Career Tips from Phineas & Ferb
July 24, 2010
In a recent episode of my family’s new favorite show, step-brothers Phineas & Ferb learn about reverse engineering, defined by the host of the “Uncovery Channel” show they’re watching as the process of closely examining [an object] and its individual parts to figure out “what do it do?” and “how it do what it do?”.
Eureka! Career tips from a Disney cartoon! (A stretch that perhaps only a mom of a 6-year-old who happens to be a career coach can finagle.)
Let me connect some dots…
“WHAT HAVE I DONE?”
We’ve all done it at one time when looking for a job. Open the job board (or, showing my age, opening the Sunday paper looooong ago) and start with a keyword search, maybe. Marketing, IT, sales… See something of interest (for God only knows what reason at that particular moment) and think, “I could do that.”
In a land far far away, a long long time ago it may have gone something like this…
We do the resume to fit that job perfectly and get the interview. We tell them everything they want to hear and by week’s end we have the offer. We start the next Monday and within the first 90 days we awake one Monday morning, sweating uncontrollably over some unnamed source of stress and suddenly it hits us, “What have I DONE? This job isn’t ME!” But we stick it out and promise ourselves we’ll stay two years so we don’t look like a job-hopper on our resumes. Then…
“HOW DID I GET HERE?”
15 years later we wake up one day after chasing jobs and promotions in the same area because those are the skills we have now and say to ourselves, “How did I get HERE? This job isn’t ME!” Ah if we’d only trusted our gut earlier…
[Do you hear the voice of experience in this story? <ahem>]
Where did we go wrong?
CAREER REVERSE ENGINEERING
For starters, we did the job search backwards. Sure it may be the somewhat conventional way job seekers do what they do. But it’s certainly backwards from a job satisfaction point of view.
So I offer this: Instead of starting with what’s out there, the most successful job-seekers-turned-happily-employed start with what’s inside themselves.
Career reverse engineering is the best way to kick off a job search that results in finding that ideal position… the role that will bring the new employee a higher measure of self-worth and <gasp> joy. Yes, it IS ok to actually be HAPPY AT WORK.
5 STEPS & ACTION TIPS
To reverse engineer your own ideal career to jumpstart your search for the next job on that path, it starts with a close examination of YOU. To understand “what do it do” when the it is you.
1) Pay Attention to Your Energy Level
We are each uniquely programmed, if you will, to do something (maybe several things) really well. Those tasks that give us energy — versus deplete it — give us clues about what we are hardwired to do better than anyone else.
PUT IT INTO ACTION: Pay attention for a full week at work or think of your most recent position and it’s daily requirements. Make a list of the energizing activities from each day. Do you see any trends? Categorize these tasks into 3-5 themes. You now have a starting place for your ideal duties and responsibilities on the job.
2) Separate Strengths from Skills
You learn skills. You’re born with certain inalienable strengths. Ignore them at your own peril! [Again, voice of experience here.] Conventional development plans insist, “Work on your weaknesses to improve the things in which you do not already excel.” Really? “Fixing your weaknesses” or “maximizing your strengths,” that is getting better at those things at which you’re already naturally good. Where’s the better return on investment?
PUT IT INTO ACTION: We are our own worst critics, aren’t we? Especially when it comes to valuing what we do best. Ask friends, family, coworkers and others in your circles to write down 5 things they appreciate about how you operate. You may be surprised when you see the words they use. “Really? But that’s just what I do.” Exactly. Now, how do you get to do “that’s just what you do” in your job every day?
3) Stick to Your Core Values
One of the worst things that can happen in an economy such as we’re in now is that we lose sight of what’s most important to us when we get desperate for a paycheck. Might there be compromises along the way? I’m not so Pollyanna to think we might have to give up a few perks to make sure there’s food on the table. But beware sacrificing the principles that are woven into the fabric of your very being.
PUT IT INTO ACTION: This article includes a list of common personal values. Cross out the ones that are unimportant to you. Next, try to narrow the remaining values to 10. Now, take an even closer look. Can you settle on the top 5? How about 3? If these 3-5 values are not shared or at least respected by a potential employer, is it worth taking a position knowing you’ll be compromising what you hold most dear?
4) Articulate Your “Why”
Highest job satisfaction happens when we feel that we’re making an impact, when we care about the work and its outcomes. It’s about finding what is personally meaningful. So, what is it that will elicit, “I get to go to work today!” when the alarm goes off each morning?
PUT IT INTO ACTION: Just for fun, imagine you’ve won the lottery. And I mean the never-have-to-work-another-day jackpot. You no longer need a job for financial security. What do you have to do anyway? What do you care enough about that you will invest your time to see it through? Call it passion, cause, mission… This is your work.
5) Outline Your Success Factors
PUT IT INTO ACTION: Think on these things that can directly impact your professional and personal career success. What do you know you need to be truly successful? What does your physical space look like? Who are you teammates? What kind of leadership support do you need? How are you managed? How do you manage your direct reports? What’s the ideal culture that will bring out your personal best?
OTHER RESOURCES
It’s challenging to try to uncover and articulate our own strengths. One of my favorite resources that can help you do just this is StrengthsFinder 2.0 by Tom Rath. All major book stores are likely to carry it. For about $20 you can purchase the book and take the online SF 2.0 assessment that will help you pinpoint natural talents that when practiced, developed and put to good use become true strengths.
Here’s to getting to do what you do best… every day!
MEET PHINEAS & FERB
The quickest summary: P&F, as it’s now known at the Masse home, is about step-brothers who, as a means to beat Dog Days boredom, devise outrageous activities throughout their summer vacation… like building a large-scale roller coaster throughout their hometown of “Danville,” opening a fine dining restaurant in their backyard and other mega shenanigans. Trust me, it’s way more hilarious than I’m portraying here, I swear.
The short relevant clip is from 1:15-1:40 but by all means watch more…
DISCLAIMER: I take no responsibility if you too get hooked. Enjoy!