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- Title: You're Fired! Tips for Avoiding the Termination Blues
You're Fired! Tips for Avoiding the Termination Blues
by Joan Schramm
http://www.achieve-momentum.com
© 2007
With almost daily news reports of companies laying
off workers, or filing for bankruptcy, or going out of business
altogether, losing your job suddenly doesn't sound all that unlikely.
Here are some strategies either to avoid being laid-off, or to
cushion the blow if it comes.
- Keep your resume current. If you haven't looked at your resume
in over a year, drag it out and review it. Make sure you've
included your latest work accomplishments and that it adequately
represents who you are. Whether or not you are looking for a
new job, you should update your resume every time you get an
award, finish a big project, or get a promotion.
- Stay up to date on the latest news about your company and
in your field. Read the business sections in the newspaper.
Look at trade journals. Read your company's
annual report. Pay particular attention to stories that might
indicate the market for widgets (or whatever your company does)
is going south.
- Get to know people in different departments in your company.
The sales and service staffs always know before anyone else
how the company is doing. Learn to read the handwriting on the
wall.
- If you think the company might be considering layoffs, get
busy finding yourself a new job and then volunteer to leave.
If you're the first one out the door, you can probably negotiate
yourself a substantial severance package. Later people won't
be so lucky.
- Cultivate work relationships. If you're the kind of person
who thinks company golf outings, picnics, birthday parties and
other team get-togethers are a waste of time,
or if you routinely berate co-workers, steal ideas or lose your
temper, you'll be packing up your desk while good ol' mediocre
Jim in the next cubicle is comparing golf scores. People want
to be around people who make them feel comfortable. If it's
a close call on who to keep and who to let go, you and your
anti-team-mentality are going to lose.
- Stay current in your field. Take a seminar. Write an article
for a trade journal or an online article directory. Get certified
on a new piece of software, or learn some new
applications for one you already use.
- Toot your own horn. Make sure your boss knows just how much
you contribute to the bottom line. Get in there and get some
face-time. Volunteer to take on extra projects. Bring in new
customers or find ways to cut costs. It doesn't matter how great
a job you do, if no one realizes you do it.
- If you have a lot of personal information on your work computer,
get rid of it. Keep copies of performance evaluations, certifications,
letters of appreciation, etc, at home. Maintain a current list
of networking contacts, personal e-mail addresses and other
useful information (including your current resume) on your home
computer. If you are laid off, chances are you won't be allowed
to even log into your computer, let alone be allowed to download
anything. You probably won't be able to walk out the door with
a briefcase full of papers, either, so plan ahead. I'm not talking
about proprietary information you can go to jail for
doing that -- but you have a perfect right to the names and
contact information of people with whom you've developed a positive
working relationship. There's nothing to prevent you from calling
them to say you've left the XYZ Company and to ask them to keep
you in mind for any job openings they might hear about.
Losing your job doesn't have to be the end of
the world. You can't prepare for every eventuality, but you can
cultivate a positive outlook an make sure you're ready to move
ahead if the ax falls on you.
Credit:
About The Author:
Joan Schramm, the Workplace Solutions Expert, is a career, executive
and personal coach with twenty years experience in management,
training and coaching. Joan can work with you to figure out exactly
what you want from your life and your career, and how to get there
without a lot of detours. For more information, or to talk about
what's going on in your life, go to:
http://www.achieve-momentum.com
Related
Information:
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Speedy
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Enhancement Basics
NBA
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Voyages
Reprint
of this article does not constitute an endorsement by the National
Business Association; the article is for informational purposes
for our members and viewers of our Web site.
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