Reentering the Workforce – 50 Plus and Baby Boomers

Age No Bar
Are you planning on re-starting your career after age 50 or post-retirement? Though it might take a longer time and a concentrated effort, there has never been a better time for the baby boomer generation to think about reentering the workforce.

Many baby boomer generation men and women are learning new technology, going back to college, hiring life and career coaches and seeking direction from their children in improving their careers or re-entering the job market.
From being actively involved in volunteer activities to starting their own websites to founding their own companies, the experience and inspiration is all around.

Does reentering the workforce appears intimidating to you? What are your anxieties and questions as you step up towards contributing to the workforce with the generation X and the Millennials?

Positive Affirmation and Self-Confidence

These are real-life statements expressed a couple of 50 plus reentrants to the workforce.

I am above 50 years old; re-entry in the corporate world would be much more difficult for me.”
“There are so many talented young men and women in the workforce; their working style shows a clear generation gap on how I have worked some years back. Would I fit in?”


What do you infer from these statements? What is the message that this person is sending out to herself and others? She has already made up her mind with a statement (note that she is not even questioning her belief in the first statement) that re-entry would be much more difficult for her at this age. With such a statement she has already done the first harm by de-motivating herself.

Now let us rephrase her statement to:
“I am in my fifties right now, what can I do to make my re-entry in the corporate world easier?”
When we frame a statement positively we are already on our way to finding the solution to the issue.

“Stop asking if the glass is half full or half empty. instead, ask “What’s in it? How did it get there? What can I do with it?”
David Kaufman

Now let’s review the second statement.
Of course, generations will have different work style and preference, the question is whether or not you would fit in a new working environment. Focus on your strengths and see how you could contribute to the new work culture. Your maturity would be deeply appreciated by your younger generation co-workers who are at loss of much needed knowledge right now. The Millennials are joining the workforce as fast as the baby boomer generation prepares for retirement. The shortage of labor is a reality in the coming years and your expertise and knowledge would be regarded in all sectors.

How about rephrasing that sentence now to:
“How can I incorporate my maturity in understanding the business in the present work culture?”
As before, you are now on a way to make a list of solutions on how and where you can use your acquired skills to help the current workforce.

When you add value to your work and yourself, others will see you portray in that very frame. Your attitude can take you wherever you want to go and perhaps beyond what you dreamed of, having a positive outlook and persistence are the main keys to a successful outcome.

But since confidence also comes from the means you are equipped with, you must also aim to have your skill sets honed to the new job/career requirements. Your skills are your tools to creating your new career path. In this world of information overload and divergent choices, choose wisely and appropriately that best suits your needs. Just getting certifications in multifarious applications and languages might not be the right choice in the current global working environment.
You have to be more self-promotional than ever before. If you believe that you what you have done in the past has made you a better person, others will too. But you have to take the first step, to have complete confidence in yourself. Now follows the step of marketing yourself or letting others see how you can best present yourself to their requirements.

“I can’t do it” never yet accomplished anything. “I will try” has accomplished wonders.
– George P. Burnham

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Why Women MUST Work

Are you a working mother, or do you wish to be one? There has always been a conflict in the past, present and will be in the future also on women managing career and family life- it is tough on women almost everywhere in the world to achieve a balance doing so – but this article is not to scratch further on this debate but to find reasons why women should have a career / work!

Well on the fun side of it all, some factors that might motivate you to join or reenter the workforce:

  • Limited interaction with the spouse might mean less confrontations and reduced divorce rates.
    This research indicates it is indeed true: “In fact, as University of Michigan sociologist Hiromi Ono found in 1998, a woman is more likely to divorce if she has no earnings than if she does in fact earn money. Other researchers find that the higher the household income–whatever the source–the higher the quality of family life and marriage.”
    But this source is from the “old” 20th century report! So how about this recent one:
    Divorce rates in the U.S. have been falling for the past decade, while female labor force participation rates have been rising. Aggregate data for US states show that in 2000, divorce rates across states are negatively correlated with female labor force participation rates, even after controlling for the variation in the average age of marriage. We connect these two trends in a simple random matching model which starts from the observation that a working woman, because she is paid in cash, has greater flexibility to transfer surplus to her husband than a non-working woman. Under unilateral divorce law, this implies that a marriage with two working partners is more stable with respect to outside offers than a marriage with only one working partner: marriages between working partners break up only if it is efficient to do so, while marriages between a working and nonworking spouse may break up inefficiently. We show that in aggregate there is a predicted inverted U relationship between the divorce rate and fraction of working women.”(Source: Are working Women good for Marriage, July 2006)
  • Leading a more active lifestyle and multi-tasking around work, household chores and picking up kids from school, could mean you losing those extra few pounds and an enhanced self-worth with a toned look.
    Check out this report on WebMD:
    “In fact, women were healthier in 2000 than ever before. When Schnittker crunched all the numbers, he found that women had somewhat better health than men. However, only employed women had better health.”
  • Could being a working spouse improve your sex life?
    One longitudinal study of 500 couples by the University of Wisconsin-Madison’s Janet Hyde found that for both men and women, the highest sexual satisfaction was among couples who both worked and experienced high rewards from their jobs. A good job, it seems, is good for your sex life.”(Source: Career Women Bad Wives? Let’s Ask the Guys)
  • A dual income brings financial stability and financial independence for women.
    The majority of men and women credit their private wealth with achieving a better sex life. When viewed separately, a larger percentage of women agree with the statement, perhaps indicating that females derive a greater degree of empowerment from their financial independence than their male counterparts,” the survey, “Money as an Aphrodisiac — Being Rich Means Getting Lucky on Your Own Terms,” found. Some 84% of rich women and 63% of rich men say having money means having better sex.
  • More Savings More Dough
    More time at work and managing house and family might mean lesser outings to the mall and more saving.
    If the savings account shows a good increase, your spouse might help you around the household chores more to keep you in the dough making business. Though they may want you to be partners in accumulating wealth, men still want women to make lesser than they do.
  • Are you looking for a life partner? The office might be a very likely place where you can find a suitable mate.
    Men are more likely to want to marry women who are their assistants at work rather than their colleagues or bosses, a University of Michigan study finds. The study, published in an issue of Evolution and Human Behavior, highlights the importance of relational dominance in mate selection and discusses the evolutionary utility of male concerns about mating with dominant females.”These findings provide empirical support for the widespread belief that powerful women are at a disadvantage in the marriage market because men may prefer to marry less accomplished women,” said Stephanie Brown, lead author of the study and a social psychologist at the U-M Institute for Social Research (ISR).

Join in and comment below on your reasons to work!

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The Choice and Freedom to Work on a Flexible Schedule

A society that puts equality… ahead of freedom will end up with neither.
Milton Friedman (US economist)

The same is perhaps true for equality between men and women at work. The struggle should not be focused towards equality of pay or equality at work for the two genders but rather for the freedom of work for women.
Women have played will continue to play the traditional role have been defined and for quite some time it would be true that women would be ones bearing children and nurturing their families. It is not an imposition but the human instinct.

The companies and employers have to facilitate the working women and working mothers with the freedom of choice thus enabling them to bring more stability to the society.

Women have a major role in shaping the society and the future, if the employers have to help in building a better future for us all the power of choice in employment must be available to every working mother.
To attain freedom and satisfaction in life, flexibility in work and family life is a must.

Freedom comes from choice, the ability to choose what works best for us. The companies and future employers have to provide that choice it must be a policy for the companies who believe in the freedom of choice.

For some families the mothers have a choice to work or not though for much of the middle class all round the world and for single mothers this is a not a choice it is a requirement a daily struggle to meet the ends meet or take care of the financial needs of a family.

Our workplace today is not conducive and non-supporting to women who want to manage their family and career. Why is it so that a woman has to rethink her priorities to rejoin their career after motherhood?
What can the government and the future workplace culture do to not only make the transition back to workplace easier but also not to let women opt out of their careers in the first place?

A major shift in perspective of employers is required. Some of the companies in the 21st century have taken legitimate steps to further this cause and help women with flexibility at work but this needs to be a major movement not only in one country but elsewhere in the developing countries where the situation would be at similar crossroads soon enough.

In an interesting survey carried by Sylvia Ann Hewlett in 2001, she quotes in an article:
Thirty-three percent of high-achieving women are childless at ages 41-55, and this figure rises to 42 percent in corporate America and 43 percent in academe.”

Could this be related to the work pressure or pressures of a demanding career? A full time career and the busyness of life have kept many a women from delaying motherhood to a later stage in their lives. Women delay having a child because they know or believe that their career could be at a standstill or somehow perish if they started a family. Could this scenario change if the choices are available to women upfront? This can change if the women know that getting back in to the workforce is not a struggle anymore. Or if the mothers want to work part-time and flex-time they know that they would be welcome and not be as apprehensive as we are today.

The revolution is already happening, the freedom to make a choice for your career is with you. But it is also the responsibility of the employers in this century to step forward and be a part of the revolution and support the demand of working flexible hours and part-time through programs that support women – not only in one country but all through the world efforts are still needed on war footing to empower women and thereby to help strengthen the society.

What needs to change in workplace policies are the options and freedom to choose to work flexible hours, to have and maintain a good work-life balance for a stable family and workplace environment.

By providing such choices we are empowering the society – towards balance and happiness.

The Equal Opportunities Commission (EOC) report, Sex and Power: Who Runs Britain? 2007, says, “asking for flexible working still spells career death for too many women in today’s workplace, and as a consequence women with caring responsibilities all too often have to ‘trade down’ to keep working. Extending the right to ask for flexible working to everyone in the workplace would change that culture and enable more women to reach the top“.

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Balancing Career and a Growing Family – Can a Working Mother make her Life Easier

How concerned a woman feels on managing her career and a new baby on the way depends on how well prepared you are for this major change in your life.
Before having a baby you were completely focused on the job and advancing your career and enjoying life with your partner with the arrival of the new bundle of joy, many things change – relationships and career management which were easy flowing before need better nurturing and planning.
But some nervousness is good for early preparedness. If you are starting a family or already a working mother with an expanding family, the concerns are many – here are some tips on how to make your life easier and getting you prepared for a smooth sailing ahead.

Though on smooth sailing and expectations – be forewarned not to expect everything to be back to normal sometime soon; it might take a few months or a year or more perhaps, right no with good planning all you have to do is ride it out and see what works best for you and your family.
The growing family’s and kids demands are ever increasing, you may feel the guilt or pressure from the family of not being there for your young ones during their early years and the relations with the spouse are also not the same with both trying to struggle with work-life balance issues. Guilt, pressure, frustration, are all part and parcel of a growing family for a working mother, but all these being there we can rejoice in the pleasures of ‘making’ a family and we can thrive if we can keep our sanity and our planning perfect. Here are some tips in the series – Make your Life easier Working Mother (please do share yours to make the list comprehensive):

Time Management – Compartmentalize your Life
The top most concern of a working mother is finding time to do what they want. There is never enough time in a day to get all done or even get the essentials taken care of. One of the best solutions to this ever present time management problem is to compartmentalize your time. Plan and spare time for, these and others that matter most to you:

  • Family and personal concerns
  • Career / Work life
  • Social Life
  • Physical Development or Health / Working out
  • Finances evaluation
  • Spiritual life

Carpool for Kids
School carpool and pick-up drop-off services for your elder kids will ensure that you are not in a rush to finish chores at home or at work and rushing to pick up kids from school. A good healthy neighborhood connection also helps. Never be afraid to ask for help.

On Personal Care
A working mother or two or three on regular trips to a spa or a salon? Well, it is possible for many but not feasible for most. Where is the time and at times we tend to get in the “who cares” mode. But we need “me” time, to pamper, exfoliate or just relax but it is essential to keep us going in full steam all week. Follow a daily skin care and personal care routine when the kids are tucked in bed or whenever you find the best time to spare only for yourself. A routine becomes a habit and personal care and a glowing mom is not all that impossible. And of course, a few hours in a spa on a weekend can be possible too. All you need to do is ask your spouse for that special quality time that he needs to spend with the kids.

On Cooking
Look up some quick cooking tips on the internet or consult your friends. There is a list on Top 10 Best Quick Cook Cookbooks on the About.com pages perhaps that can inspire some quick healthy cooking tips that all working mothers seek.
The point is to try the best to keep the meals healthy and the lesser time it takes during the settling in phase with the new baby or the busy days with multiple agenda, the better. Spare a few minutes each weekend to plan for the kids and your lunch bag planning. A couple of thinks cooked and frozen for the weekdays is a good idea for those crazy days when things are just out of hand. I have some tips on healthy lunch ideas for a working mother here.

These two tips are from the previous posts on the Make your Life Easier Series on this Blog:

On House Help
It was interesting to read an article in the magazine Working Mother relating (not) getting house help to divorce! Well, why not, working mothers are pressurized at work and more at home, an average working mother does 2-4 times more work than her male counterpart. Getting some help in our lives helps us keep some time for those precious relationships that we work for.

Don’t think about the extra 100 -200 dollars you would be shelving off every month or two for the house help, consider it as an investment to your time. The invaluable time that gets released to you to spend with your family. To go to the soccer game or the dance practice with your kids and not feel guilty of not cleaning the bathroom this weekend. Or just watching a late night movie with your spouse and not worrying about scrubbing the stains off the counter and cabinets in the kitchen.
Or just finding time to sit with your feet up and enjoying that cup of tea! Ahh….If some help gets the tension and stress off you, it’s worth it.

On Organization
At home I feel most flustered when I see the living room full of toys or the closet all disheveled even after a full week of cleaning. Organization at home always seems like an endless chore, and in a house with kids, it is inevitable.

Some tips to share here, what works for me:Toys all over – get a toy chest (which can also serve as an ottoman / table) in the living area for a quick toss in when needed. Kids love to own one and when they are declared responsible for the same, organization and clean-up follows.

Kitchen and around – make it a point to do a complete clean-up event once a year at least – you can get rid of half the stuff when you realize you don’t even use it!
Closet – hmm? Let’s not get there, that’s a whole big monster to talk about in a short blog post!Look up some tips on quick organization:

And sometimes, just let it be, choose taking a walk outside to clearing up the mess. De-stress and energize, you are the main supporting pillar of the house, a happier you and a disorganized house is better than a grumpy mom and a spotless house.

What other tips can you share with us? Please comment.

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Who all to Contact when Looking for a Job

Are you looking for a new job or just after the layoff the first worries are to get a permanent job as soon as possible?
Once you have gathered yourself and planned an optimized schedule which enables you to make the best use of the time now available to you, one of the first steps towards your job search process is to make a list of resources and people who you can contact to expedite your search. The smarter and better you can network now the faster you will land a job. Now, who all could you contact to accelerate your job or career search process?

Your Personal Contact List
Prepare a list of at least 40-50 people you know – they could be your friends, neighbors, family or those you have established acquaintances at the gym, volunteering activities, at your kids school or at club meetings if you attend one or more.
Of these select those who could be willing to forward your resume or meet you to discuss a position of your choice and follow-up well thereafter.

Other than the contact list you have prepared above, you may also contact the following with a personalized request, either through an email first and a phone call later and yet again with an effective follow-up approach.

Recruiters
Scott Reeves in an article in Forbes says, “The smart candidate works with at least two top recruiters in his field. This won’t be a problem, because the best recruiters expect their clients to work with at least one other headhunter. Always be upfront with your recruiters and disclose who is conducting a search on your behalf. If nothing else, this will stoke the competitive fires and work to your advantage. Failure to do so will cast you as less than forthright and is likely to get your résumé kicked to the bottom of the stack.”

Megan Fleming in an article on Dice says, “Recruiters know about the best jobs in the industry and have their finger on the pulse of the job market. If you know what to expect from recruiters and know how to respond to them, you’ll lessen your frustration and improve your chances of success.” Read other tips in this article.

On how to select a Head Hunter or a professional recruiter and on recruiter relationships, here are some good tips:
Using Head Hunters
Recruiter Relationships: Job Search Essentials

Career Counselors or Career Coaches
Career coaches and counselors help, guide and assist you throughout the job search phase, interviewing and beyond. Career coaches offer a variety of services for example, resume update and critique, sprucing your marketing skills, they also offer effective tips and guidance on networking and most of all support and motivation all through your job search. Seeking professional help often results in expediting your job search or career change and very often results in better job offers than those you can expect through recruiters alone.

Of the various sources listed here that you could use one or multiple resources to speed up getting that interview call.
Keep in mind that efficient networking is a must. A large percentage of jobs are in the unadvertised job market, make the most of it through smart networking.

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Do you want to be a Good Boss? Here’s How

If you want to retain good talent in your company, managers need to be trained on some basic aspects of managing constituents from time-to-time. See some points here; if you are a manager do you have it what it takes to be a good boss?

You are the Leader, the Guide and a Mentor
Employees look up to you lead the group, to show the direction not only in technical aspects but personality wise as well. Be accessible to your employees questions and needs, be compassionate to their personal problems as well, of course keeping the company interests first but at times flexibility repays better in the long-run. Acting as a coach and a mentor to your constituents will instantly result in more confidence, respect and trust towards your leadership skills. And to be trusted you must first learn to trust your employees. If the employees feel valued and empowered in the organization, they are sure to be stay on longer and with a deeper sense of loyalty towards work and the company.

Show Appreciation
Showing appreciation at work must be part of integral policies of a company. And even if your company does not have specific policy doing so regularly take on the responsibility to show appreciation to your team on a regular basis. In general meetings or through group emails, acknowledge and appreciate a job well done. Bosses usually are good at telling others what is not going well take time to tell them what you are doing well. Boosting employee morale is directly proportional to increased productivity.
The bottom line is: reprimand in private and appreciate publicly.
Never berate your employee in front of others.

When Expectations fall short
All employees do not work at same performance levels there are quite a few that you would come across falling short of expectations. It is not just a reason to dish out a bad performance review but it is your responsibility to help them and try your best to encourage them to talk about their struggles. A compassionate one-on-one meeting will enable them to open up and discuss the reasons of poor performance, also helping in boosting the employee self-confidence. Do not wait until the employee performance review to do so.

Periodic and Meaningful Communication
Schedule regular one-on-one meetings with your employees where they feel more comfortable to discuss their workplace issues or share new ideas for future projects or personal development. Employees perform better when they feel they feel counted in the organization, especially the new Millennials in the workforce would perform better when given initiative to lead a task and being counted in an organization’s progress, but hey, don’t we all?

During the one-on-one meetings with your employees, try your best to derive SMART goals from your employees. Ensure they understand what your and company’s expectations are from them and also inform them of employee appreciation, recognition and compensation programs on a job well done.

THE LEADERSHIP CHALLENGE – The Essential Guide for the Leaders of the 21st Century

The few points above might be just an outline towards helping you be a good manager, but one of the most comprehensive and “the most trusted source on becoming a better leader” can be found in the book titled THE LEADERSHIP CHALLENGE, by Kouzes and Posner. If you wish to be a better manager or a boss you must first learn to be a better leader and this book is packed with words of wisdom, it offers an essential road map for the leaders of today and tomorrow – wherever they live and work.

On expectations and goals, Kouzes and Posner say, “Being clear about what’s expected of them, and what you’re trying to accomplish, is essential to helping people stay the course, especially when the going gets tough. Leaders should absolutely make sure they affrim the worth of everyone of their constituents; that goes without saying. But for recognition to be meaningful and for it to reward appropriate behaviors, you have to have an end in the mind. Goals help people keep their eyes on the vision. Goals and intentions keep them on track. They help people put the phone in do-not-disturb mode, shut out the noise, and schedule their time. Goal-setting affirms the person and whether you realize or not, contributes to what people think about themselves.”

Are you a good boss or a Bad Boss?
Answer these questions on the nfib.com article and judge for yourself.

What have you liked about your boss’s managing style? Or if you are a manager, how do you empower and encourage your employees?

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Tips on giving Effective Performance Review to Employees

In the Inc.com article titled: Putting an End to End-of-Year Reviews, a recent study by Salary.com found that more than 60 percent of workers doubt reviews boost performance. The criticisms are legion.

Annual reviews fail to motivate people long term; assessments are often perfunctory; problem resolution gets postponed; and the ritual is painful for all concerned. In response, some CEOs are starting to rethink the process, emphasizing more frequent feedback and in-depth evaluations, says Steve Gross, who heads the performance and rewards consulting practice at Mercer Human Resource Consulting. “Employees want the feedback, and companies want a better sense of whether an employee is at risk of leaving,” Gross says.

There are two case studies which discuss how the review system was improved over time with frequent assessments and rewards process.

Not just one year end review or two in a year is the call of the times but we need more involved process where there employee feels more responsible for the continuous cycle of review and reward. Also whenever possible the organizations must endorse the profit-sharing principles as a means to reward employees, it adds as an incentive towards people retention and employees feel more of a part of the organization than just workers on wages. Compensation, reward, recognition has to go hand-in-hand as a result of a performance review, else the meaning is lost.

By not talking about performance and compensation at the same time, you cause the review to be as meaningful as possible,” says CEO Craig Erlich of Pulse220.

The sooner the employers start looking at this issue in-depth, the better it would be for them to retain good talent and also enhance performance of the constituents.

 

Tips on giving Effective Performance Review to Employees

 

  • Performance reviews and evaluations must be two-way communication process. Get as much employee input as possible on the goals and expectations. Your goals and expectation must be extremely clear to the employee – ensure it is so. The importance of this step cannot be overemphasized.
  • What is it in for the employee? What will be the outcome of the performance review? What does this evaluation translate in terms of a raise and a promotion? Could a bad performance review or evaluation led to termination? Get all the discussions discussed before an evaluation management system is explained to the employee. The HR plays an important role in explaining and preparing a concrete documentation to all employees upfront.
  • Make the feedback and review sessions frequent. Get it in the system and keep on it to ensure that both the manager and the employee are responsible for the reviews to be updated and expectations discussed every now and then, not once or twice a year only. Is it your company policy to hold reviews twice a year only, how about asking to revise this policy if it is in the best interest of the employees. Rules must be revised to help an organization grow well – there are no rules which cannot be rewritten.
  • If you see the need to talk to an employee about falling standards in performance, do not wait until the performance review to present him/her as a surprise. Constant appraisal and updates must be a norm in an organization. Do not jump surprises on your employees. For this the managers need to be empathetic and use good communication skills as well.

The management might take on various steps to improve the process of the feedback cycle but it the employee’s responsibility to be proactive towards their career development as well as towards their performance reviews.

 

What are your tips for an effective performance review policy?

 

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Blogging as a Career

A few years before no one would have even thought that blogging could be a full-time career but as the Internet evolves and the recent news in business magazines Entrepreneur and Inc. often citing success stories from not one or two but quite a few bloggers on how they are making decent money blogging full time, blogging could soon be on the list of full-time careers.
Would you want to take on a career as a blogger? Ask yourself first what motivates you to do so and why?
If money is the only reason then think again. The first step towards your decision to be a full-time professional blogger must be to research thoroughly on how previous successes have been achieved and what are the real life scenarios – not getting all enamored by the one page websites of all those bloggers around who want to sell their software or services and get you making a 5 figure income in a month through blogs – easily.

There are some great blogger tips websites; Darren Rowse on ProBlogger perhaps tops it all. He recently had a post on his website titled: Do you call yourself a blogger, worth a look to get tips from this seasoned blogger and also for some interesting comments.

Of course when you are taking upon blogging as a career you better think about making good money from it as well, don’t give up your day job before a good research within (explore your true passion towards blogging as a career) and outside (research how others have paved the way and what they say about blogging as a full-time career). It pays to listen to all those trailblazers who can offer you the best advice. Research well and take on good advice before jumping in thinking that it is an easy way to a passive income. Of course exceptions are always there but there is a never easy way to success. Experience and knowledge and good marketing skills reign above all others. Read this post to get closer to realities as Darren describes how it is not a one day job to build a blog and start digging money the next day onwards.

Here are some other websites where you can get some quality advice:

Update: Some good advice on Problogger.net by Mark Avey: Pros and Cons of Niche Blogging

Looking for a job board for professional bloggers? Check these out:

Also these blogs might be of help: Top 25 Blogs About Blogging

Freelance Blogging

Through freelance blogging you can earn some extra income charging for per posts. The publishers might pay you from around $10,$15 to $100 per post. It all depends where you post, the quality of your posts and also how well you negotiate the price of your articles.
Skellie has some great tips on freelance blogging at: Freelance Blogging for Side Income: My Top 10 Tips. And some more tips on freelancing in general: A Comprehensive Guide to Starting Your Freelance Career.

Downsides of Full-time Blogging

  • If you are a people’s person and love one-on-one interaction with coworkers and working in a team, then think again. Blogging can be pretty lonesome, a career where you are all by yourself most of the time and where words take a back seat and your fingers do the talking. Although you get enough opportunity to network and interact with the bloggers on the vast blogosphere but it depends on you on how further you can take on such networking.
  • You might be under the impression that blogging can bring in instant passive income, the sooner you get rid of this idea the better it is for us. Blogging as any other small or large business needs continuous nurturing and a lot of time to grow. Don’t expect instant success. Time and quality of your work will tell the difference.
  • You might miss out on the regular benefits that a full-time employee enjoys – healthcare benefits, bonus, profit-sharing, perks and coworker camaraderie.

Benefits to the Full-time Blogger

  • If you enjoy working on your own without supervision and find it hard to work under a boss – oppressive or cooperative – professional blogging could be for you. Also coupled with the desire and drive to work on your own, you must also be good (if not proficient) at expressing your thoughts and ideas in writing or through some art form depending on how you want to present your blog to the world.
  • No commute and more time with family.
  • If you become an expert on the theme that you have chosen for your blog – you might get good job offers where you can earn well and also continue your blogging.
  • When you love doing what you do, work becomes a discovery, a learning experience which you enjoy every day and yearn to be back on the computer every morning. If you are passionate about blogging for what you feel most driven – what better job could be there for you!

Characteristics of a Fanatic Blogger

  • You are obsessed with your stats and your ad earning report. You sneak out of the bed in the middle of the night to monitor your blog’s traffic or just to check out the AdSense earning – and feel a slight guilt when the AdSense report shows that you had logged in just 2 hours before!
  • Your child narrates with delight the day at school and your mind is constantly filtering to find “stuff” in what he/she is narrating to mold to a new blog post.
  • You are about to leave for the hospital for the delivery of your baby and you ask your husband if he has packed in the laptop, so that you can check your blog stats in the middle of the night in case the labor is long.
  • You are at the hospital for the delivery of your baby and while waiting your husband sneaks out for a quick trip to the cafeteria only to return an hour later – he confesses he was just doing a quick check on his blog stats.
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The Power of Appreciation – How to Praise your Employees

Creativity is so delicate a flower that praise tends to make it bloom, while discouragement often nips it in the bud. Any of us will put out more and better ideas if our efforts are appreciated. ~ Alex F Osborn

Have you recently appreciated a co-worker or your employee at work?

Is appreciation a part of your to-do list at work?

75% and 80% of American workers said they got little or no recognition from their managers in the last year.”

With stats like this, chances are you’d say “no” to both these questions. And here’s why you must make this a practice at work – not to increase your likability but more to make others happy, satisfied and increase retention at work.

We have talked about the difficult bosses, the no-so-good communication between employees and managers and the traits of good and bad employers in the past. Perhaps difficult and bad bosses might not be so negative after aff if they can include even a pint of regular appreciation offerings in their schedule!

How many managers are actually doing it often and if not let’s discuss why they should be doing it on a regular basis – appreciation and recognition are critical to talent  retention.

Everyone has an invisible sign hanging from their neck saying, “Make me feel important.” Never forget this message when working with people.
– Mary Kay Ash

Compliment often and with Honesty

Just saying “Good job” might not be the best way to get the praise across. Display sincerity and be specific in praising your employees. Send an email to the employee and if you wish CC to the HR personnel or another senior manager in your division. On being specific, mention the specific task or the project you were impressed with for this particular employee, if the employee is a good team player, add that to the testimonial.
Don’t be a miser when showering words of praises towards your employees or coworkers, and neither should you present false praise; be honest and to the point.
Empathetic employers have happier employees; invest wisely in your people and your company shall retain best talents and render the best in performance.

Follow this best practice on showing appreciation - let him/her know verbally and in written. The verbal praise makes it an instant confidence booster  and the written endorsement will benefit his/her future.

A 10-year study of 200,000 managers and employees suggests that praising people for a job well done may lead to bigger profits, says Fortune’s Anne Fisher. She mentions a book, “The Carrot Principle“, a fascinating book by Adrian Gostick and Chester Elton, the subtitle of this books says- “How the Best Managers Use Recognition to Engage Their People, Retain Talent, and Accelerate Performance” – the basic idea is simple: People will work harder and more enthusiastically for an appreciative boss, and companies that praise topnotch performance are more profitable than those that don’t.

What goes around comes around; employees must also endorse and praise managers for their work, verbally and in written format as well.

Checkpoint- As an employee how many times have you shown verbal or written appreciation to your boss?

Encourage and Motivate your Employees

As a manager and a leader your responsibilities toward employee motivation go beyond praise and recognition – you must be strive to motivate and encourage your employees to better performance and excellence.

In an article in Entrepreneur.com, Stanford University psychology professor Carol Dweck has some definite opinions when it comes to being open-minded. In Mindset: The New Psychology of Success, Dweck discusses why some people excel and others don’t. When employees fall short, praise them for trying, and allow them to talk about their struggles so that knowledge gaps aren’t a source of shame. “Convey that a lot of learning is necessary to do the job well,” Dweck says. “The employer is a guide and a resource, not a judge.”

Recognize your Employees

Endorse or initiate a regular practice at your workplace of recognizing good talented constituents with recognition at company meetings through certificates of “Employee of the month / year”, or through gift certificates on a job well done in a project. All these are added incentives towards making your constituents feel praised and recognized in an organization. And of course a perk or a raise is always what will help retain the employee in the long-term. But even if your company cannot afford a raise at the present moment, always keep on track on simple free recognition to boost employee morale.

Kouzes and Posner in their classic book: The Leadership Challenge say:
“Believing in others is an extraordinary powerful force in propelling performance. Feeling affirmed and appreciated increases a person’s sense of self-worth, which in turn precipitates success in all areas of one’s life. Research and everyday experience confirm that people with high self-esteem, of all ages and levels of education and socioeconomic backgrounds, “feel unique, competent, secure, empowered, and connected to the people around them”. If we have someone in our life who believes in us, and who constantly reinforces that belief when interacting with us, we’re strongly influenced by that support.”

 

Quoting Chip Conley of Joie de Vivre Hospitality from the Inc. Magazine,
” When you are going through rough times, it’s easy to have depressing meetings and talk about things that aren’t working instead of reminding each other about things that are. So in 2002, he last time business was hurting as it is now, we started ending our weekly meetings a bit differently. During the last 10 minutes, anyone could raise his or her hand and recognize someone in the company for outstanding work. … Just something small like that has had big, positive effect on our business.”

 

Susan Adam in a Forbes.com article says:

Expressing appreciation can be an extremely effective way to motivate employees, yet few bosses do it.

Although appreciation and praise, especially when expressed specifically, inevitably make employees feel more loyal and more engaged, all too few bosses practice the art of gratitude, says Chester Elton, a motivation consultant. A recent study found that between 75% and 80% of American workers said they got little or no recognition from their managers in the last year. Together with a co-author, Adrian Gostick, Elton has written four books on using recognition and praise to boost results, most recently The Carrot Principle: How the Best Managers Use Recognition to Engage Their People, Retain Talent, and Accelerate Performance.

In that book, Elton and Gostick include the results of a survey they commissioned of 200,000 American workers that demonstrates a link between bosses who recognize employees with praise, along with other signs of appreciation like holiday parties and handwritten notes, and a company’s financial performance. The survey shows return on equity three times higher for companies that engage in employee appreciation. Their workers are more creative and more dedicated to the business’s success, and they have a stronger bond to their company and its goals, according to the research.

 

Recommended reading:

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What to do after a Layoff

Once you are done with accepting and dealing with the layoff in the initial phases it is time to plan on how to make the most and best of this period.
These articles also suggest that people who are unemployed are finding hard to get into a job and are out of work for a longer period.
Since it is harder to find a job right now, what would you like to do in this period?

Of the various options before you, how about:

  • Make the Best of the Available Time
    Do you have some extra time at your hands these days? Make the best of your time; plan your day accordingly during the layoff period. Assume you are on a project; every well executed project works on a well laid off plan. Plan your job search smartly; the more conscientious you are now, the faster you shall see the results. Review some of the suggestions below and see how you can divide your time to these activities resourcefully to quicken your steps towards your goals.
  • Make the Best Use of the offered Employment Placement Services
    If your employer has offered you employment placement services or paying for a career coach or counselor, do not let this offer stay sitting in an envelope. Pursue good coaches who can help you through the transition phase. Career coaches and counselors can help you prepare a job search plan and assist you towards the secrets of the unadvertised marketing plan. They can also provide some customized assessments which help you figure out your true inclination towards a career or job. More so, at this stage they can act as your guide and friend who can give you an unbiased opinion and boost your confidence in getting back in the job market quickly. There are also resume critique services available through coaches and counselors and resume experts, make the best of these again. It is time to revamp and polish your resume.
  • Update your Resume
    Sprucing up your resume is not about updating in the usual way as you have done before; it pays to look at your resume in a new light, it is time to completely refresh your resume. Focus your resume not for mass sending to the job boards and advertised jobs but focus on a few that you really want to pursue. Research each potential employer carefully, what is the required job description and how you can tailor your resume to suit their particular needs. Prepare a customized resume not a standard one that caters to all. Take time and consult your career coach or counselor in preparing an above average resume, in a tough job market you have to market yourself much more intensely than what you would do in a strong economy with a robust job market growth.
  • Smart Networking is what will Work Eventually
    Not just networking but smart networking is the call of times. Look for networking at all opportunities. Prepare new business cards, what you have carried all through were from your previous employer now you have to market yourself on your skills and abilities, how would you do that? At every networking opportunity never go empty handed and don’t come back empty handed. Have your resume and/or business card handy and bring back the business card of the person your network with.
  • Begin with the End in Mind
    Of course the final desire is to land a great job or a new career that satisfies and is conducive to your working style. Have the end in mind, if you have been doing all of the above diligently, an interview call is not far ahead. Start preparing in parallel for this make or break event – prepare for acing that interview and the road to a new job or career will seem shorter.
  • Research and Track how Income Tax Deductions can be Availed during Job Search
    Your costs incurred towards the job search process post layoff are tax deductible. You must keep a record of your expenses such as mileage when going for job interviews, the costs of resume preparation, phone calls to possible clients/employers, recruiters costs etc. Some good tips on this topic are at How the tax code can help you in a layoff.
  • Take a break
    If you feel your mind and body needs a rest, then why not go on a short (or long) vacation with your family to unwind and relax and rejuvenate to get back in the rat race. (Obviously depends on various things – your present financial standing, your state of mind and your severance package!). How about a trip to Las Vegas (but of course, if you are in US), if you are good at gambling (whatever that means) and hit a jackpot perhaps you don’t even have to bother about looking for a job thereafter. But before you dip into your savings for that vacation, note this good advice on the CNN.com article: But those who are unemployed more than six months lose unemployment insurance benefits and are more likely to deplete savings to the point where they are forced to cut back on spending.

Some tips from by Erin Chambers at the WSJ article: What to Do After a Layoff

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