONIC DISEASE Obesity has enormous impact, partly because it is so widespread and partly because it exacerbates so many other disease states. In the US, there are 93 million Americans with...
Fingernail Infections
Fingernail InfectionsFINGERNAIL INFECTIONS AFFECT WOMEN MORE THAN MEN In contrast to toenail infections, fingernail infections, especially those caused by candida, impact more women than men. This happens because often women’s jobs as housekeepers or dishwashers...
Strategies to Preserve Your Family Business
Strategies to Preserve Your Family BusinessOriginally from http://www.familybusinessmagazine.com/mitzi-perdue%E2%80%99s-strategies-preserve-your-company-family-businessThe widow of Frank Perdue, longtime president and CEO of Perdue Farms, offers nine suggestions on...