Cleat marks up your back



In accordance with our principles of free enterprise and healthy competition, I'm going to ask you two to fight to the death for it. (Monty Python)

Cleat marks up your back

"I want to find a place where I don't have to work so hard anymore. I'm 6 years from retirement. With my experience, I should be able to get top dollar for my next job."

Do you see the absolute logical disasters in that statement? He wants to work less, slow down preparing for retirement, and be paid as much as ever. I hear these words at least once a week. They are the prelude to disaster. This guy may get another job, but he will be fired.

No one wants to pay you to relax and take it easy. They want your best effort. They want miracles. If you decide it is time to slow down, then step down too. If not, someone who wants to work hard is going to leave cleat marks up your back. He will run right over you to climb his career ladder. Your boss will cheer him on and give him your chair.

A lot of people complain about age discrimination. There is a fair amount of it. More often the problem is that the young guy is obviously determined to excel. He commits to hard work. His record shows 50, 60 and 70 hour weeks. The older person literally says in an interview, "I've learned how to work smart and not hard. I don't need to put in more than 40 hours a week anymore." The boss who is putting in 70 hours a week will not believe the old guy can do it. What is worse, often the older guy has a history of declining output.

Who would you hire? The person whose output is increasing, or decreasing?

Especially if you are over 40, like me, you have to show in every second of your interview that you can outwork, outlast and out perform any of those young guys. Your message is that they don't know the meaning of accomplishment. If you prove you won't relax and take it easy, you'll get the job. It doesn't matter who you are competing against. If you relax, you'll get cleat marks up your back.

About the last two weeks

This series is about what makes or breaks a job hunt. Reality and the real world. My list of the reasons people get a new job or struggle includes:

  1. Nothing beats a positive unstoppable Helium II attitude.
  2. People who are hurting are terrible employees and everyone knows it.
  3. You have to know your advantages and ruthlessly exploit them.
  4. The people competing against you must be known, measured, and either beaten, eliminated or enticed elsewhere.
  5. You can't make a silk purse out of a buggy whip.
  6. You have to be worth more than you are being paid
  7. A man dying of thirst will still want a bargain on a bottle of water
  8. Perception isn't important, it is everything
  9. Character really counts
  10. Diamonds in the rough don't stay that way
  11. Relax and get cleat marks up your back

Think about your job search. Just think. And then take notes about your conclusions.

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Next: The attention business

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Copyright 2005 by Bryan Dilts. "How to REALLY get a GREAT JOB" and "REALLY get a GREAT" are trademarks of Bryan Dilts. Connecting the Best People, With the Best Companies is a trademark of AGI.  All rights reserved.



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Message Added: December 5th, 2007 at 4:50 am