ARTICLES
Written By Rich For You.
The Top 10 Commandments Of Work.
I’ve been making a list over the past six months of commandments about work. I get requests all the time to bundle them up into a post.
I’ve been making a list over the past six months of commandments about work. I get requests all the time to bundle them up into a post. So here they are:
1. Be the go-to person in your area.
Know your industry inside and out, you won't do well if you just know your job. Learn what's happening, who's up, who's down, any new processes and practices, who are the stars, etc.
2. Cultivate and consistently grow your contacts.
You can never have too many friends, colleagues, or connections.Learn how to communicate, both written and verbal. Most people stop once they start a job — this is death for any career. It's not only what you know — it's who you know too.
3. Ensure your superiors and clients ALWAYS look good.
This is not the same as brown-nosing — do the right thing and take care of the people that sign your check. When they move on to bigger and better things they will call, every time.
4. Know your strengths and weaknesses well.
Strengthen your strengths and keep a tab on your weaknesses so they don’t sabotage you.
5. Be totally honest in everything you do.
Even if it hurts in the short run. Solid ethics always trumps sharky snarkiness.
6. Don't ever get trapped into a dead-end position because you're scared of change.
Move. Change is good and will open new doors. Trust me.
7. Treat everyone from the CEO to the janitor with the utmost respect.
Yes, you do have time for everyone — I start conversations with security guards. When my battery is dead, guess who offers a quick jump?
8. Never stop learning.
Stay hungry for knowledge and experience. Not only does it feed itself, it becomes fun.
9. Listen. Don't talk all the time.
People you meet everyday have the most interesting and powerful things to say that can change your life.
10. Mix with other successful people.
To play better tennis you must play tennis with better tennis players. Seek their advice, listen to what they say, and apply it. Go find where they live.
Can you think of any others? Which ones have rung true for you in your career so far?
The One Mistake We All Make.
"In looking for people to hire, you look for three qualities: integrity, intelligence, and energy. And if they don't have the first, the other two will kill you." — Warren Buffett
"In looking for people to hire, you look for three qualities: integrity, intelligence, and energy. And if they don't have the first, the other two will kill you."— Warren Buffett
If you don't know Warren, he's an American industrialist and philanthropist widely regarded as one of the most successful investors in the world. Often called the "Oracle of Omaha", he is the primary shareholder, chairman and CEO of Berkshire Hathaway. He is consistently ranked among the world's wealthiest people (third wealthiest person in the world as of 2011).
So he knows what he is talking about.
It's interesting Warren places integrity first. In today's work- and marketplace, the focus is centered on intelligence and energy. How much do you know? What experience do you have? What have you done? Are you willing to spend 10-12 hours a day (and more) knocking it out of the park for me?
But we always forget about integrity. A definition of integrity — "Adherence to moral and ethical principles; soundness of moral character; honesty."
Let's be honest — how many times do you experience a concerted effort by management to adhere to moral and ethical principles? Where everyone displays a powerful moral character? Where people don't lie and endeavor to tell the truth in their business dealings?
I'm not saying the marketplace or workplace is totally devoid of integrity. But it does take a back seat to profits, targets, stock price and power. Not even a back seat . . . it's in the trunk with the spare tire.
In the wake of all the turmoil with Wall Street, Washington, and many boardrooms, (and even on Twitter lately) we all need to begin to make harder choices based on integrity. Who we invest in, who we purchase from, who we do business with.
And sometimes we need to look within for our anchor to integrity — because sometimes we fall short. We need to also pay attention to our own actions and decisions and how they impact others.
Whatever we do, we will continue to face ethical challenges. It's how we react to them that counts.
What do you do to stay ethically anchored?
