Crush Your First 6 Months in a New
Job
Whether you’re new to a company,
or taking a new role at your employer, your first six months in any job are
absolutely critical to building your brand.
Over-deliver on your core responsibilities:
·
Figure out how your
performance will be measured... get explicit metrics and numbers. If
you’re in a role where expectations aren’t clear… work with your manager to
write them. Uncertainty on what is expected of you is a recipe for disaster.
·
Don’t try to learn
everything… priority #1 during your on boarding is proving that you are
reliable (and eventually excellent) on the few things that matter… the 3-5 core
activities. Interview people around you and observe star performers to
figure out what these core activities are and how to be great at them.
·
Over-deliver on
your first 3 assignments, and most importantly, over-communicate your progress
to your manager as you work through each assignment. They don’t trust you
yet, so keep their anxiety low by keeping them in the loop. When you have
a question, don’t be afraid to ask, but bring recommendations to show how you
thought about the problem. Ask for feedback, and take feedback with a
smile.
Build the right network:
·
Invest in the
relationship with your manager, and figure out how they are measured. By the
end of month 6, you should be working with your manager on a project to hit one
of their goals that is beyond the stated scope of your job. Remember, their
objectives are more important than yours to the long term success of the
company, and your career.
·
Get to know the
people on your team and your cross-functional partners. Figure out what
matters to them, and find an opportunity to help... perhaps assisting on a
project, doing some research for them, or just offering feedback on a report
that they’re writing. If they don’t sit in your office, travel to meet
them in person. Meeting face to face makes a huge difference.
Finally, avoid at all costs office politics or getting involved in personal
disputes between coworkers.
·
Ask lots of
questions. When you're new, you can meet anyone and ask anything.
Take advantage. Book time with a wide range of people, including senior
executives if possible, and get educated on how the company works. You'll learn
a ton and this network can be incredibly helpful to get things done.
Set yourself up for success at home:
·
Figure out what is
expected on the job (hours, travel, uncertainty of schedule), and put together
a plan to make this work at home. Most importantly, sit down with your
spouse and make sure you’re both on the same page about what changes will be
required, and what you can each to do mitigate the impact. The last thing
you want is to be crushing it at work while digging a hole for yourself at
home.
·
Work hard, but
don’t stay at the office late. It’s critical to nail your first six
months of assignments, but it’s also critical that you don’t set expectations
that you’ll work all the time. That can’t be seen as your norm.
Rather, if you need to work extra to deliver exceptional results, then do it at
home. The goal is to deliver output, not show input.
Lay the groundwork for the future:
·
Be ready for a
brief interaction with a senior executive. Create an elevator pitch on
the relevance of your role, what you’re working on, and how it fits into the
broader business unit strategy and company mission. Being able to explain
the relevance of your role is often interpreted as a sign of future potential.
·
Have the “career
goals conversation” with your manager around month six. Share your
feelings about working at the company long term, and how you want to grow
professionally. It’s not a conversation to have in the first month, but
it is a conversation you need to have in the first year. During this
conversation, ask your manager what their career goals are and what role you
can play in helping them succeed.
·
Make sure you like
what you’re doing, and you enjoy the people you’re working with. If
you’re not happy, figure out why and think about a path to resolution.
You’re at your best when you’re happy and inspired. Don’t linger in a job
you don’t like.
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