Thursday, November 14, 2019
13 reasons your bosses dont find you likable
13 reasons your bosses don't find you likable 13 reasons your bosses don't find you likable While you might wish those days where a popularity contest mattered are over, the hard, cold truth is that being liked by those above you may make or break your career. As New York career coach, Carlota Zimmerman explains, likability can determine your life. âFrom shopping to dating, whether itâs getting a good deal on your dream home, or student loans, getting upgraded on a plane, to receiving faster care at the ER, likable people tend to move to the front of the line,â she says. âYou want your boss to like you, since sheâs the one determining who will get the opportunities necessary to achieve their career potential, and goals. You want your boss to like you, so that when sheâs planning to attend that huge industry conference in Shanghai, she picks you to join her in first class. You want your boss to like you, so that when sh*t gets realâ"as the young people sayâ"she can go to bat for you.âTo make sure youâre putting your friendliest foot forward, avoid these b lunders that might make your boss wish someone else was doing your job.You give your boss a lot to manageUnless youâre at the top of the totem pole or standing atop that glass ceiling at your own company, part of your role will always mean making your managerâs life easier. And while asking questions is part of learning and advancing your career, the more time your boss has to spend holding your hand, the more frustrated he or she might become. âYour boss has a lot on their plate, and they donât have time to constantly babysit you. Micromanaging is not fun for anyone, and though most employees say they donât like being micro-managed, if youâre a lot of work, your boss probably feels like they have to use this method to get work done,â explains career coach Colene Elridge. Instead of constantly asking for reassurance, smart employees figure it out, or come to the boss with a succinct description of the problem and potential solutions. If you find it tough to resist the urge to ping your boss several times a day, Elridge suggest finding a coach or a mentor outside of your office to build your confidence. âGain the skills you need to more effectively do your job. Then find a mentor that can help guide you through your career. Mentors are great at helping you grow and develop,â Elridge says.You fake it and donât produce resultsCongrats! You earned an awesome promotion or finally got the lead spot for a project you wanted to spear. But now, the pressure is on: dropping the ball after a career growth moment can quickly make your boss doubt his or her decision. Though faking-it-until-you-make-it can work in certain cases, if youâre throwing around fancy terms and answers, without actually understanding your responsibilities, you might make a big mess for your boss to clean up. âI canât tell you the number of organizations Iâve worked with who have employees who donât do their jobs. Meaning, they do everything but produce results. Some bl ame falls squarely on the organization for not properly engaging their employees, but some falls on the individual. When you make the choice to not do your job, you make your boss have to work harder, and thatâs a key way to make them not like you. You were hired to do a job. Whatever the job is, there are expected results, and when you donât produce those results, thereâs a problem,â Elridge says. Many people can stagnate for years at this level of middle management because they never learn how to stop bossing people and start leading people. How do you start to grow as professional, in a meaningful, impactful way? Elridge says itâs a slippery slope that might require some soul-searching to figure out why youâre working where youâre working, and what might be keeping you from being less than motivated. From there, baby steps are key. âIf you donât like the work, consider a career change. If youâre just in a bit of a slump, pull yourself together and set a deadli ne. Momentum changes things. When you see yourself complete a project or task, you build more momentum to do better work,â she adds.Youâre not straightforward about things that donât workNo matter if itâs your dream job or just a starter gig to get you to the company you truly want to work for, there are going to be issues that arrive in every workplace. Though ultimately, itâs your managerâs responsibility to address workflows, teams or programs that simply arenât working, itâs also part of your role to flag miscommunication or difficulties youâre having. Why? When something goes wrong, productivity is the first to suffer. âAny good workplace knows how to handle conflict. A workplace without conflict resolution skills is a recipe for chaos. It is not uncommon that people lack conflict resolution skills. Avoidance is not a tactic. Conflict will happen, and though it can be uncomfortable, itâs not always a bad thing. If youâre the type of person who avoids con flict or stirs up conflict in your office, my guess is your boss may not like you,â Elridge says. Hereâs where itâs essential to put your creative thinking hat on by figuring out whatâs causing the trouble and how you might suggest fixing the issue to your boss. Approach your manager with a solution â" not just a complaint â" and let them take the reins from there.You donât impress himUsually the bossâs least favorite people are the ones who punch in the clock and contribute no more than they have to. Or they ask for more responsibility, but when asked to see a project through to the end, make excuses as to why they canât. The bottom line: Promotable employees go above and beyond. So if youâre not taking ownership for your own career path, why would you expect your boss to guide you along a highlighted, trackable path? Worst of all, if your boss has stopped coming to you because he knows he canât count on you, youâre definitely not going anywhere in the company .âThereâs only so many hours in the work day, and if your boss starts rolling her eyes, since sheâs just done with your âdiscussions about why a project isnâtâ finishedââ¦youâre in trouble. You want your boss to identify you as someone who solves problems, whom she can count on, not as someone who makes her life harder,â Zimmerman says. âWorking in an office, making deadlines, keeping a business on track is difficult enough. When you consider that people have their own lives, with partners, children, mortgages, parents, Netflix queues, you begin to realize that very few good managers want any unnecessary stress in the office.âInstead of doing the bare minimum and offloading the rest to your boss, consider why youâre feeling disconnected. âYour issues may be legitimate, but if they are making it difficult to get work done, if theyâre contributing to a tense corporate environment, you and your issues may need to look for a new job,â Zimmerman suggests.Yo u make it all about you Bosses have to oversee teams, and the employee who is always trying to focus attention on themselves is a distraction to cooperation. Derailing team discussions to talk about your own goals, dominating planning, and refusing to see the bigger picture of team progress rather than your own are all manifestations of this attitude. While this type of self-first behavior might make you feel like a powerful executive at first, it doesnât do much to build a relationship with your co-workers, or more importantly, your boss. This applies on a personal level too: when other people are talking, listen. You might not be interested in hearing about their random trip to the Finger Lakes, but itâs in your best interest to listen, anyway, as a way to show respect for their experiences.Consider this: people you work with have to spend a minimum of eight hours a day with you. Wouldnât they prefer someone who is pleasant to spend that time with?âPeople want to work with people that they like, not just people who are competent. Make an effort to develop a good working relationship with your boss. This does not necessarily mean that you always have to go out to lunch together. But it does mean that you should try to create a spirit of camaraderie between you,â Zimmerman adds.You refuse to do simple tasksMaking copies? Creating a spreadsheet? Sending notes post-budget-planning meeting? Under no circumstances should you break any ethical standards for a boss, but for routine requests, the answer should always be - as far as you can swing it - âyes.â You might not find all of his or her tasks to be necessary, but your role is helping your higher-ups to meet deadlines and goals, so itâs worth your effort. If you donât do it â" or do it poorly â" you not only make yourself look bad, but the team, too.âYears ago, I had a client who, on the first day of her new job, was given a detail-oriented project. She didnât do it. Not only did s he not do the project, she spent time that could have been used to make her deadline, writing out a long letter of excuses and apologies. Needless to say, her management was furiousâ¦and within two months, that new job was only an old memory,â Zimmerman says. âYou may not understand the reason for the deadline, you may disagree with it, but if youâre really trying to climb the ladder, make the deadline.âIf youâre actually strapped for time and canât do a deep-dive into data before 6 p.m.? Donât just cross your arms and refuse to do something. Show you can think strategically. Instead of saying, âI canât do that,â and expect the boss to fix it, instead point to facts and numbers and make a case for another way: âBecause our budget canât cover this right now, itâs a challenge to get this project done. Have we considered hiring an intern or distributing the workload among other teams? Hereâs how that would work.âYou refuse to understand the struggle of bu reaucracyIn very few cases does management responsibility mean snapping your fingers and getting what you want. Managing takes maneuvering. Being a boss is very often a matter of managing bureaucracy to get things done. Some bosses are good at it, and some are terrible. But whatâs never helpful is an employee whoâs constantly talking down the company or asking why something hasnât already happened by now, exactly the way that employee wants it. âYou can create major headaches for your boss and everyone else on the job if you donât understand bureaucracy. As frustrating as dealing with bureaucracy can be, there is a certain protocol that is expected, and if you try to bypass the workings of bureaucracy in order to get things done, you will ruffle feathers along the way,â explains career coach Cheryl Palmer. âYour boss will probably take the heat because of your bad decisions. This in turn will affect how the boss perceives you. The best thing to do is to learn how th e bureaucracy works and work within the system.âNot everyone is cut out for corporate world though, Palmer notes. If you canât see yourself conforming to the bureaucracy, she suggests looking for a job in a small company where there isnât as much bureaucracy to deal with â" or working for yourself. You make your boss look badJust like you, bosses like to look good in front of their bosses. If you do a good job, they look good. But if you undermine your boss by badmouthing them unreasonably to teammates or their own bosses, they usually find out, and they see you as a problem. âA few years ago, a friend of mine was going through a rough patch in her life. She confided in a friend of hers, an attorney who owned a successful small practice, and he hired her, on a part-time basis, to help him out in the office. Sounds great, right? It was, except my friend simply couldnât stop herself from biting the hand that fed her. Whatever the boss said, she had to correct him, or one-u p him, or simply make it clear to him that he might be a well-to-do lawyer, but she had a Masterâs degree, and he owed her respect,â Zimmerman shared. âAfter two weeks, all his compassion had drained away, and the next time she corrected him, he came down came the ax.âThere might be times when you donât agree with your employer or you think you could do a better job than him or her, but as Zimmerman says: your boss is the boss and he or she is charge. If you canât bite your tongue, you might want to consider seeking another job, where you can be at the top, or a manager you vibe better with.
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