How to Receive Multiple Job Offers After You’re Fired
The more you try to be in control, the less you really are…in life and at work. You just got fired and you think it’s the end of the world. You’re looking at the wrong end.
Waltham, MA (PRWEB) June 28, 2005 -- Ask survivors of the most popular
reality television shows and they’ll tell you “If you have to eat a cockroach,
don’t spend too much time thinking about it.” Keep focused on the end-game and
move on.
Know yourself, have a plan, make a footprint. After you’re
fired, the raw power needed to convert a job loss into a high-voltage catalyst
that gains multiple job offers is surprisingly simple.
Consider these
energizers:
-Who you are? Detangle your sense of job from your sense of
self
-Where are you going? Design a five-year plan for career focus /
direction
-What can you do? Maintain a life-long log of your career
achievements
“Getting fired is a lot like getting divorced,” says Steve
Johnson, Vice President of Information Systems for R. L. Stevens &
Associates Inc., (http://www.interviewing.com)a leading international career
marketing firm headquartered in Waltham, Massachusetts. “All you hear is ‘I
don’t want you anymore’,” he says.
Own your success and your failures.
When he was fired from a multi-billion dollar petroleum company earlier in his
career, discernment gave Johnson, a business-world veteran, the inner strength
to get up and get on instead of rolling over and playing dead.
Despite
an impressive portfolio of documented achievements that solidly contributed to
the bottom line through process reengineering, he was still let go. His stellar
performance though appreciated, was undervalued by his employers. Johnson made
sure that this unexpected event did not end his career or dampen his spirits.
“The time I was given the pink slip and told my talents were no longer needed, I
faced a decision to either continually bemoan the shut door or look forward and
find a new door I could open.”
Possess the wisdom to know the difference
between opportunity lost and possibility found. Johnson, an avid golfer,
expertly swung himself out of his job loss bunker and found customers wanting
his talents by taking the same approach in his job search as he does in his
sport. “Getting fired is like an awful day on the golf course. You’ve got to
stay in the game, play the holes, and adapt, improvise and overcome,” he says.
“Every time a bad thing happened in my career, I always landed on my
feet and good fortune proliferated through increased earnings, greater
fulfillment and expanded opportunity to learn new skills. Using multiple career
marketing strategies simultaneously I made sure that failure was never an
option,” he added.
Quickly create opportunities for yourself by changing
your mental and physical state. Here’s what you can do to restore order out of
your job loss chaos:
Want to deactivate your fears?
• Take a vacation
now to clear your head and get perspective
• Don’t feed your anger by calling
past colleagues and revisiting the past
• Welcome your firing as an
unexpected career advancement to the next level
• Limit your pity party to
one business day (8 hours)
• Forgive, let go, accelerate onward
Want
to reactivate your confidence?
• Volunteer your time to someone who needs you
– a charitable organization
• Convert your resume from a career obituary to a
marketing promo piece
• Inventory your portfolio of skills and question their
relevancy / currency
• Showcase your business talent by serving on a
community task force
• Upgrade your self-marketing campaign to strengthen
your branding
Change your focus from retribution to restoration and
you’ll find the key to layoff survival and increased employer interest. Swallow
your pride and take control of your career by morphing yourself into a
consultant. You might even be able to reverse your misfortune and sell your
talents back to the boss who fired you. Many ingenious job searchers have done
just that and leveraged their talents by filling a void left by their departure.
If you limit your choices only to what seems possible or reasonable, you
disconnect yourself from what you truly want, and all that is left is
compromise.
Got any valid reason to settle for a bad-tasting insect when
a juicy steak is just around the corner? Get on with it.
About the
Author:
Marta L. Driesslein is a senior management consultant for R.L.
Stevens & Associates Inc. http://www.interviewing.com.
About R.L. Stevens &
Associates, Inc.:
For 24 years, R.L. Stevens and Associates Inc., has helped
thousands of professionals and executives find the best career positions in top
U.S. companies. Utilizing the advertised and unadvertised job markets, R.L.
Stevens & Associates consistently generates quality job leads for all RLS
clients. For more information, please visit our website: http://www.interviewing.com
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Source : http://www.prweb.com/releases/2005/6/prweb255582.htm