2014: Let the Goals Begin!

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Last year frankly worked pretty well with smaller monthly goals, so we’re gonna continue with that method though we are going to fiddle with the categories a bit and add one for “Habit of the Month”.  This came out of an earlier post about a TEDTalk that suggested doing one new thing for 30 days.  Some things are going to be prescheduled since the big fitness goal for this year is the Vegas Rock and Roll Half Marathon in November 2014.

Happy-New-Year-2014-Celebration-Black-WallpaperDaily habits I’d like to develop or improve upon include writing/journaling, exercising, reading for pleasure, taking a picture and so on.  I don’t know if I can come up with 12 right off the bat, but I’m expecting more to grow out of the initial ones.  The big financial goal is 3 months of living expenses in the bank on top of the money the heir will need for college, so we’re going to continue with the cost cutting.  We did pretty well last year, but we had a few major expenses and we can do better I think.  We shall see.  And we will, of course, continue with the decluttering and the home improvement with the long term goal of being “ready to go” should we decide to sell the homestead at some point in the future.  Professional development will continue to be on the list, though I’m shifting focus from technical to process and management.  And, of course, at least one bucket list item marked off.

New for 2014 I’m going to try to think out for a quarter so that if I see an opportunity to complete/trade off a later goal, I can.  I’m also adding “clean up” months or “bye rounds” throughout the year to catch up on goals that were perhaps a bit more than they seemed and to manage the months that just fly by.  Plus, it seems more sane and realistic.

So, let’s take a look at January:

  • Fitness – Hit my Fitbit goals for the month (yep, Christmas present)
  • Professional – Complete the ITIL 2011 Intermediate SOA qualification
  • Habit – Fitness and Food Journaling
  • Home – Guest bedroom
  • Financial – 401K and retirement accounts
  • Decluttering – File for 2013 taxes, set up 2014 files
  • Cost cutting – Insurance review

And February:

  • Fitness – Sign up for the NC Half Marathon Twilight 5K in March
  • Professional – Complete the ITIL 2011 MALC (Expert) qualification
  • Habit – Take or draw a picture every day
  • Home – [month off to catch up if needed]
  • Financial – 2013 Taxes completed and filed
  • Decluttering – Scan/Shred old records
  • Cost cutting/saving – Cut dining out to one dinner and one lunch per week

Finally, March:

  • Fitness – Complete the NC Half Marathon Twilight 5K
  • Professional – [month off to catch up if needed]
  • Habit – [decluttering habit, see below]
  • Home – Front porch and walks (getting ready for spring!)
  • Financial – update wills
  • Decluttering – Declutter one thing per day (sell, trade, donate, recycle, repair)
  • Cost cutting/saving – Utilities review (gas, power, phone, internet, cellular, TV, etc.)

Looks doable.  Here’s to having some fun, simplifying my life, and rocking 2014!

2013: Reflections on a Year Gone By

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Perhaps a bit early for the 2013 post, but I’m feeling reflective, so… It’s been a really great year!  Just a few of the highlights:

  • New job with a terrific company.
  • New (old) car that I love.
  • The heir got accepted to his (only) college of choice.
  • The heir was named VIP of the rugby team (as a junior).

    No, no - it's not New Year's Eve yet.  I'm just behind on posts and ahead on reflection. :)

    No, no – it’s not New Year’s Eve yet. I’m just behind on posts and ahead on reflection. 🙂

  • Repainted the house.
  • Zero debt other than the mortgage.
  • The consort got a new job.
  • Spent a weekend on the lake outside Toronto with old friends.
  • Spent a week in Vegas with my best friend.
  • Completed 2 more intermediate ITIL certifications.
  • Added a new dog to the herd.
  • Finished the guest bathroom.
  • Both the Braves and the Panthers made the playoffs!

There were some downs (though not many) – my old workplace had gotten pretty chaotic and stressful, we had a few unfortunate appliance and car meltdowns, I didn’t complete some of my 2014 goals (though others stepped up to the plate) and so on, but overall 2013 was a wonderful year!  Bring on 2014, we’re ready!

LinkedIn: Get Experienced!

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So, it’s been quite a few posts about LinkedIn now and I’m sure anyone who is reading this is wondering when the heck I’m going to get to “the important part” – experience.  Resume.  The “job description”.  Well, the time has come.  But it is the same as the other sections – it’s about your story.  What you did.  How you did it.  How it turned out.  This isn’t an old school resume where you pull out your job description and start listing the responsibilities that went with the title.  Booooring!

There are really only two things to remember in doing this – action and outcome.  What did you DO and how did it work out?  Use numbers.  Use dynamic, active words.  Use real words.  “Responsible for thought leadership and strategy within global organization building synergy across regional divisions.”  Huh?  Do what?  Here’s what that statement means – nothing.  Absolutely nothing.  Now, try this – “Changed global focus from products to services resulting in 23% increase in sales worldwide, 41% increase in customer satisfaction and 12% decrease in employee turnover.”  Now you have my attention!

“Project manager for RadWidget 4000 rollout.”  Erm… OK?  Led multidivisional project team in global product development and implementation resulting in $400,000 savings over first two years.  Project completed on time and 18% under budget.”  Who cares what the product name was (unless it is well known such as an ERP or CRM type project or everyone in your current or future field will recognize it)?  It’s not the details here, it is the results.  The actions.  The outcomes.

“Identified and closed organizational knowledge gap, establishing ongoing program to maintain employee skills.”  No clue what you mean there, really.  I’m assuming you sent folks to some classes?  Established division-wide training program in support of [corporate initiative], certifying 100% of staff and reducing the implementation timeline by 40% over 3 years.  Presented successful business case to create internal training staff, instructional materials and program for use across global organization.”  Wow.  You take employee development seriously!  You engage people!

And now a few additional tips:

  • Update your profile experience on your current position as you go once you have the core in place.  Add projects, courses, awards, achievements, etc. while the numbers and people and outcomes are fresh in your mind.  This will also show up on the feed, which is all good.
  • Build out your most recent and most relevant experience.  Trim down (and eventually eliminate) older and irrelevant experience and positions.  If you are going for a new type of position requiring a specific skillset, reorganize and update to support that skillset.
  • Use meaningful titles that say what you did.  Corporate bands may not indicate the depth or breadth (or even level) of the position – I was listed as a Sr. Application Systems Programmer “officially” since that was the correct salary band even though nothing about my position involved any programming at all.  Include the official title parenthetically so someone doing a background check will have it when they contact HR.
  • Avoid buzzwords.  They get stale fast.
  • Use action words.  Don’t be “Responsible for” when you can drive, develop or create.  Don’t tell, show.  Use numbers.
  • Show growth across your experience.
  • Move volunteer positions and organizations to that section unless they fill employment gaps.  The experience will still be visible on your profile but it will be cleaner.
  • DON’T lie.  DON’T exaggerate.  DON’T inflate.  I cannot emphasize this enough.  The damage you will do to your credibility will be huge when you are caught – and you will be.

Step back and look at your experience from an employer’s perspective.  Have others who are responsible for hiring do the same.  If you know a great recruiter ask them for their thoughts and then implement them.  Make sure your experience tells a story and leads up to where you are and, more importantly, indicates you are ready to move forward to where you want to go.

LinkedIn: Of Course(s)!

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First and foremost, courses are not certifications.  They may come with certificates, but if there is no actual test of knowledge or understanding and they do not align with a certifying organization, they aren’t industry certifications.  They are, however, critical to showing your interest in development and growth.  You can also use this section to list all the courses aligned with an industry certification as you complete them – some certifications require a large amount of coursework along the path with no real way to indicate completion.  Additionally, if you are working in a “pathed” area (like a university major or a multi-track certification), it shows which path you took towards completion – the individual elements that make up the whole.

Courses are easy to enter.  Simply go to Profile > Edit Profile, scroll down to the Courses section and click Edit.  Type in the course name and associate it with an experience element (job or volunteer) or education element.  You can add a course number if you feel it would be useful (generally it’s not since numbering schemes are usually pretty internal and obtuse).  Add as many as you like and hit Save.  All done!

LinkedIn Courses

Be careful that you associate the course with the correct experience as that is where they will show up (similar to projects).  List leadership courses, professional courses, technical courses, anything that shows your expertise and, more importantly, your direction.  List the actual course title – if it is a fuzzy internal name you may want to parenthetically indicate the content.  CorpWise (leadership and management) or SecureCorp (information security training).

Also keep in mind that every change to your profile (such as adding a course) posts a feed update – use that to your advantage and add one or two at a time (or all the ones associated with a particular experience element) and then a few more when you need feed visibility.

TEDTalk

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I used to go to summer camp for the entire summer and my mother would not only write me but would tuck postcards inside my clothes so I would find them as I got dressed in the mornings.  I found it sad when my son received a lovely thank-you note from his grandmother and was extremely excited, but had to ask me to read the cursive.

Sometimes 140 characters and an avatar just isn’t enough.