Wednesday, August 19, 2015

7 Things I Wish I Knew When I Was Starting My Career


Three years ago I took a leap of faith and left a company I had been with for 9 years, to go to a competitor, and work in management for the first time. As much technical knowledge and experience as I had, I was definitely nervous about what was in store. 

Now I am celebrating my three year anniversary at First Business Bank, and almost twelve years in banking.   (Did I really just say 12 years???)  I will never claim to have things all figured out, but I have learned a lot of lessons along the way.

Here is my list of the 7 Things I Wish I Knew When I Was Staring My Career:

1 – ASK.  Ask questions, ask people for their opinions, if you’re not sure why something is done a certain way, ASK.  Asking questions is important, and asking powerful questions is even better.  It can be easy to only ask questions when it’s absolutely necessary.  You likely want to fly under the radar when you’re starting out and just learn to do things the way they’ve always been done.  Asking questions shows that you are thinking and that you care.  If you ask bigger picture questions, it shows you will go above and beyond in your thinking, and your work. 

2 - Eat lunch and attend happy hours with people outside of your department.  Building connections with people in your company that are in other areas will pay dividends.  You will have more allies at work, and when you are tasked with something that involves these other departments, you’ll have a smoother go of it if you’re already familiar with someone involved. 

3 – Remember people’s names and use them.  I have always struggled with remembering names, and last year I made a conscious effort to use people’s names when I greet them.  It was amazing how people’s responses to me changed! People are always at least moderately friendly, but when you use their name it becomes a much stronger link between the two of you.  Even Dale Carnegie knew this when he wrote How to Win Friends and Influence People back in the 1930’s.  He said that hearing your own name is the sweetest and most important sound in any language.  He’s right.

4 – Become the expert in areas people shy away from.  You will learn quickly in a new job that there are tasks people willingly take on, and then there other things people will groan about and try to avoid.  In my first bank job people dodged participation loans, SBA loans, report writing, and New Market Tax Credit loans.  So what did I work hard at specializing in?  Participation loans, SBA loans, report writing, and New Market Tax Credit loans.  This will quickly set you apart as someone who doesn’t back away from challenge, which is invaluable when you’re trying to stand out in a positive way.

5 – Dress for the job you want, not just the job you have.  Starting out I could barely afford groceries, let alone a wardrobe of dress clothes.  I would buy things cheap, and wear them till they wore out.  Over time I learned through observation that there was a difference in perception of people who barely met the dress code, and those that put themselves together well daily.  Now before I go much further, I don’t think you should be judged by your looks and clothes.  We’re all glorious people full of potential no matter what we wear.  BUT, most of the information someone gets from meeting you once is from your appearance.  You have a choice to use that to your advantage or not.
6 – Respect those who aren’t present.  a.k.a.  Don’t trash talk co-workers.  When starting a new job it is very easy to cling to the first group of people that accept you.  If you quickly find they are a group that will gossip and talk badly about other employees whenever they have a chance, graciously distance yourself from them.  They’re the toxic ones everyone knows about, and you don’t want to be in that category.   People watch new employees closely, so this is a great chance to show your integrity and gain trust.  If you rise above the shit talking and instead spin conversations in a constructive way, people will respect you, and will know you won’t trash them as soon as they leave the room.
7 – Relationships are JUST as important as tasks. This threads through everything I’ve written about in this post.  It is really important to be knowledgeable and great at the work you are required to do, but the other side of the equation is the people.  You will never know which co-worker will eventually be your boss, or be close to someone in HR at a competitor.  The absolute best thing you can do is make it a point to get to know people, be sincere, take the high road, and manage yourself with integrity.  There’s no telling how one bad relationship could ruin your chances at your dream job, or one good relationship could open the door to a golden opportunity.
There's no shortage of fun relationships to build at First Business!