How To Answer “Tell Me About A Time You Failed” (Samples)

How To Answer “Tell Me About A Time You Failed” (Samples)

“Tell me about a time you failed” is an interview question that many people misunderstand. Because of this, they spend their time crafting an answer that doesn’t give the interviewer what they’re actually looking for! This guide will teach you how to answer this question, and provide you with some great sample answers to help […]

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How To Prepare For A Career Discussion With Your Boss

How To Prepare For A Career Discussion With Your Boss

In order to have a productive discussion about career growth with your boss, it is important for you to prepare and think through some key items ahead of time. You want to be in full control of your career path and the best way to do that is to approach your manager with confidence and conviction around your career growth goals.


To prepare for the discussion, start by answering some basic questions about yourself and your career:

Basic Career Questions You Should Ask Yourself

What is your personal branding statement with regard to your career?

This response should focus on what you hope to achieve in your career.

What are your values?

This response should include your top five values in life. The importance of answering this question is to be sure your career goals match your current values. For example, if you value innovation, that influences your career choice and objectives.

What are your motivators?

This response includes examples of what motivates you. Is it fast-paced work with short deadlines? Is it structured work or flexible work? As with your values, you want to be sure your career objectives align with your motivators.

Deeper Career Questions To Ask Yourself

Businessman thinks about career goals in preparation for a meeting with his boss

What is your short-term career objective?

This response should be about where you see yourself in the next 12 months. If you want to be in a new assignment, then you should state that, as well as what that assignment could be. If you want to remain in your current role but perhaps take on additional duties, then include that information in this question response.

What is your long-term career objective?

This response highlights your ultimate career growth objective. Some people do not know what this is, but if you do, it is important to share it with your manager. This helps your career plan to be tailored toward reaching your ultimate career goals.

Questions For Planning Career Growth

Manager goes over her employee's career goals

What are your strengths?

This response focuses on your current strengths that you can leverage as you grow in your career.

What are your developmental areas?

This is about the areas where you need to grow so you can reach your career objective.

What are you willing to do in the next 12 months to reach your career objective(s)?

This response should focus on some specific, tactical items (SMART goals) that you can work on over the next 12 months. Consider this your action plan to reach your objective.

After Preparing For A Career Discussion With Your Boss

Confident professional is ready to move forward after important career discussion with manager

After you have these questions answered and feel comfortable with your responses, it is time to share this information with your manager. Ask your boss for input on your career growth objectives and whether they feel these are reasonable and achievable.

Ask them for input on your strengths and development areas and also request their support of your action plan. This will aid in your ability to be successful in reaching your objectives.

By taking the time to answer these questions and prepare for your career discussion, it will be much more productive and, hopefully, a more engaging discussion for both you and your manager.

Not sure how to grow your career? We can help!

We’d love it if you joined our FREE community. It’s a private, online platform where workers, just like you, are coming together to learn and grow into powerful Workplace Renegades.

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This article was originally published at an earlier date.

5 Ways To Find Your Work Passion

5 Ways To Find Your Work Passion

A lot of people tell you to follow your passion, follow your dreams, or do what makes you happy. But how many people are really doing it?


Survey after survey indicates that the majority of employees are unhappy in their professions or wished they had pursued other passions earlier. So, why do they stay?

In reality, it may be a case of not really understanding what they want to do. Finding your work passion is tough when you have no idea where to start. However, the alternative of not figuring it out can leave you even more unhappy, bitter, and unproductive.

When you realize you want to do something else but have no idea where to begin, follow these steps to get started:

Evaluate What Drives You Each Day

In order to find your work passion, you have to evaluate what drives you. What makes you tick? What issues do you feel particularly excited about? What cause or stance would make you drop everything to make life better?

Answering these questions can help you to assess your interests and decide where you can place them in your professional life. They can also help you create an interview bucket list, which is vital to a strategic job search.

Connect Those Strengths To A Career

Professional man and professional woman smiling while going over a work project they are passionate about.

Not every interest translates into a career. For example, just because you love soccer doesn’t mean you can make a career out of it. Instead, focus on the strengths that you have and connect these strengths to a career path. So, for the person who’s interested in soccer, perhaps you also have a real interest in how the sport is marketed. You may want to look into sports marketing positions, which can fulfill both interests.

(P.S. If you want to know which careers you’d thrive in based on your workplace persona, check out our free quiz!)

Ask Yourself If It’s Realistic

Professional woman sitting at her home laptop, wondering if the career she wants to pursue is realistic.

You may be a great public speaker. However, that doesn’t mean you should be the president.

Setting realistic expectations can help you to navigate these strengths into a suitable career. While not everyone can be the president, you can pursue public speaking opportunities elsewhere. To help you, try making a list of all of the jobs you would like to have and narrow them down to jobs you have the most chance of actually landing.

Network And Gain Connections

Happy coworkers talk at work

Networking and gaining the right connections can have dual benefits. First, networking can help you meet people with similar dreams and work passions. These connections can then let you know how they got to where they are, share pros and cons about your passion, and provide some real insight into what you can expect.

Next, networking and gaining the right connections can help you break into an industry. Think of it as that golden ticket to finding and then landing those jobs you would do anything for. This is particularly vital to those who haven’t worked in the given space, even if they love it.

Be Bold

Happy man has a passion for his work

Being bold can get you far in life. It’s how so many innovators and leaders reached that level of greatness.

While your work passion may be out there, it’s necessary to pursue it if it’s important enough to you. Sure, it’s probably going to take a lot of hours and late nights. However, being bold means taking the good with the bad and moving forward with the notion that it’s all worth it. And if it’s not worth it, then you can move on to something that is.

Finding your work passion and relevant jobs when you have no idea where to start can be very frustrating. However, once you understand what your passion is, you can get busy getting your life started, and be happier because of it.

If you could use more help figuring out what you’re passionate about, we’re here for you!

We’d love it if you joined our FREE community. It’s a private, online platform where workers, just like you, are coming together to learn and grow into powerful Workplace Renegades.

It’s time to find work that makes you feel happy, satisfied, and fulfilled. Join our FREE community today to finally become an empowered business-of-one!

This article was originally published at an earlier date.

How to Improve the Teamwork of Retail and Hospitality Teams

How to Improve the Teamwork of Retail and Hospitality Teams

Retail and hospitality teams are very customer-focussed, and because of that, teamwork is essential. You need your team to work together and support each other. A team that works well is one that is immediately more professional and generally nicer to be around, which is a boon for your business.  The retail and hospitality sectors […]

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How to Build The Most Effective Remote Team

How to Build The Most Effective Remote Team

The pandemic has resulted in a shift in work practices; several companies have moved from the usual in-office or onsite work methods to virtual offices. In America, about 26% of employees are currently working remotely. Remote working is fantastic. Employees get to work from the comfort of their homes, while recruiters can choose from a […]

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Don’t Be A Wallflower! A Beginner’s Guide To Building Rapport

Don’t Be A Wallflower! A Beginner’s Guide To Building Rapport

Building rapport is the art of establishing an emotionally comfortable relationship with a person during a conversation.


When I first started as a call centre trainer, I listened to a sales team leader’s briefing. Like many naturally talented salespeople, he couldn’t explain how he was so good.

He told his team to build rapport with their customers. One recent recruit asked: “How do we build rapport?” He replied: “Be yourself!”

I thought to myself: “What does that mean? There must be a way to train for this.”

I did some research on the internet and found various techniques. These are the top four which I included in the first training session of our agents’ onboarding course.

Key Principles

Coworkers laugh during a work meeting

1. Use the other person’s name

Dale Carnegie said people like nothing more than the sound of their own name. Using a person’s name can get and hold their attention very effectively. Like all games, this one has rules.

Make sure you know how to pronounce it. I work with people from all over the world. I often first see their names in written form. So I will ask them, “How do I pronounce your name?” No one wants to hear someone mispronounce their name, and they will appreciate that you have taken the trouble to say it correctly.

Don’t overuse it. The classic stereotype of the “slimy sales guy” uses a customer’s name at the end of every sentence. Use the person’s name at the start of the conversation, and then at points where you want her to pay special attention. That should not be more than once or twice.

Names can be a sensitive topic. In the English-speaking world, using first names with complete strangers is considered normal. In the Czech Republic, it’s still common to use “Mr.”/“Mrs.” and a surname. Be careful to fit in with what’s normal for their culture, or you could be seen as disrespectful.

2. Question, answer, comment (QAC)

When two people talk for the first time, they often ask each other questions.

At a conference, you might ask: “What do you think of the event?”

When your partner replies, respond with a comment before asking the next question. Here’s an example:

“What do you think of the event?”

“It’s not what I expected. I was hoping there would be more presentations.”

“Really? What aspect of XYZ are you interested in?”

The comment, “Really?” shows you are interested in her answer.

Two points to note: your comment needs to be appropriate to the answer, and you should not use the same comment for every answer, otherwise, you will sound like a bored telemarketer.

3. Something in common

Finding something in common with the other person is a good rapport-building technique. If you are talking to someone, you are in the same physical or virtual environment.

You could ask a question or comment about the event you are both attending.

You could comment about the signal quality of the video conference call you are on.

If you meet face to face, you could do the classic British thing and talk about the weather!

You could also volunteer some personal information, such as mentioning your children or pets. People love to respond with a similar comment of their own. Suddenly, you find that you both have teenage sons or Jack Russell terriers. You have something in common to talk about!

4. Humour

This is the most effective, but the riskiest way to build rapport. Humour is usually culturally specific. What makes one person laugh could leave another person cold, or even get you a fist in the face.

I wait for the other person to make the first joke, to gauge what works for her.

If you’re going to make a joke, don’t make a joke at the expense of anyone you are talking to.

I know someone who was talking to the managing director of another company. He made a humorous comment about salespeople. The managing director had spent the first 20 years of his career in sales.

You may think that self-deprecatory humour is a safe option, but in some cultures, making jokes about yourself is seen as a sign of insecurity and weakness.

How Can I Improve My Game?

Two professionals shake hands and smile at each other

Start by watching other people and how they build rapport.

Watch what other people do in meetings or conversations. Watch TV or films where people have conversations. Police dramas are great since police officers usually try to build rapport with witnesses and suspects who they interview.

Start actively practicing by trying one technique at a time in conversations. Watch how your conversational partners react, and take that as feedback.

I used a practice activity where every new trainee had to ask the other trainees five questions to get to know each other. They had to use rapport-building techniques. Fifteen minutes after the exercise kicked off, the classroom sounded like a party!

If you go to a networking event, prepare four or five simple questions and go around the room and try to talk to everyone, using the rapport-building techniques. See how they react.

Follow Up

I love hearing how people get on when they use these techniques, what works for them and what doesn’t. Send me a message and let me know how you got on!

Why You Need A Data Strategy Before Data Governance (Part 1)

Why You Need A Data Strategy Before Data Governance (Part 1)

Part One: Data Strategy Is More Important than Ever in an Age of AI.

This will be a multiple-part series on data strategy and how it is the precursor to data management and data governance.


Firms often skip many essential steps to creating a data strategy favoring data lineage/governance, usually for regulatory compliance rather than creating a holistic yet integrated vision for data. While practicality is always good, it can be at the bane of getting the most out of the firm’s data over time. When a data strategy does not guide data governance, this keeps data governance in a defensive position in general; it is a big mistake that keeps data governance in the basement of the organization, being perceived as a cost center and not the revenue and monetization driver that data governance can be.

Let’s start with what a data strategy is and why your organization needs one. Then we will discuss in future articles how data governance needs a tighter connection to strategy.

Data strategy and how I like to think about it is a sharp vision for how your data is organized and turned into knowledge throughout the organization.

There is data, information, and knowledge. Each of these has some organization of data and planned use cases. I like this pyramid or hierarchy paradigm for data strategy. As you go higher, it’s about generating insights and improving the quality of decisions based on clean fit-for-purpose quality data.

20 Key Considerations In Your Data Strategy

Data strategy graph

Some key considerations in your data strategy, and I will not prescribe the answers to these considerations here:

1) How do you define quality data

2) Who gets to move data and to where?

3) Is there a planned level of data duplication, or is it, as they say, the “Wild West” with replication all over the place?

4) Do we want to have one version of the truth or multiple versions of the truth? What are the risks and benefits of each?

5) Are we using an ETL process or ELT in the age of big data

6) What types of data models are we using? Logical layers (star Schemas) no SQL, blob storage?

7) Are we using open gardens or data lakes, or a pond approach?

8) How do we define our data fabric at the firm?

9) What newer tools do we use for moving data. Are we using AI-based tools (RPA, etc.)?

10) Who can access PII or NPII data, and how do we create highly secured data zones?

11) How many self-service analytics tools do we allow? Do we need both PowerBI and Tableau?

12) Do we have an on-prem cloud approach or a full-on cloud data strategy?

13) Where do AI and cognitive technologies get their data

14) Do we have transparency in business rules and algorithms that drive our business?

15) How do we monetize our data, and at what point in the data lifecycle?

16) How many customer keys or unique identifiers do we carry?.

17) What is the role of generative AI?

18) How do we resolve the identities of both prospects and customers?

19) Who owns the data Do we have producers and consumer-defined roles?

20) Do we have a centralized or decentralized approach to data management, and is our organization clear about how we operate?

There is no formal data strategy if the firm doesn’t have clear answers to many of these questions. In addition, a data strategy is not a data management framework, which would come next once you have defined the strategy.

“Why is this important?” you ask. It will help you set the priorities for data governance and data management organizations (DMOs), rather than just having them fall into a project or two and perhaps only viewing them as the people who handle compliance issues or controls. Remember DMOs, enable data science, marketing automation, AI, CRM, and many other revenue-generating functions. An integrated enterprise data strategy will allow you to scale your data management and governance efforts, making the work more important and meaningful and increasing the focus on the business objectives and ROI.

I look forward to your thoughts on why you think the tail is often wagging the dog regarding data governance versus data strategy.

In our next issue, I will discuss master data management and data governance in detail.

Phone Interviews: How To Put Your Best Voice Forward

Phone Interviews: How To Put Your Best Voice Forward

Today, more and more employers are conducting phone interviews before inviting job candidates to an in-person meeting. With more applicants available for each opening, employers do not have the time to invest in a meeting for every candidate that simply looks good on paper.


Phone interviews make it easier to screen candidates. Some of these phone interviews may include standard questions that ask about facts, such as your experience and any specific skills you have. However, there are also employers who dive right into some of the most challenging questions, such as giving you a scenario and asking for your response and plan to handle the situation described.

As a job applicant, there are benefits and disadvantages to a phone interview. Some people are well-spoken and are great on the phone, but in person, their nervousness gets to them. Some are more comfortable speaking in person but lack personality on the phone. Under both situations, it can be a challenge when you don’t have feedback that may typically appear through face-to-face contact.

Regardless of the situation, you need to put your best voice forward to leave the employer with a good impression. This may be the only shot you have at getting a step closer to securing a job offer with them. Remember that the employer may change their mind about inviting you in for an interview if you fall short of their expectations or leave a negative impression on the phone.

Note that in a phone interview, your intonation is most important in how you come across, so you should be energetic and enthusiastic and change your tone to better engage the interviewer. You should also be prepared to ask some basic questions, although save the big ones for a formal interview.

Take the tips offered here to help put your best voice forward and further advance on an opportunity to a job offer:

Treat Every Call You Receive Like It Was An Interview

Phone interviews may not always be scheduled. An employer may call you to respond to your submitted cover letter and resume, and the moment you pick up the phone an interview may occur right then.

Most employers will be courteous to first ask you if this is a good time, but that does not always happen. So, if you believe there is a chance an employer may be calling, be prepared by providing a professional greeting on your voicemail or when you pick up. Also, be conscious of what the caller may hear in the background if you pick up the phone. If it’s not an appropriate time or place to talk, let it go to voicemail, but try to call back immediately when it is more appropriate for you to talk.

Talk Enthusiastically

Happy man talks on the phone at work

Since the interviewer will not see your face, all they have to work off of is the voice you present, so make sure it sounds enthusiastic and energized with confidence. Try keeping a smile on your face as you talk and be aware of your tone and pitch so you do not come off sounding monotone.

Watch Your Words

Woman looks at laptop during a phone interview

Keep a “can do” attitude when you talk. It will leave a more positive impression than if an employer were to hear, “I can’t,” “I don’t,” or “I haven’t.” Also, be conscious of how you speak; avoid the “Ahs,” “Errs,” and “Ums.” You can come across as unsure of yourself and lacking in confidence.

Use A Clear Line

Man smiles during his phone interview

Many people list their cell phone number on job applications, cover letters, and resumes, which is fine, as long as when the phone is answered you have good reception. If you are the one initiating the phone call, use a landline to avoid static or dropped calls. It’s also important to find a quiet location where you will not be disturbed or distracted.

Treat It Like An In-Person Interview

Woman talks during a phone interview

Keep in mind points that you can use to help explain how your previous experiences or skills make you a good fit for the open position. Also, always have questions in mind to ask during the interview that show your interest and desire to work with the company. Don’t forget to also keep your resume, a sheet of paper, and a pen on hand. You’ll need these items for reference or to take notes while on the call.

Find Out The Next Steps

Young man smiles during his phone interview

Interviews, whether in person or over the phone, should end with an understanding of what the next steps are. If it was not covered, be sure to ask. The employer may also view this question in a positive way that you care about this opportunity and have a desire for it.

Remember, phone interviews deserve a follow-up thank-you note or email to the individual(s) you spoke with—just as you would do after an in-person interview.

Treat phone interviews as important as face-to-face interviews. The impression you make on the phone will also be taken into consideration when the employer is trying to decide between you and another candidate for the position.

We know how difficult it can be to ace a job interview, on the phone or in person. If you’re still not feeling confident in your interview abilities, we can help.

We’d love it if you joined our FREE community. It’s a private, online platform where workers, just like you, are coming together to learn and grow into powerful Workplace Renegades. More importantly, we have tons of resources inside our community that can help you prepare for your next job interview.

It’s time to find work that makes you feel happy, satisfied, and fulfilled. Join our FREE community today to finally become an empowered business-of-one!

This article was originally published at an earlier date.

Beneficial Extra Functions To Add To Your E-Commerce Site

Beneficial Extra Functions To Add To Your E-Commerce Site

There are tons of compelling reasons to consider starting an e-commerce business this year. And just one of the more significant reasons is that e-commerce continues to show exceptional growth as the pandemic and lockdown regulations encouraged consumers to opt for the convenience of online shopping. And the new increasing demand is definitely here to […]

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The Best Jobs For Those Who Love To Drive

The Best Jobs For Those Who Love To Drive

If you love to drive, you can turn your love of being on the road into a career. There are many different jobs that involve cars and driving. Below, you will find details of some careers that could be ideal for you. Parcel Delivery  If you love nothing more than jumping in any form of […]

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6 Ideas For Writing an Effective Job Description

6 Ideas For Writing an Effective Job Description

It is not necessary to be innovative to produce the most successful job advertisement ever. It would help if you communicated clearly and straightforwardly. Are you are looking for a simple Homeruns example of a content writer job description?  Here is how to avoid the usual jargon that is used in job descriptions and make […]

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Should You Take A Low-Paying Job That You Love…or a High-Paying Job You Don’t Like Much?

Should You Take A Low-Paying Job That You Love…or a High-Paying Job You Don’t Like Much?

It’s a question that many people ask. It’s whether or not they are willing to take a pay cut knowing it’s a job that they like. Here’s the kicker: they are currently working a job that they don’t like but pays well. This is a bit of an issue here for many people. The money […]

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