Fifteen Tips for Being the Indispensable Employee
Robert
A. Hall
Some
employees are more valuable than others. Sorry if I’ve hurt your self-esteem
and bruised your feelings. It hurts my feelings that the New England Patriots
pay Tom Brady millions and won’t even give me a try-out. Okay, so I’m a LOT
older than Brady, in lousy shape compared to him, and lettered in chess in
college. Every human being is unique and equally valuable, right?
No.
Tom Brady fills the stands and puts millions of fans in front of the TV on
Sunday, providing an excellent return on investment for his large salary. The
only entertainment value I’d provide would be for the lynch mob of fans hunting
me after my first appearance on the field.
However
valuable you may be to your family and friends, that doesn’t make you valuable
to an employer.
All
employers are looking for employees who provide value. Those who provide the
most value are the least likely to be cut in a downsizing, and the most likely
to receive raises and promotions, because the powers-that-be want to keep them
around.
That’s
obvious, right? Then how come so many employees act like their job is a right,
and that they must be catered to?
The
really successful and valuable employees are always trying to make themselves
indispensable. Here are fifteen tips on becoming the indispensable employee.
1.
Commit yourself to constant improvement. Perfection doesn’t exist, but
every organization and every individual can be better tomorrow then they are
today. Look at your job every Friday and ask yourself, “How can I do a better
job next week?” Then do it.
2.
Commit yourself to life-long learning. Takes courses and read books and
journals that will help you do better in your area of specialty. But, equally
important, expand your horizon. Read widely in other areas as well. Study the
field that your organization operates in, so you understand the customers and
their problems. Study the jobs of your colleagues, so you understand—and
perhaps can help with—their problems. And study trends outside your industry
that may impact your organization. Yes, you can’t read or know everything. But
you can always read and know more.
3.
Banish, “That’s not my job” from your vocabulary. Everything that helps
advance the mission is your job. The more you contribute in other areas, the
move valuable you will be.
4.
Banish, “We’ve always done it that way” from your vocabulary. Nothing is
more constant that change. I was ten years into my professional career before I
had a computer, fifteen for a fax, over twenty for e-mail and the Internet. If
I was still doing things the way I’d done them then, I’d be unemployable.
5.
Avoid gossip, drama and back-biting with your colleagues. It seems like
every office has a Drama Queen or King, who is constantly involved in small
feuds, has problems with colleagues, and is generally high maintenance. You
know who has to be tiptoed around. And the boss is dreaming about how nice life
would be if only that person could be moved on. Don’t let it be you.
6.
Pitch in. Look for areas where you can help your colleagues with their
challenges. Do more than your share, especially of the unpleasant takes, the
“dirty jobs,” that are present in every employment situation. Don’t work in a
silo.
7.
Banish Busy Work. Look for ways to be more efficient, so that
time-consuming, repetitive work can be eliminated from your schedule. Can
data-entry be computerized directly from the Web, or out-sourced overseas?
Having lots of busy work to do doesn’t make you valuable; it makes your job
fungible. There is always more valuable work available to fulfill the organization’s
mission. Getting rid of busy work will allow the boss to assign you more
valuable work.
8.
Make the boss’s life easier. What skills can you apply, what can you
learn, what can you take on that will solve a problem for your supervisor?
Solving a couple of the boss’s problems every year will make you pretty
indispensable.
9.
Be the “Go To” employee. If there’s a problem, and they think first of
getting you to work on it, they won’t think first of you if staff census needs
to be cut.
10.
Keep a cheerful attitude. Sure, we all have problems. But people don’t
like to work with those whose hobby seems to be whining and complaining. Your
boss doesn’t either.
11.
Go the extra mile for the customers. Don’t have to be pushed to do what
needs to be done to keep the customer happy. When you provide out-standing service,
they will mention it to your boss, who will appreciate you all the more.
12.
Share the credit. When your supervisor says you did a great job on a
project, saying, “Well, I couldn’t have done it without Mary’s help” reflects
well on you, and makes you a star for Mary. Sincere compliments cost you
nothing and mean a lot to your colleagues.
13.
Don’t try to outshine your colleagues. Say you have a great idea as to
how the department could improve service. At a staff meeting, in front of
everyone, you could pipe up and say, “Well, I think service could have
increased by….” Or you can go to the supervisor privately and say, “I have an
idea I was wondering if you’d thought about, that might help our our customer
service….” Which will serve you better in the long run?
14.
It’s your organization too. Yes, we are fond of saying, “it’s the owners’
business.” But it’s also yours. And not just your little piece. Take ownership.
If your area is doing well, but your organization is floundering…your area is
NOT doing well. It’s like folks on the Titanic saying, “Well, the BOW may have
hit an iceberg, but we’re nice and dry here in the STERN!”
15.
Be the most dependable person around. Under-promise and over-perform. If
you say you will do something, your supervisor should be comfortable forgetting
about it, because she knows it will be done well, on time.
If
you noticed, there is nothing on this list that you and I cannot do as well as
Tom Brady. And following these rules will make you an indispensable association
employee.
Robert A. Hall, was a five term Massachusetts state senator,
an association executive for 31 years, and currently (at 72 after a lung
transplant) works PT at the A as a Writer-Editor, interviewing veterans about
their lives, writing it up for their records and giving them copies for their
families.
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