Work It Daily Reviews: A Hopeful Testimonial For Job Seekers

Work It Daily Reviews: A Hopeful Testimonial For Job Seekers

As a professional who’s going through a tough job search or career challenge, finding the help and inspiration you need can be difficult. At Work It Daily, we know our career resources can help anyone, no matter what problem they’re facing or where they are in their career. But don’t just take our word for it…


We wanted to highlight a recent testimonial from one of our amazing members to inspire and instill hope in others who are also struggling in their careers and considering getting help. Per her wishes, we’re leaving her review anonymous.

Check out this new, inspiring testimonial from one of our incredible Workplace Renegades below!

A Work It Daily Testimonial…

Happy young woman writes a review about Work It Daily

J.T. and team,

I want to say a big THANK YOU for sharing your inspirational videos and other tips on LinkedIn. Thanks to you, I successfully landed a job in my desired career field (I pivoted my career to more closely match my talent with my passion), AND I negotiated a salary increase of 63% more than the hiring team’s initial offer. Plus, they upped my annual potential bonus from 10% to 12%. I have never been able to successfully negotiate my salary before now.

I have been following you for about 3-4 years. About a year ago, I finally invested in your resume and cover letter review because I decided to get a little more serious about getting my career documents and online presence up to a higher standard just in case a new opportunity came along.

Well, this past January, my current employer made some interesting decisions for remote workers that lead my career truly into a dead-end if I would have stayed. So, instead of getting sad about feeling stuck, I went into full swing by applying all of your wonderful advice that I’ve learned over the years.

I quickly found myself actively interviewing with 4 different companies. At each stage I told myself, “Ok [name], remember what J.T. says to do at this point…” and I went and did it.

I start my new job as a Technical Writer, fully remote, on April 4th.

From the bottom of my heart, thank you.

I don’t know about you, but that testimonial brought tears to my eyes! It’s a wonderful reminder for us at Work It Daily to know that what we do is truly making a difference in people’s lives.

We hope you found this Work It Daily review to be motivating and inspiring. And remember: you’re not alone in your career. If you need some extra help with your career right now, 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—just like our amazing member did above. Join our FREE community today to finally become an empowered business-of-one!


The Most Important Coaching Question You Must Ask

The Most Important Coaching Question You Must Ask

It started well. James was delighted with the approval of his “ask” to work with a leadership coach. The coach he selected had a great background, including key executive roles with top-tier companies. James was on track to be promoted and was also on a high-potential list for a senior-level position. James had recently received comments about giving more attention to listening before giving his opinions. He knew he could work on that. But in his mind, others knowing James was working with a coach would signal to everyone that he was on his way up and increase his visibility in the company.


A few weeks into working together, and far from gratifying James’ ego, the coach kept asking James to see things from different perspectives and committing time to hold conversations with his coworkers about what he could do to become a better peer and leader. James told his coach how busy he was, and besides, he wasn’t paid to make friends but to make good decisions quickly. A month later, James was shocked when his coach said “full stop” because they had made no progress on the work that brought them together a couple of months before. Worse, James knew others would ask about what happened and why. Working with a coach could have been a powerful way for James to boost his executive career opportunities. But if coaching could be his answer, what question should James have asked?

Coachability

Leadership coach fist bumps his client

The first and most important question to ask yourself is, “Am I coachable?” No matter how much you want to achieve something. No matter how experienced and talented the coach you hire, the situation will become frustrating and disappoint everyone if you are not coachable. Working with someone who is not coachable is the number one reason coaching engagements fail, as was the case with James. Coaches also know it is the number one reason to decline accepting someone as a client.

Looking Into The Mirror That Is You

Leadership coach gives his client a thumbs up

You are the expert on yourself, not the coach. To get the maximum benefits from coaching, you have to invest time before working with a coach to know how you will show up and follow through on what you say you will do. Whether you’re looking at career coaching, life coaching, executive coaching, or any other coaching engagement, keep the phrase COACH in mind. It will guide you to the things you need to pay the most attention to before beginning a partnership with a coach.

“The most important relationship in your life is the relationship you have with yourself. Because no matter what happens, you will always be with yourself” –Diane von Furstenberg

Candor. You have to be honest with yourself before being honest with anyone else. Spending hours and hours in deep soul-searching is unnecessary, nor crafting perfect answers. But getting clear on what motivates you and what gets in your way will help you know how successful you can be with a coach. Consider some or all of these questions: What do you want to focus on with a coach? Why does it matter enough for you to commit to bringing about a change? How does it matter to others who may be family, friends, coworkers, or people you’ve not met yet? What could cause you to become un-coachable or disrupt your efforts? Remember, honesty with yourself leads to being open with your coach.

Openness. Results through coaching depend on having mutual trust. You are not obligated to tell a coach everything on your mind. Still, you must share enough information to make a successful coaching partnership possible. A coach will listen, asks questions, and, with your consent, may provide observations and occasional insights from their own experiences when and if it could be helpful. Together, you and your coach will create and maintain a “space” where open conversations occur. Some questions to ask yourself to see if you are ready to be open include: Do you listen fully to questions before forming your response? Have you changed your mind on anything important to you because you looked at it from a different point of view?

Action. Though many of your conversations with your coach will be enjoyable and inspiring, results do not happen just because of those conversations. No tangible progress will occur until you have goals or steps supported by intentional actions outside of the coaching sessions. The coach can help you put a plan together and offer new ideas and resources, but the coach will not give you answers or do the work for you. Going back to your mirror, when you’ve set goals and achieved them in the past, what did you need to have in place for success to happen? What will you share with your coach about this that would help them help you? Are metrics you track yourself, having an accountability partner, or both, the best way for you to track progress on your actions? Being clear about what it takes for you to build momentum and sustain it is a valuable insight for you and your coach to work from to convert your plans to actions.

“All progress takes place outside the comfort zone” –Michael John Bobak

Commitment. Picturing the future is fun, but it takes more than initial excitement and a plan to get there. And this is especially true if what you want is outside your comfort zone. If you have ever pushed beyond your comfort zone before, you know how unsettling it can be. All manner of doubts, distractions, and temptations appear. Turning around and going back to what is comfortable is the easy thing to do. What gets you through this will be your commitments, where your candor meets your actions. Sustain those actions, and together, you and your coach will get you to those better outcomes you’ve said were important to you and the people around you. To create firm commitments, get curious about what could slow you down or stop you. Think of a time when things did not come easily to you. What sustained you to keep going and not settle for what was easy? If you became distracted or began to doubt yourself, what would it take to get back on track? When will the resources (time, money, energy) you’re investing to reach your goals start signaling you to stop? Give yourself the gift of awareness here and share it with your coach.

Humility. People are captivated by the “aha moments” in coaching where someone visibly lights up because of unexpected insights, inspirations, or realizations. It is almost magical. The coach asks a powerful question, there is a pause, and then suddenly everything shifts. Here’s the thing: the power is not in the question; it is in that moment when your humility steps forward. Humility is not about meekness or submission. Quite the opposite. It is having the courage to let go of what is holding you back. Humility is a gateway you have to pass through to get to the best things that coaching will bring out in you. Here are a couple of questions to ask yourself to see if you’re ready to engage with humility: How do you react when another person suggests you may have been wrong, made a mistake, or could have done something in a better way? Does it matter whether that person is a peer, a boss, or reports to you? When was the last time you asked for help because you didn’t know what to do?

COACH-able. You will know you’ve chosen something powerful for coaching when you feel the weight of the Candor, Openness, Action, Commitment, and Humility you will have to carry and still see it all as being worth taking along on your journey. When your coach asks you questions to gauge your coachability, don’t be surprised. Instead, surprise them with how well you’ve prepared yourself for your work together.

What To Put For Desired Salary On A Job Application

What To Put For Desired Salary On A Job Application

Figuring out what to put for “desired salary” on a job application and learning how to answer this question can be tough. And this is especially true if you haven’t gone through this process before! Table of contents The Ideal Time to Discuss Your Desired Salary What to Put for “Desired Salary” on a Job […]

The post What To Put For Desired Salary On A Job Application appeared first on Career Sherpa.

3 Reasons For The “Big Quit” In Teaching

3 Reasons For The “Big Quit” In Teaching

Recently, a teacher whom I was coaching quit their school in the middle of the year. Hired first as an English teacher, this educator was then given the additional job of teaching special education when the school could not find enough staff. This person felt overwhelmed.


Statistics suggest stories, like above, have been common during COVID-19. According to The Wall Street Journal, between January-November 2020, quits in the educational services sector rose 148% while quits in state and local education rose 40%. Also, the share of teachers on LinkedIn who changed careers increased by 62% last year alone.

In a LinkedIn poll, I asked educators to comment on what factors were causing them to reconsider their commitment to the teaching profession. These factors included the way teachers are evaluated, the number of expectations, the currently divided political environment, and “other” conditions (such as pay). This post generated thousands of views and 98 responses. Here are the three main reasons why those who responded to my survey are looking to jump ship:

1. The Straw That Broke The Camel’s Back – Expectations

Stressed young teacher

Dr. Ginger Jewell, CEO of Total School House Solutions, says that, in her school improvement consulting work, she works with teachers all the time and the biggest things she hears are the number of expectations and lack of support. Indeed, the largest percentage of respondents in my poll, 43%, indicated that the number of expectations placed on teachers is driving them from the profession. Teachers are not “just” responsible for teaching academic content, using performance-based standards, and differentiating the learning materials so students at varying academic readiness levels can learn, but also—post-COVID-19—for infusing SEL and trauma-informed practices into their teaching.

COVID-19 also set off a tipping point when increasing numbers of teachers began calling in sick and the remaining teachers then had to cover additional classrooms, says education consultant Dr. Hope Blecher. While only 4% of respondents in my survey indicated that teacher evaluation was making them consider fleeing the profession, Blecher further argues that increased expectations are finding their way into teacher evaluation. This can only be adding to teacher cortisol levels.

2. Cancel Culture In A Fishbowl – The War Between Right And Left

Stressed middle school teacher

Classrooms are a microcosm of society at large. Twenty-nine percent of respondents in my poll indicated that the divisive political environment might have them raising the white surrender flag sometime soon. We have a situation in some places, like Florida, where teachers might end up in legal jeopardy if they say or do something counter to what some see as unclear provisions as to what is appropriate to say and do within the Florida Critical Race Theory Amendment or HB 1557—the “Don’t Say Gay” Bill. Personal liability aside, the fear of saying or doing the wrong thing also can serve as a powerful disincentive for teachers when considering whether to engage students in cognitively rich discourse on complex issues. This ultimately might prove problematic if we want to maintain an informed electorate.

This is not just an issue on the right. The progressive Ethical Culture Fieldston School fired a teacher recently for criticizing Israel—comments which some families in the community felt were antisemitic. Educators can also be let go for things that might appear inconsequential. Toby Price of Hinds County Public Schools, in Mississippi, was recently fired for reading a children’s book, marketed to children, to second-grade students. This prompted an official response from PEN AMERICA. While we, as a society, struggle in both defining what is and is not permissible regarding our free speech rights and in having difficult public conversations about race and identity, teachers are often the ones caught in the crossfire. It is this “mass surveillance” of teachers that is dramatically increasing educators’ stress levels, says teacher career coach Nicole Routon.

3. Money Makes The World Go Round – Teacher Salaries

Concerned teacher

Twenty-four percent of respondents in the poll indicated that they were thinking of leaving teaching due to other reasons with pay being cited as a key consideration. While it is rare to hear a teacher say that they went into education for the money, money does keep the lights on at home. Yet, the Center for American Progress has found that in 35 states, teachers with 10 years of experience or more who head families would qualify for multiple public assistance programs while teacher salaries, in general, are between 14 and 25 percent lower than for other professions open to college graduates.

A Salad Bowl Of Maladies

Stressed art teacher

It is probable that teachers are leaving the profession not because of any one thing mentioned in the poll but because of the totality of all these factors coming together in a confluence of misery. Tara Boertzel-Schuenemann, the founder of Brainiacs Learning Lab, says the big quit in teaching is really about the combined effects of two things—being underpaid and undervalued. Nor is this anything new. Dr. Timothy Slekar, Director of Educator Preparation Programs at Muskingum University, further argues that society has been demeaning the teaching profession for at least the past 40 years and that people who come into the profession eager to make the world a better place soon become demoralized by conditions that prevent them from teaching. Some of these conditions have been discussed above.

Two Minutes To Midnight

Teacher talks to his students

Our children deserve a quality education. We need to both keep current teachers in the classroom and recruit new people to the profession. It is unsustainable to keep adding water to a bathtub if there isn’t a plug on the drain. Although I wish I had the solution to reducing current political discord in society, please see new approaches to salary equity here. For schools interested in valuing teachers in ways other than straight compensation, such as through better work-life balance, see this great article on teacher flexibility by Simon Rodberg.

As an education consultant passionate about helping students achieve and grow, I can help your teachers manage workload stress and improve student learning outcomes. I have supported hundreds of educators in improving their curriculum, instruction, and assessment practices by modeling strategies for working smarter rather than harder. Please feel free to reach out to me at John Schembari, Ed.D. | LinkedIn.

What Are the Best Jobs for Military Veterans?

What Are the Best Jobs for Military Veterans?

For people with past military experience, finding a job is one of the first challenges they often face after serving. Veterans tend to have great skills that hold a lot of appeal for employers, but they have to learn how to maximize those.  For example, if you’re a veteran or have military experience, you’re likely […]

The post What Are the Best Jobs for Military Veterans? appeared first on Jobacle.com.

6 Ways To Approach Innovation

6 Ways To Approach Innovation

With the increasing push from corporate boards and shareholders for innovation, digitalization, automation, and disruption of business, many managers and leaders stand before a tough mission. Which of the many different ways innovation can be achieved, accelerated, and maintained is right for their current innovation maturity, company culture, available budget, the market they operate, strengths of their competitors, and customer expectations?


I had the privilege to be a part of such discussions in a large multinational corporation, both on the international level as well as a member of local management in one country. In the last four years, we tried a couple of different approaches and learned many of their pros and cons. There is no single best approach, but you can find the one most suited to your current needs.

Innovation In-House (Traditional Approach)

Innovation team works together

With the traditional or evolutionary approach, innovation initiatives are distributed among the whole organization. There is no central unit or formal Head of Innovations; innovations are part of every business unit’s endeavors. Focus is on everyone’s ability to come up with new ideas and often offers a well-defined and guided process on how to work with unusual and innovative ideas on their path from the drawing board to a sustainable business idea.

Decision-making usually follows the hierarchical (line of business, LOB) chain of command or inclines towards an innovation committee, where a final go/no-go is given. Awarding proactivity and efforts leading to successful innovations seem like a straight line to walk but brings unexpected challenges.

Some of the most interesting innovation supporting tools include:

Adobe’s Kickbox Foundation is a methodology in corporate innovation to activate employees and create valuable business cases for the company. In general, employees can volunteer to receive an innovation box with creative tools and a $1,000 prepaid credit card to fund any new projects they desire. The “Kickboxers” then present their ideas to their executives and their ideas can lead to full-fledged business plans.

Creating a Culture of Innovation shows eight ideas that work at Google. Those ideas (Think 10x, Launch, then keep listening, Share everything you can, Hire the right people, Use the 70/20/10 model, Look for ideas everywhere, Use data, not opinions, and Focus on users, not the competition) are designed to encourage interactions between employees within and across teams, and spark conversation about work as well as play.

Innovation In-House (Separate Department Approach)

Innovation team brainstorms together

Creating a new department that centralizes company-wide innovation efforts is one of the most common ways companies approach their need for innovation. The purpose of this department is to collect new ideas from all employees and across hierarchies, scout and gather ideas from outside of the company, evaluate distinct ideas, execute feasibility studies, and prepare business cases for specialized committees or even the board for a final go/no-go decision.

The biggest challenge in this approach is setting the right key performance indicators (KPIs) to measure effectiveness and return of investment (ROI). The not-invented-here syndrome (NIH) is a challenge that will be addressed sooner or later. A single entity within a company tasked with challenging the status quo, existing rules, and standards only rarely finds unconditional cooperation from other departments.

Where the separate department approach excels is the fact that it can create a versatile team of in-house experts to address a potentially vital innovation through all of its life cycles. This team of in-house experts has a broad knowledge of your goods or services, the company’s strengths and weaknesses, existing or targeted customer groups, your existing and potential competitors, and the existing legislation or regulatory environment.

Innovation In-House (Autonomous Lab Approach)

Medical innovation

As a next evolution step in the in-house innovation approach, many companies embrace the autonomous lab approach. The lab is a more-or-less autonomous business unit that can benefit from the resources, knowledge, and innovation base of its parent company while suffering less from often rigid and time-consuming bureaucratic ways of decision-making of many large companies.

As a result, many new or unique opportunities can be explored far more quickly than an ordinary internal department could ever dream of. Furthermore, many of the strict corporate guidelines and procedures can be bypassed or at least postponed to a later phase of the innovation process.

In some cases, a lab or innovation unit can even sell its services to the parent company’s clients, thus increasing the existing revenue stream. A fine example of this approach is Philips Engineering Solutions. As a modification of this approach, some try to find innovation by creating internal startup teams.

Innovation External (Mergers And Acquisitions)

Start-up innovates

To harness the existing potential of a growing start-up or emerging technology, mergers and acquisitions (M&A) is one way many companies use to gain substantial market growth or to acquire a solution or service they were missing and not willing to invest years of time and needed resources to invent by themselves.

Google purchased YouTube back in 2006 as one of its many acquisitions. Microsoft acquired LinkedIn with the purpose to accelerate the growth of LinkedIn as well as Microsoft Office 365. LinkedIn acquired Lynda.com and created LinkedIn Learning. Twitter bought Quill, a business-focused messaging service meant to compete against the likes of Slack.

Like every merger and acquisition, ones with the aim to acquire technology or a new disrupting service or product can fail. Mismanagement or cultural differences between the two companies can lead to slowing down of innovation processes, or severe setbacks.

Innovation External (Start-Up Support)

Start-up brainstorms ideas

Harnessing the power of many talented groups and individuals worldwide, some companies have chosen the strategy to set up accelerators or incubators for small and independent start-ups. Often supporting a limited group of most promising start-up companies by providing access to the newest technology and solutions as well as senior managers serving as mentors, their advantage is early access to new and unique ideas without the need for expensive investments into internal innovation department capabilities.

Examples include L’Oreal and its Founders Factory, a leading global multi-sector digital accelerator and incubator based in London. L’Oréal provides each start-up with access to an in-house team of experts that gives operational support and mentoring; brings its century-old beauty expertise and access to a passionate & connected ecosystem of specialists across marketing, R & I, and operations.

The UBS Future of Finance Challenge offers the winners a share of over $400,000 USD cash prizes and support, over 300 hours of dedicated coaching and mentoring from experienced technology and business leaders, and also a chance to further commercialize and scale their ideas and technologies with help from UBS resources and support.

The corporate start-up incubator approach is not limited by the industry or size of its parent company. The Axel Springer Plug and Play Accelerator as a home for digital entrepreneurs is a joint venture between the Plug and Play Tech Center and Axel Springer SE.

New Forms Of Innovation

Innovation/idea concept

Innovating is subject to innovation as well, with many new and out-of-the-box ways of how-to emerging, often bringing best-of-both-worlds of internal and external innovations together or creating brand new forms of cooperation.

New forms of innovation include sandboxing. Sandbox of Slovak National Bank is a platform that allows the participant via consultations with NBS to adjust financial innovation in compliance with regulation and practically test it on the Slovak financial market. The purpose of the platform is to facilitate the implementation of innovations in Slovakia.

Crowdfunding is yet another rising approach to do innovations. Twisting the usual Kickstarter approach a bit, you get Ideascale crowd where you can launch a challenge and solve a problem with the help of a curated group of 30,000 problem-solvers, design thinkers, and ideators.

Open innovation is combining the strengths of an external company to build and launch innovative ideas and programs with the huge power of internal employees and the whole external audience. An example of utilization was done by LEGO Ideas Community.

Choosing The Right Way To Approach Innovation

Idea concept

Whatever way you choose/style you adopt, do not be afraid to re-evaluate your choice on a regular basis. Innovation is not your everyday business process that can be honed to simplicity and perfection. As your innovation maturity evolves, you might find that your current innovation style no longer suits your needs. No one ever said that you cannot use several different approaches at the same time.

Different ways of innovating have different pros and cons. Knowing those are fundamental in your decision-making. Decisions based on facts and the experience of others might help you leverage others’ success and get around their mistakes.

How To Respond To Lowball Job Offers

How To Respond To Lowball Job Offers

You got a lowball job offer. The employer thinks you’re desperate for the job. Yet, you know you’re worth much more than the salary and benefits package they’re offering you. So, what do you do?


What To Do When You Get A Lowball Job Offer

@j.t.odonnell How to respond to low-ball job offers. #negotiationtips #salarynegotiation #lowball #joboffer #interviewtips #careertiktok #edutok #careeradvice #jobs ♬ original sound – J.T. O’Donnell

When you get a lowball job offer, the first thing you should do is make a list of how you meet and exceed every single requirement and/or qualification on that job description. Then, once your list is complete, you’re going to reach out to the hiring manager.

I recommend calling the hiring manager to have a conversation so they can hear the sincerity in your voice, but you could also send an email that says, “Thank you so much for the offer. I’m really honored. That’s why this is hard for me to share. But the offer came in lower than I expected. I really can meet and exceed everything that you put on that job description.” This is where you can share the list you created. Then, you can say, “And for those reasons, I was hoping that you could pay me X.” You need to give them a number.

After sharing your list and giving them your preferred salary, you can end your call or email message with a promise by saying, “If you can deliver on that number, I will make sure it is worth every penny.” That way, you’re making it clear to them that you know your worth and that you are looking for more money. The worst thing that could happen is they come back and say no, and then you can decide if you’re going to take the job or not.

Are You Looking For A Satisfying And Fulfilling Career?

Woman writes out her response to a lowball job offer

I hope these tips will help you effectively respond to any lowball job offers you may receive in your job search. It’s tough knowing what to do when that happens. You don’t want to make a mistake when a job (and your income) is on the line. I know how difficult it is to navigate situations like these in your career and make the right decisions. If you’re feeling trapped or lost in your career right now, I’m here for you. I’d love it if you joined my FREE community where professionals like you are learning how to become empowered in their careers so they can finally find career happiness and satisfaction.

Sign up for my FREE community and become a Workplace Renegade today! My team and I are looking forward to working with you soon.

4 Ways To Balance Your Job Search

4 Ways To Balance Your Job Search

It’s not uncommon for job seekers to spend almost all of their time sitting behind a computer searching through online job postings. If your job search has been unsuccessful up to this point, your time behind the computer could be a major factor in your lack of success.


Sitting behind a computer screen, endlessly scrolling and applying to open positions, is simply not the most effective use of your time out of the workforce. Here are some tips for balancing your activity during your job search:

Make It A Point To Network Every Single Week

Woman networks virtually

The old adage, “It’s not what you know, it’s who you know,” really is true. In most cases, a friend or colleague won’t be able to get you a job for which you’re not qualified, but they may be able to get you an interview when your resume would have otherwise been overlooked.

Anything you do that involves talking to other people about your job search counts as networking, whether it’s lunch with a former co-worker, coffee with a recruiter, or a formal networking event in your area. Some people are apprehensive about networking, but like anything in life, the more you do it, the easier it becomes.

Schedule Time For Follow-Ups

Two former co-workers meet up for coffee.

Whether you’re inquiring about a submitted job application or following up with a colleague you met while networking, these intimidating tasks often get pushed to the back burner as you prioritize your time. Scheduling them into your weekly agenda ensures that you will set aside adequate time to close the circle with various activities that you’ve started.

Update Your LinkedIn Profile

Man updates his LinkedIn profile

If you’ve taken the time to build your LinkedIn profile, you should be logging in at least once a week, and preferably more often.

The various groups on LinkedIn offer a never-ending conversation on topics from looking for a job to news relevant to your industry/field. Following and connecting with people who work at your bucket list companies gives you the opportunity to build your professional network and get referrals. A fully optimized profile also allows recruiters and hiring managers to find you when they search for job candidates with specific skill sets.

Build Your Personal Brand

The candidate who walks into a job fair or interview knowing who they are and what they can provide has a remarkable edge over a candidate who’s still figuring these things out. Spend some time developing a personal branding statement, printing business cards for yourself, and engaging in activities that support your personal brand—whether that means volunteering, blogging, consulting, or tweeting about your field.

When you walk into a room and say, “Hi, this is who I am and this is what I do,” it makes a powerful statement.

Having a polished resume is critical to your job search. However, sending that resume off to online job postings is not how you should spend 100% of your time looking for a job. Make sure you’re interacting with other people both in-person and online to maximize your chances of standing out from the crowd.

Remember to stay positive during your job search and know that there are resources available to help you through this challenging process, including the resources at Work It Daily. Join our FREE community today and learn how to become empowered in your career so you can finally find job search success and career satisfaction!

This article was originally published at an earlier date.

The 31 Best Six-Figure Jobs In 2022 (Plus Requirements)

The 31 Best Six-Figure Jobs In 2022 (Plus Requirements)

The best six-figure jobs are rewarding, stable, and growing in demand. But many people who are in school (or early in their careers) are surprised when they find out which positions actually pay well. This list of jobs that pay six-figures will help you understand your options if you’re seeking a high income. 1.Construction Manager […]

The post The 31 Best Six-Figure Jobs In 2022 (Plus Requirements) appeared first on Career Sherpa.

How To Answer Interview Questions About How You Handle A Heavy Workload

How To Answer Interview Questions About How You Handle A Heavy Workload

We all have times on the job when the work piles up. However, we don’t all react in the same way. Some of us handle that stress better than others. A potential employer naturally wants to know how you will react when that situation happens in this new job. So, they say something like, “Describe a time when your workload was particularly heavy and what steps you took to handle it.”


Behavioral Interview Questions

This is a type of behavioral interview question. These types of questions ask you to describe your past actions or predict how you’ll react in future situations. These can be great ways to get insight into your personality and how you approach difficult situations.

Answers to behavioral interview questions are best structured using the STAR format (situation or task, action you took, and results you achieved). Using this technique ensures you say what you need to say to give a complete answer to the question. (Some people forget to talk about the results they got from the actions they took, but this is the most important part.)

What Do Employers Want To Know?

Young man answers interview question about how he handles a heavy workload

Basically, employers want to know how you approach problems and stress. Can you adapt? Can you prioritize? Can you stay calm? A lot of people will just say, “I stay until the work is done.” Persistence is good, but letting them know that you approach problems analytically and strategically is better. Show them that you can think critically and make good decisions. Walk them through how you have dealt with this issue before or how you would deal with it.

Good Sample Answers

Hiring manager asks job candidate how they handle a heavy workload

Here are a couple of examples of good answers to this question:

1. We all have times when the workload gets a little heavier than normal. I’ve found that the best way to handle it is to step back, take a look at everything on my task list, and prioritize. Most of the time, not everything needs to get done immediately. Some things are more critical to team goals than others, so sometimes it’s necessary to prioritize.”

Then, tell a short story about a time when you did that, and tell what the results of it were: you got X task done, which was beneficial because of Y.

2. In that kind of situation, prioritizing and teamwork both become critical. I speak to my supervisor to see if I can help him or her and get some input on which tasks to tackle first.”

Then, talk about the time you provided assistance to your boss on a mission-critical task and what happened as a result of that teamwork.

Every interview answer should help sell you for the job. Be prepared with great answers for dozens of tough questions in How to Answer Interview Questions and How to Answer Interview Questions II, both available on Amazon.

We understand the challenges you face in the job search. We know how difficult it is to land (and ace) an interview and make the right career decisions. If you’re feeling trapped or lost in your career right now, we’re here for you. We’d love it if you joined our FREE community where professionals like you are learning how to become empowered in their careers so they can finally find career satisfaction.

Sign up for our FREE community and become a Workplace Renegade today!

This article was originally published at an earlier date.

Cultural Execution: A Brainstorming Tool For Exceptional Social Media Content

Cultural Execution: A Brainstorming Tool For Exceptional Social Media Content

As the demand for more content on a daily basis becomes the norm, the topic around the brainstorming process and what tool is best for brainstorming quality ideas for creative content becomes essential. I can tell you—from the many years that I have worked with exceptional gaming and music creative teams—I would be focusing on one area when working with creatives & influencers: culture.


Creative Teams

Creative team brainstorms content for social media

The only way you get great ideas is if people feel safe to say them out loud. The tools needed to achieve great narratives and to get great campaign content are rooted in a culture where people feel safe to express ideas out loud and not get judged. When a team feels safe to speak up and share ideas that are relevant to pop culture at the time, the creative content is unstoppable and this creates successful new content. The reason most organizations and companies struggle with good ideas is that there is usually someone in the room that is the killer of ideas imposing his/her political will against the rest of the crew, leadership styles that create fear and narrow viewpoints.

I have been fortunate to have worked with some of the best teams in the tech industry and the common thread, in my opinion, has always been a crew that supports humility, kindness, and curiosity as those are the elements to unlock the creative process and unless you have a culture like that, you’re dead. If your boss makes people feel scared to throw things out for creative discussion the future of the team is in jeopardy.

This is called cultural execution.

Focusing on planting seeds with your entire team to create an inclusive environment will achieve more. If allowing everyone to contribute to the success of the team is a priority, the campaign will align with new creative ideas. Your team should feel safe, where if they have a new idea and can throw it against the wall out loud to see if it will stick and is respected for contributing, this act alone creates trust which equates to results.

Try to avoid this scenario: for example, a Sr. creative with tons of experience comes into the meeting and makes the entire team feel little. This is not effective and creates fear and is counter-culture to great creative campaigns and, by the way, Gen Z can smell it a mile away. Collaboration is the key here to creating creative authentic relevant content.

Influencers

Influencer creates social media content

Particularly when working with influencers directly, allow them to create without interference and encourage them to lead the narrative. They know their fanbases the best and know how to engage them. Fans, consumers are more sophisticated and smarter today than ever. I have found myself many times kindly educating brands on how the optimization of dollars spent for an authentic content campaign is reliant on reach and no one can unlock that better than the influencer. The opportunity lies in constraint and not to judge, but to support.

So, if you want to obtain creative content at a better, faster pace than you are now, creating a culturally creative environment is important, not to mention a great way to build your team for long-term success. This will help you to create an atmosphere for your team where they feel safe to share new relevant ideas. Making this change will increase the volume of content as more ideas more frequently start executing.

Try this strategy out today and let me know how it works for you!

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