The first year is different
Starting to work in an organisation is a unique and critically important time
that requires you to have a special perspective and use special strategies to
be successful.
You will need to recognise that the first year on a new job is a separate and
distinct career stage. It is a transition stage; you’re not a college student
anymore, but you’re not really a professional yet, either. It is only by
considering the first year on the job separately from the rest of the career
ladder that the world of work begins to make sense.
Savvy graduates know that many new graduates hang on to their student attitudes
and behaviors too long. But few realise that it also takes time to understand
and earn the rights, responsibilities, and credibility of a full-fledged
professional. There is an intermediate stage that lasts from the time you
accept your job until about the end of the first year that can make or break
the early part of your career.
There is a different set of rules to follow during this breaking-in stage.
Because you’re the “new kid on the block,” people will respond to you
differently, work with you differently and judge you differently. In turn, you
have to approach them differently too.
There’s a special game being played during the first year, and most graduates
don’t know all the rules. It’s only by learning those rules that you can get
the strong start your career needs.
Because a strong start is essential to a successful career, it is unfortunate
that so few students know how to break in with a company. The key is to come in
with enough savvy to have appropriate expectations and attitudes and to know
how to establish yourself, to learn the “way things are done,” and to figure
out what you need to do to earn credibility and respect. Most new graduates are
way off base on all of these.
The way in which you enter a new organisation and a new job will have a major
impact on your success within that organisation. Much of your early career
opportunity and success will be charted by the impressions you make on the
people you work with and the perceptions they develop of you in the early weeks
and months on the job.
Research suggests that how you approach your first year will have a major
impact on your future salary, advancement, job satisfaction, and ability to
move within the organisation -- and your own feelings about success and
commitment to the job.
Your challenge in the early months will be to establish your reputation as a
bright, capable, and valuable employee, worthy of the respect of your
colleagues. If you are successful here, you will quickly be given opportunities
to make a real contribution to the company and to make yourself visible to
upper management. If you then take advantage of those early opportunities by
demonstrating what an outstanding performer you are, more opportunities to
succeed will follow.
Mess up your introductory months and you may find yourself labeled as
“immature” and relegated to lesser assignments while your colleagues -- and
competitors for promotions -- are busy impressing the boss with their
professional maturity and success on juicy assignments. That’s not to say that
an entire 30-year career is made or broken in a few months’ performance.
However, the simple fact is that it can take years to recover from a poor
start.
|