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Bev's Tips for a Better Work Life

Tips for a more rewarding and resilient career

For almost 20 years, Bev has been coaching
professionals to thrive at work, navigate
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Praise your team in ways that work

Posted by Beverly Jones on January 5, 2018

Motivate your colleagues by

creating memorable moments

People like to be appreciated. In fact, we need it. If a friend or colleague offers us a warm and sincere “thank you,” we tend to feel acknowledged and validated. And each little expression of gratitude might help create a sense of connection between those giving and receiving thanks.

Psychologists say that feeling appreciated promotes a healthy sense that we are valuable and that our life has meaning. And good managers understand that workers who feel valued are happier and more productive than their peers.

Most strong leaders know that if you want people to go the extra mile it’s essential to give them positive feedback.  So when they do good work, you thank them and let them know how they’re making a difference. And employee recognition is a key to retention. Not feeling appreciated is a reason folks often give for moving from one employer to another.

 But even though most bosses claim to understand the importance of making employees feel appreciated, they may not understand how to go about it. Gallup polls suggest that only one in three U.S. workers strongly agrees that they have received recognition or praise for doing good work in the past seven days.

As an executive coach, I frequently hear from professionals that their best work goes unrecognized. A typical situation is that I meet with the client’s supervisor at the start of an engagement. The supervisor raves about the client’s excellent work, explaining that the coaching opportunity is being offered because the client has high potential and is greatly esteemed. Yet the client complains to me that she doesn’t feel appreciated.

In many organizations there is a perception gap. Team leaders believe they lavish thanks and praise, but team members feel unnoticed and undervalued.

One reason for this disconnect is the well known tendency of the human mind to focus more on critical feedback than on the positive. One theory explaining our preoccupation with the negative, from an evolutionary perspective, is that our ancestors who tended to worry were the survivors, and they passed on the genes that make us more likely to focus on threats and negative cues.

Another factor is that when recognition comes along regularly, but in the same old way, we are less likely to notice it. For that reason, savvy leaders try to create celebrations, like events or surprise gifts, as way to underscore their gratitude and make it memorable.

In their latest book, “The Power of Moments,” insightful authors Chip Heath & Dan Heath explore why unexpected gestures can have an extraordinary impact.

They explain that people tend to remember the high and low moments of an experience, and perhaps the beginning and end, but forget the rest.

People feel comfortable when things are in a rut, but we feel more alive when something unusual is happening, the Heath brothers say. And moments that feel out of the ordinary are a powerful way to really hear “thanks” because we are likely to revisit and cherish those memories.

The Heaths say that if you want to express appreciation in a meaningful way you should create a “defining moment” – a short experience that is both meaningful and memorable. You can create a peak moment by breaking the normal script and doing something that makes a person feel joyful and surprised. One way to do that is by “boosting sensory appeal,” which might mean offering food, decorations, funny clothes or anything that makes people want to pull out their phone and take a picture.

They suggest that another way to create times your team will remember is to “elevate milestones.” Break up the sameness of your routines by setting objectives and dates, and then find new ways to acknowledge and even celebrate goals that are reached and work that is done well.

Remember that people need to feel appreciated and they are motivated by a sense that their work is valued. And as you experiment with different ways to say “thank you,” you may discover that by creating defining moments for them, you start feeling more valued and connected yourself.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: feedback, positivity, thank you

Celebrations support a healthy workplace culture

Posted by Beverly Jones on December 6, 2014

Build your team & boost productivity

with 13 ideas for workplace celebrations

Celebrations can enhance your workplace culture and help team members do even better work. Sharing appreciation for success and good fortune can support the well-being of individuals, foster a sense of community and promote the health of your whole organization.

Creating a celebration can be a wonderful way to acknowledge achievements and encourage people to continue to excel. Positive reinforcement is a powerful motivator and a celebratory event can be a smart way to offer good feedback.

Celebrations provide times when colleagues come together, get to know each other better and develop a shared perspective. Enjoying festive occasions helps workers become friends, and having friends at the office helps you do your best.

Arranging celebrations can provide a moment for reflection, allowing people to develop a collective focus on the right stuff. It’s a way to draw attention to the organization’s goals and values, and to remind participants that they work at a great place.

Consider these 13 ways to celebrate at work: [Read more…] about Celebrations support a healthy workplace culture

Filed Under: leadership, motivation, organizational techniques, team building, Uncategorized Tagged With: celebrating work, leadership

Positive games can empower your career

Posted by Beverly Jones on October 30, 2014

How the games we play can

help us through tough times.

 

Positive games can energize your career (Image(c)denis_pc via Fotolia)

When I asked George, a fairly new manager, about his work, he hesitated. Then he said, “Objectively, it’s going really well. But I don’t know how long I can stand it.”

The good news was that, after two years of building collaboration and creating expertise, George’s team was exceeding all its goals and had been recognized as a shining “center of excellence” within the large organization.

But now leaders in other divisions were trying to steal some of the glory and resources. They were attempting to poach George’s critical experts by having them reassigned away to other challenges.

When I asked George how many team members he’d actually lost, he said, “None. But I’m so exhausted from the constant fight to protect them that I’m not sure if I can keep this up. The stress is just too much.”

I thought about how much George loves board games and recalled a party where he and friends had played fiercely for hours. The intense players shouted and mocked each other. But at the end of the game they simply laughed about the competition and rejoined the festivities.

I asked George whether he could take a step back from the challenges to his team, and view his colleagues more like other players in a strategic game. [Read more…] about Positive games can empower your career

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: career resilience, positive games

If you’re wondering “what’s next?”

Posted by Beverly Jones on April 10, 2014

Ready for a career shift?

Read Kerry Hannon’s tips.

 Are you thinking about a launching a new career, but don’t know where to start?  Then here’s good news.  Acclaimed journalist Kerry Hannon has just released a revised paperback edition of her book, “What’s Next? – Finding Your Passion and Your Dream Job in Your Forties, Fifties, and Beyond.”

 Since 2006, Hannon has been writing in leading publications about “Second Acts,” the new careers that many of us are launching in our later years.  Hannon knows as much about this trend as anyone around. And, while she certainly understands the data on jobs trends, she developed much of her understanding firsthand, through hundreds of interviews with people, aged 40 to 70+, who have made big shifts in their work lives.

In “What Next?” Hannon offers portraits of 17 people who have chosen new paths.  For example, there’s Ken Rynne, a Washington energy lawyer who decided to live his dream and become a professional performer.  He launched Planet Washington, a rollicking musical act featuring timely political satire.  And there’s a clinical nurse who opened a knitting store, an AT&T executive who became an Episcopal priest, and a former IT specialist who is now a licensed acupuncture therapist specializing in fertility issues

Kerry Hannon with Zena
Kerry Hannon with Zena.

 The individual profiles are both inspiring and instructional, but the book is made even richer by Hannon’s insights, lists of resources, and specific advice about how to change your career.  And, while the book’s personal stories tend to involve people who are reinventing their work lives to pursue new passions or long-held dreams, the book is a useful guide for anybody considering a significant job shift.

 While Hannon touches upon everything from the value of volunteering to the ABCs of franchising, one theme she emphasizes is the power of networking.  She points out that the years you’ve spent years building up a circle of contacts can translate into a rich opportunity.

 I also particularly like Hannon’s suggestion that you prepare for your transition with a three-part fitness program: [Read more…] about If you’re wondering “what’s next?”

Filed Under: Career management, career transitions, encore careers, Uncategorized Tagged With: career transitions, changing your life, second acts

Ready to reinvent your career? Or to pursue a long-held dream?

Posted by Beverly Jones on April 8, 2014

Number 206

Here's some good news for people who are thinking about finding a new kind of career path. Acclaimed journalist Kerry Hannon has just updated and released a revised paperback edition of her book, "What's Next? - Finding Your Passion and Your Dream Job in Your Forties, Fifties, and Beyond."

In "What Next?," Hannon offers portraits of 17 people who have chosen new paths. For example, there’s Ken Rynne, a Washington energy lawyer who decided to live his dream and become a professional performer. He launched Planet Washington, a rollicking musical act featuring timely political satire.

And there’s a clinical nurse who opened a knitting store, an AT&T executive who became an Episcopal priest, and a former IT expert who is now a licensed acupuncture therapist specializing in fertility and women’s health issues.

The individual profiles are both inspiring and instructional, but the book is made even richer by Hannon’s insights, lists of resources, and specific advice about how to change your career. And, while the book’s personal stories tend to involve people who are reinventing their work lives to pursue new passions or long-held dreams, the book is a useful guide for anybody considering a significant job shift.

While she touches upon everything from finding a mentor to understanding franchises, I particularly like Hannon’s suggestion that you prepare for your transition with a three-part fitness program:

  • Get financially fit, by charting a budget, socking away an emergency fund, boosting your credit rating and downsizing your lifestyle.
  • Get physically fit, because being in shape and energetic matters in the work world.
  • Get spiritually fit, by finding a space – perhaps through meditation -- where you can get away from the stress and fears that go hand in hand with making changes in your life.

I asked Hannon about what was in her mind, as she edited the 2010 edition to bring it up to date. She said when she started her first “Second Acts” column in 2006, she was fascinated by how many people forge an encore career because they want to get excited about work again and make a difference in the world. Today, however, it seems that a higher percentage of second actors are motivated at least in part by economic necessity. They are planning on working well past their expected retirement age because they need the money.

People contemplate shifting gears for many reasons. Perhaps you’re tired of working for a big organization and itching to try something entrepreneurial. Or maybe you want to re-deploy your business skills to make a contribution in the non-profit sector. Regardless of your motivation, if you’re contemplating a mid-life reboot, “What’s Next?” can offer you a handy road map for getting started.

MESSAGE FROM BEV: LET’S STAY CONNECTED. If you’d like to have an issue addressed, send me an email so I can explore it in this eZine or my blog. And let’s be cool careerists and stay in touch through Social Media. Please Follow me on Twitter and connect with me on LinkedIn.

Downloadable PDF

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Bored at work? Make new choices!

Posted by Beverly Jones on March 29, 2014

Boredom isn’t productive.

So make some changes!

As I waited in a Post Office line, I watched the clerk.  She looked to be so deep into the doldrums that she could barely hear her customers. It seemed that, when she finally took in a request, she’d move in slow motion, lethargically searching through stacks of paper with her eyes half closed and her mouth half open.

As the minutes ticked on, I became annoyed.  Then I thought, “Oh, I’d hate to have her job.”  So I was feeling more empathetic when it was finally my turn.  By then, nobody was behind me in line, so I engaged her in conversation. 

I said I needed to mail my passport for renewal, and led her into a discussion about the safest way to send it.  I made a big deal about my worries, and soon she was lending me a pen and making gentle fun of my concerns.  And we were laughing together. 

The clerk may have been overwhelmed by the monotony of her job.  But she seemed to wake up when she connected with, and focused on the needs of, another person.  Shifting your attention to somebody else’s problems is a classic way to beat back boredom.

Photo of boards, by JMcreation_Fotolia.com
Photo of boards, by JMcreation_Fotolia.com

You know what it’s like to feel bored, don’t you?  When nothing seems challenging, and gradually you feel less and less creative?  When you’re bored, you might be keeping busy, and yet you’re not getting enough stimulation to stay interested.

On the job, unproductive boredom seems to be the opposite of what psychologist Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi has called “flow.” You’re in flow when your work is so absorbing you lose track of time. It’s like you are playing a game that is so much fun you forget about everything else.

Csikszentmihalyi, who has been studying the satisfying flow state for decades, describes it as a time when “action follows upon action according to an internal logic that seems to need no conscious intervention by the actor.”

You are more likely to find yourself in flow, and not bored, when: [Read more…] about Bored at work? Make new choices!

Filed Under: professional growth, Uncategorized, workplace issues Tagged With: beating boredom, personal growth

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Bev in the Media

Bev’s career coaching is featured on NPR

Bev’s job search tips, in AARP.org

Entrepreneur.com suggests you stop complaining about your job and do something about it by reading Bev’s book and working toward your dream goal

Bob Garlick chats with Bev about career success in this Business Book Talk interview

The Palm Beach Post suggests that you share gifts of knowledge, motivation & self-improvement, including with Bev’s book

The Voinovich School of Leadership and Public Affairs writes about Bev’s history as an Ohio University “campus feminist

Bev on key communication habits, in stilettosontheglassceiling.com

Science Magazine reviews Bev’s book and explores how becoming adept at "leading up" helps you to enhance your career and contribute more within your organization.

John David's Huffington Post article talks about how Bev’s book evolved from her blog

In her Journal Record book review, Terri Schichenmeyer says Bev offers soothingly civil, workable ideas that can make your life and your career better

AARP features a book chapter on dealing with colleagues who make your life miserable

Congressional Management Foundation says thinking like an Entrepreneur can help Capitol Hill staff

AMA Playbook shares Bev’s tips on building your leadership brand

The News-Sentinel offers a nice book review

The Journal Gazette agrees that an entrepreneurial attitude can help in any job

Kerry Hannon’s Forbes article quotes Bev

Bev discusses career tips for Boomers on WOUB

Bev writes about how to avoid getting distracted by political talk at the office, on bizjournals.com

Money quotes Bev about how to fall in love with your job again

Forbes describes how to find a second act with purpose

The Journal Gazette says an entrepreneurial attitude can help with any job

Rich Eisenberg interviews Bev about fresh career starts at any age, in Forbes.com

Bev speaks about Ohio women supporting women

Bev and thought leader Dave Goldberg discuss ways to build durable careers in changing times, in this VoiceAmerica Business podcast

Bev speaks to Ohio University alumnae in Columbus, Ohio

Bev writes in Forbes about how some high achieving women aren't moving confidently into leadership

Listen to "The Leadership Coaching Revolution," with Bev as a panelist on "Big Beacon Radio," on VoiceAmerica Business

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More About Bev

Beverly Jones is a master of reinvention. She started out as a writer, next led university programs for women, and then trail-blazed her career as a Washington lawyer and Fortune 500 energy executive. Throughout her varied work life she has mentored other professionals to grow and thrive.

Since 2002, Bev has flourished as an executive coach and leadership consultant, helping professionals of all ages to advance their careers, shift directions, and become more productive. Based in the nation's capital, she works with clients across the country, including accomplished leaders at major federal agencies, NGOs, universities and companies of all sizes. Bev is a popular speaker and facilitator, and she creates workshops and other events around the needs of her clients.

When she's not working, Bev is often found in Rappahannock County, Virginia, in the garden of the farmhouse she shares with her husband, former Washington Post ombudsman Andy Alexander, and their two dogs.

See more career tips from Bev in Kerry Hannon's prize-winning book, "Love Your Job"



Read about Bev’s coaching in Barbara Bradley Hagerty’s best selling book, "Life Reimagined"

http://www.barbarabradleyhagerty.com

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